Yum is an automatic updater and installer for rpm-based systems.
Included programs:
/usr/bin/yum Main program
Yum is run with one of the following options:
-
update [package list]
If run without any packages, Yum will automatically upgrade every currently installed package. If one or more packages are specified, Yum will only update the packages listed.
-
install <package list>
Yum will install the latest version of the specified package (don't specify version information).
-
remove <package list>
Yum will remove the specified packages from the system.
-
list [package list]
List available packages.
See the man page for more information (man yum
). Also see:
-
web page: http://yum.baseurl.org/
3.2.X Branch - yum-3_2_X
Starting commit is roughly: a3c91d7f6a15f31a42d020127b2da2877dfc137d
E.g. git diff a3c91d7f6a15f31a42d020127b2da2877dfc137d
You can build an RPM package by running:
$ make rpm
Note: Make sure you have mock
and lynx
installed.
You can run Yum from the current checkout in a container as follows (make sure
you have the podman
package installed):
$ make shell
This will first build a CentOS 7 image (if not built already) and then run a container with a shell where you can directly execute Yum:
[root@bf03d3a43cbf /] yum
When you edit the code on your host, the changes you make will be immediately reflected inside the container since the checkout is bind-mounted.
Warning: There's a (probably) bug in podman at the moment which makes it
not see symlinks in a freshly created container, which, in turn, makes Yum not
see the /etc/yum.conf
symlink when it runs for the first time. The
workaround is to touch /etc/yum.conf
or simply re-run Yum.
Note: When you exit the container, it is not deleted but just stopped. To re-attach to it, use (replace the ID appropriately):
$ podman start bf03d3a43cbf
$ podman attach bf03d3a43cbf