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Yum list installed
Yum list installed












yum list installed

In that case, we can simply add new repositories to further expand the catalogue of packages available to us.

yum list installed

The official CentOS 7 repository has a huge list of packages and it covers almost all bases in terms of software for servers, but sometimes we need some additional packages which are not available in the official repositories. It would be great if yumdb supported “group” type.This tutorial explains how to set up and use Yum repositories on a CentOS 7 VPS. So only way around this I can see is to not install groups, because installing a group tells it to install whatever is in the list. Similarly, for ModemManager, it’ll be part of default group. $ sudo yum groupinfo hardware-support |grep ipw2200 I guess that makes sense, if you install a group then you’re telling it you want all of the packages there (but you shouldn’t get any deps).įor example, most systems probably have group installed, which is where ipw220-firmware comes from: I think the reason for this is that yumdb is including default and mandatory packages from when you install a group. Some people have written in to say the command shows packages that they never explicitly installed, things like ModemManager and firware packages. Yumdb search reason dep |egrep "agg|boost-iostreams|boost-serialization|gtkglext-libs|pangox-compat" List packages which were installed as deps: If you’re after a way to list all the packages you have explicitly installed (rather than packages that have been pulled in as a dependency) then you can do that with yumdb (thanks to Panu on #yum for the tip) which is powered by a new database added in 2009.














Yum list installed