[K12OSN] [reposted] yum OR apt - which?

Daniel Hedblom daniel.hedblom at skola.solleftea.se
Thu Apr 28 10:55:37 UTC 2005


Hello!

I like them both because they solve a big problem in a good way, namely
dependancies. Apt has some advantages over yum but for the normal user thats not
an issue. For the user all that matters is the ability to get things installed
in an easy way and both apt and yum shines on that area. 

You can avoid going trough refreshing the repo on yum by doing 
#yum -C install packagename. -C tells yum to not refresh the repo but instead
use the local one.

/daniel

Citerar Gavin Chester <sales at ecosolutions.com.au>:

> [sent this in a week ago, but no one had time or interest.  
> Any takers this time?]
> 
> A quick straw poll with perhaps a weighted vote given to THE MAN (ie,
> Eric) if he has the time to chip in an opinion :-).  
> 
> Which works best overall: apt or yum and what are the pros and cons?  
> 
> (If this subject is "wiki-fied", forgive my laziness and tell me that
> it's all been documented already ;-).)
> 
> MY VIEW:
> I've always favoured apt in the past, particularly after I discovered
> synaptic.  I mostly use that to browse packages graphically, but I'd
> rather do the deed of updating and upgrading via a terminal.  Having
> been sold on apt by this list in the distant past, I have been surprised to
> see Eric mostly refer to yum updates lately and almost never apt.
> 
> Thinking "he knows best" (well, who would if not Eric?) I started
> exploring yum's capabilities instead.  I didn't like it at first, but 
> now it's growing on me and helping me avoid apt's tendency to want to 
> remove some packages each update.  That's a big minus for apt - perhaps
> driven
> by repository madness (I've alternately added and removed certain repos
> to get some wanted packages not in the stock repos).  
> 
> However, I find some big minuses with yum, such as it being a chore on
> dialup because it goes through such protracted preparations just to end
> up telling me that package "xxx" is not listed, or that there are no
> upgrades for "yyy".  Then there is the yum daily cron update (I deleted
> it) that was chewing up precious bandwidth without actually seeming to
> speed up yum's updates when I manually invoked them.
> 
> I could go on, but I want to hear of the experiences and opinion of
> other "frontliners" on my personal apt vs yum dilemma.  Thanks.
>    
> -- 
> Regards, 
>         Gavin Chester 
> 
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> 
> 


Ne auderis delere orbem rigidum meum!

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