# Only the system administrator should modify this file, ordinary users # should not have to change anything. [Backend] # Yum plugins which we should disabled when running with PackageKit # # Some yum plugins do not work well with PackageKit, either by trying to be too # clever or by adding support for things that PackageKit doesn't understand # # Seporate entries can be seporated with the ';' character. # # default=rpm-warm-cache;remove-with-leaves;auto-update-debuginfo DisabledPlugins=rpm-warm-cache;remove-with-leaves;auto-update-debuginfo # Packages that should not be removable with PackageKit # # This simple package list specifies packages that PackageKit cannot remove # in fear of breaking the users system. # # It can still install or update these packages (of which the latter may # actually remove the old package just after installing a new one) and this # list just stops an errant "pkcon remove glibc" from destroying the system. # # default=yum;rpm;glibc;PackageKit SystemPackages=yum;rpm;glibc;PackageKit # Packages that should be updated before any other packages # # Some packages like rpm and yum actually update the system, and should # probably be installed first. This prevents bugs in these components from # blocking the auto-install of updates. # # If these packages depend on any other updates, then these are considered # infrastructure packages too, and are included in the update viewer. # # default=PackageKit;yum;rpm InfrastructurePackages=PackageKit;yum;rpm # Yum is slow, and we can use Zif to accelerate some simple transactions # # Yum is written in python, and we therefor have to execute a new process and # communicate with it. This is much slower than just acessing the repo files # and rpmdb in a C thread. Zif is a pretty new project, and is not well tested # at this time. It is however up to an order of magnitude faster in some # benchmark tests. # # default=true UseZif=false