On 15/06/18 18:44, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2018-06-15 17:09, Liam Proven wrote:
But all my supplementary repos are set at priority 99. There's no real logical priority between them; apparently that is a user issue. I.e., do it yourself. IMHO that's bad.
Just choose the priority...
I look up the recommended solution and I do what it says there. I don't know what priorities to choose or what's important; every guide, and every one-click install, seems to set them all at the minimum one. This may be a valuable field for a skilled sysadmin, but I am not a skilled openSUSE sysadmin. As such, I expect the OS to make such decisions for me, or to make it easier.
Then enable vendor change. The default is "no", and for good reasons. I want "no". Yes, there is a command line option to enable it.
So if everyone says don't do it, why should I do it? I follow the advice I find online, and in response, the packaging tool nags at me. I think that is suboptimal. Is that wrong of me? I do not like it that the packaging tool says "there are 42 other updates available that I won't install". That worries me. However, my choices are to either do them individually -- bad -- or to change a config file and make a permanent change or remember to revert it manually -- also bad. I think a simpler option would be: [1] Have an interactive option to do those updates too. [2] Have a secondary option to remember the choice. For comparison look at the difference between "recommends" and "suggests" in Apt. Ubuntu defaults to ``--install-recommends'' and has for years. But you can also add ``--install-suggests'' too -- but it can add a large number of additional packages. If I tell my OS to update itself, I expect it to install all available updates. I am not happy when it says there are more but it won't do them.
Remove the kernel. Just do it. Borked system.
Sure, I've done that before. :-) It's the Unix way. It does what you tell it to do. I expect this of all Linuxes, TBH. But on Ubuntu it was easy to fix. I booted from a CD with root=/dev/sda5 or whatever, and then once it booted, I did ``apt install linux-kernel-generic" or whatever it's called. Job done. It ran ``update-grub'' for me and everything. This stuff is still rather more work on openSUSE, which is why I'd probably primarily recommend openSUSE as a _server_ distro. -- Liam Proven - Technical Writer, SUSE Linux s.r.o. Corso II, Křižíkova 148/34, 186-00 Praha 8 - Karlín, Czechia Email: lproven@suse.com - Office telephone: +420 284 241 084 -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org