I use the YaST Automatic Online Update and I like it a lot. Using it gets me all the updates as soon as they are released and I don't even have to install them. However, sometimes it would be nice to know what changed last night. Can I set up a log file that just watches for YOU updates and nothing else? A romp thru the admin manual was no help. Any suggestions will be appreciated. Don Henson
I use the YaST Automatic Online Update and I like it a lot. Using it gets me all the updates as soon as they are released and I don't even have to install them. However, sometimes it would be nice to know what changed last night. Can I set up a log file that just watches for YOU updates and nothing else? A romp thru the admin manual was no help. Any suggestions will be appreciated.
Don Henson Try: rpm -qa --last | less Which gives a quick list of all installed rpm packages in reverse chronological order with a time of install. Probably doesn't cover the small
On Tuesday 25 May 2004 21:08, Donald D Henson wrote: patches though. Also check out /var/lib/YaST2/you/youlog for a wordy log of YOU's actions. -- Steve Boddy
On Tue, 2004-05-25 at 14:31, Stephen Boddy wrote:
I use the YaST Automatic Online Update and I like it a lot. Using it gets me all the updates as soon as they are released and I don't even have to install them. However, sometimes it would be nice to know what changed last night. Can I set up a log file that just watches for YOU updates and nothing else? A romp thru the admin manual was no help. Any suggestions will be appreciated.
Don Henson Try: rpm -qa --last | less Which gives a quick list of all installed rpm packages in reverse chronological order with a time of install. Probably doesn't cover the small
On Tuesday 25 May 2004 21:08, Donald D Henson wrote: patches though. Also check out /var/lib/YaST2/you/youlog for a wordy log of YOU's actions. -- Steve Boddy
The YOU log is not exactly what I was looking for but it'll do. Thanks. Don Henson
On Tuesday 25 May 2004 12:08, Donald D Henson wrote:
I use the YaST Automatic Online Update and I like it a lot. Using it gets me all the updates as soon as they are released and I don't even have to install them. However, sometimes it would be nice to know what changed last night. Can I set up a log file that just watches for YOU updates and nothing else? A romp thru the admin manual was no help. Any suggestions will be appreciated.
Don Henson
I used that on 8.2 for some time. All of sudden some things begin to fail, missing libraries etc. Mark my words Don, you will come to regret using that thing blindly. -- _____________________________________ John Andersen
John Andersen wrote:
On Tuesday 25 May 2004 12:08, Donald D Henson wrote:
I use the YaST Automatic Online Update and I like it a lot. Using it gets me all the updates as soon as they are released and I don't even have to install them. However, sometimes it would be nice to know what changed last night. Can I set up a log file that just watches for YOU updates and nothing else? A romp thru the admin manual was no help. Any suggestions will be appreciated.
Don Henson
I used that on 8.2 for some time. All of sudden some things begin to fail, missing libraries etc. Mark my words Don, you will come to regret using that thing blindly.
YOU was working great on my 8.2 for the longest time until recently it updated the kernel, modified files in /boot but did not install /boot/initrd as well as other problems. Result is I could not reboot and had to restore my system. Very disappointing :( -- SuSE Linux 8.2 (i586) ---- 2.4.20-4GB-athlon --- Tue 05/25/04 20:55 8:55pm up 3 days 0:51, 4 users, load average: 0.26, 0.19, 0.18
Sounds like a job for grep! locate the lines in /var/log/messages by hand, identify a unique identifier on the lines, build small sh file which executes grep <uniqueidentifer> /var/log/messages Jerry On Tue, 2004-05-25 at 22:08, Donald D Henson wrote:
I use the YaST Automatic Online Update and I like it a lot. Using it gets me all the updates as soon as they are released and I don't even have to install them. However, sometimes it would be nice to know what changed last night. Can I set up a log file that just watches for YOU updates and nothing else? A romp thru the admin manual was no help. Any suggestions will be appreciated.
Don Henson
Thanks. I'll try it. Don Henson On Wed, 2004-05-26 at 01:01, Jerome R. Westrick wrote:
Sounds like a job for grep!
locate the lines in /var/log/messages by hand, identify a unique identifier on the lines, build small sh file which executes
grep <uniqueidentifer> /var/log/messages
Jerry
On Tue, 2004-05-25 at 22:08, Donald D Henson wrote:
I use the YaST Automatic Online Update and I like it a lot. Using it gets me all the updates as soon as they are released and I don't even have to install them. However, sometimes it would be nice to know what changed last night. Can I set up a log file that just watches for YOU updates and nothing else? A romp thru the admin manual was no help. Any suggestions will be appreciated.
Don Henson
participants (5)
-
Donald D Henson
-
Jerome R. Westrick
-
John Andersen
-
Stephen Boddy
-
Terry Eck