Re: [CentOS] Understanding yum automatic upgrades

2011-04-06 Thread email builder
Sorry if this is somewhat naive, but I'm a  little  confused   as to 
what 


 the
 criteria is for that which will  get upgraded  automatically  by  
   yum 
and
   what
will   not.
   
I  see in our  logwatch messages  from  time to time that yum upgraded
 a  bunch of stuff, but  I also notice that yum   will not upgrade 
other
 packages at  all  (easy example is clamav, but there  are  others).
 
 Can someone explain or  point me to where I can   read  about the
distinction
between what is and is  not subjected  to  automatic  upgrade?
   
 More  info: yum-updatesd is running and I do  not have  yum-cron.
 yum-updatesd
does a fine job  from what I can tell,  but I  still cannot understand 
 what
 criteria it applies to know which   packages get upgraded and  which 
  do 

 not.
   (?)

 The yum-updatesd  configuration file is ultra-simple,  so  that 
  doesn't 

 seem to
  be
 where the  update  choice/distinction is being made.

There seem  to be people  posting in  various places that they prefer 
to 

 use
  yum-cron, but I have  no problems with yum-updatesd and I suspect  
 yum-cron
wouldn't  address/answer my  question  anyway.
   
Help?
   
Yum-updatesd  does not automatically  install packages (unless you
configure it to), it  only  notifies you of ones that need updating.   
If
no one is manually doing  it, and you don't have do_update =  yes  in
   /etc/yum/yum-updatesd.conf, then  you have  installed  something else
   that is performing the  updates   automatically.
  
   It does look like  updates are happening, but  it's not clear to me by 
whom.
do_update is set to no, but notification  is by dbus, so I assumed  
that
   dbus is notifying another process to  do the actual  updates.  Is there 
   a 

 way I
   can track that   down?
  
   Are you sure the updates are actually  getting  installed,  and it's not
   just noise in the  log from  yum-updatesd?
  
   Well, if I can take it at  its word, updates *are*  happening.  Here is a 
 snippet
I clipped out of a logwatch a few months  ago:
  
 - yum Begin   
  
  
Packages  Updated:
   php-dba - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
   php - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
php-devel - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
  php-cli -   5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
  php-common -  5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
   php-gd -  5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
  php-pdo -   5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
  php-mysql -   5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
  
-- yum  End  -
  
   P.S. The yum  log doesn't have the  year in the timestamp, and  if it's
not active it might not get  rotated by logrotate.  This  can  cause
   false messages sent from  logwatch about  packages that were  installed
   last   year.
   
   Hmm, is there a known fix for this?
  
  
   Rotate the  log file yourself once a year.  You can check if you  are
  seeing this bug  by looking at the /var/log/yum.log last  modified time.
   If it was yesterday,  then I suppose the  packages were installed.
  
  As far as your other  questions,  how does it determine what packages to
  update, I think you will   find it's not actually doing any updating.  I
  have not used  yum-updatesd  to auto-update packages myself, but I would
  think it  would automatically  install any updated package.
 
 It's dated a  couple days ago, so I'd say it's doing what it's supposed to.  
I'm 

 not  sure what the dbus notification does, but I presume it's telling 
 someone 

 to do the updating.  It'd probably be more informative if I could  understand 
who 

 is picking up such notifications.

/etc/dbus-1/system.d/yum-updatesd.conf

Doesn't really tell me anything.  I'm guessing that someone is watching dbus 
for 
notifications, but I can't figure out how to see who that is.

 Do you know how to  determine which repo a particular package is from?  For 
 example, when I  do yum info against clamav (which isn't receiving 
 automatic 

 updates), it  just says Repo: installed.  I don't know what repo it comes  
from.
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Re: [CentOS] Understanding yum automatic upgrades

2011-04-06 Thread Ljubomir Ljubojevic
email builder wrote:
 Do you know how to determine which repo a particular package is from?  For 
 example, when I do yum info against clamav (which isn't receiving automatic 
 updates), it just says Repo: installed.  I don't know what repo it comes 
 from.
 
yum list clamav --showduplicates should show you all clamav packages 
available in all repos, and will show the installed version so you can 
compare.

Also, do you have some software that could do updates automaticaly? I 
think Virtualmin (like Webmin but for domain control, CPanel, etc.) can 
be set to do automatic updates.

Ljubomir
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Re: [CentOS] Understanding yum automatic upgrades

2011-04-06 Thread Kai Schaetzl
Email builder wrote on Tue, 5 Apr 2011 16:46:55 -0700 (PDT):

 then the outstanding question is how to figure out why certain 
 packages are not being updated.

Well, first action: did you actually check with the repo that there is a 
newer package? Just because a package isn't updated doesn't mean it's not 
working. Especially in the case of clamav I think you haven't done the 
obvious.
Please read before continuing:
http://wiki.centos.org/AdditionalResources
http://wiki.centos.org/PackageManagement/Yum


Kai


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Re: [CentOS] Understanding yum automatic upgrades

2011-04-06 Thread email builder
  then  the outstanding question is how to figure out why certain 

  packages are  not being updated.
 
 Well, first action: did you actually check with the  repo that there is a 
 newer package?

Yes.  I'm not sure why would you think otherwise...?

 Just because a package isn't updated  doesn't mean it's not 
 working.

I *do* think the updater is working, judging from my logwatch emails.  But it's 
quite clear that some packages, clamav being the example here, are definitely 
not being updated.  


 Especially in the case of clamav I think you  haven't done the 
 obvious.

Why do you say that?  What is the obvious?  Checking for an update?  

Perhaps what would clear this up for you is to note that this is an ongoing 
issue, not anything *right now*.  That is, I've watched clam tell me via 
logwatch that it is out of date for weeks at a time before I finally go log in 
and run yum update clamav on the command line, which updates things nicely as 
expected.  So clearly in those cases there IS an update available (I also check 
via yum info before the update).

So while *some* packages get updated automatically by some mystery process that 
no one here seems to know about (??), some *do not*.

Please don't take me wrong; I'm grateful for the help, but while I'm not a 
highly skilled sysadmin, I'm not asking entirely bonehead questions I think.  
Correct me if I'm wrong though!  :-)
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Re: [CentOS] Understanding yum automatic upgrades

2011-04-06 Thread email builder


  Do you know how to determine which repo a  particular package is from?  For 
  example, when I do yum info  against clamav (which isn't receiving 
automatic 

  updates), it just says  Repo: installed.  I don't know what repo it comes 
from.
  
 yum  list clamav --showduplicates should show you all clamav packages 
 available  in all repos, and will show the installed version so you can 
 compare.

Hmmm
Command line error: no such option: --showduplicates

 Also, do you have some software that could do updates  automaticaly? I 
 think Virtualmin (like Webmin but for domain control,  CPanel, etc.) can 
 be set to do automatic  updates.

I'm not looking for an auto-update system, I'm just trying to understand the 
one 
that is currently running (yum-updatesd and whomever is listening on the other 
end of dbus).  


It seems to work for the most part, but I want to understand why some packages 
don't get upgraded.  A partial answer I got to that was that such packages 
would 
be from non-enabled repos, but when I do a yum upgrade clamav from the 
command 
line, it works fine -- doesn't that mean that the repo *IS* enabled?
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Re: [CentOS] Understanding yum automatic upgrades

2011-04-06 Thread email builder
  It does  look like updates are happening, but it's not clear to me by

   whom.
  do_update is set to no, but notification is by dbus, so I  assumed
  that
  dbus is notifying another process to do the  actual updates.  Is
 there
  a way I
  can track that  down?
  
   Are you sure the updates are actually getting  installed,  and it's
  not
   just noise in the log from  yum-updatesd?
  
  Well, if I can take it at its word, updates *are*  happening.  Here is
 a
  snippet
  I clipped out of a  logwatch a few months ago:
  
   - yum  Begin 
  
  
   Packages  Updated:
  php-dba - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
   php - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
  php-devel -  5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
  php-cli -  5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
  php-common -  5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
  php-gd -  5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
  php-pdo -  5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
  php-mysql -  5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
  
   -- yum End  -
 
 A much more reliable way to check is
 rpm -qa  --last |less

Thanks for that.  I think this clears things up -- it looks like the updates 
are 
all manual ones, especially judging from how dates are grouped.

So I must apologize to you and the other responders on this thread.  The 
notifications I have seen in logwatch must have been from manual updates that I 
was unaware of or did not remember. 


 or simply run
 yum update
 and see what it thinks needs  updated yet.
 
 If things are reasonably up-to-date I would expect the  --last list to
 have a tzdata-2011b package listed near the top.

Indeed, it's not there yet I see an update available.

 One other  thing the --last list will revel is WHEN the updates were
 applied, if they  consistently are at a particular time of the morning
 then it may be based on  a cron job.

The date/times appear to indicate manual interaction from a human.  In any 
case, 
my question seems to be answered.  I will watch logwatch a little longer and 
make sure this is the case.

Thanks to everyone and sorry for the confusion.
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[CentOS] Understanding yum automatic upgrades

2011-04-05 Thread email builder
Hello,

  Sorry if this is somewhat naive, but I'm a little confused as to what the 
criteria is for that which will get upgraded automatically by yum and what will 
not.

  I see in our logwatch messages from time to time that yum upgraded a bunch of 
stuff, but I also notice that yum will not upgrade other packages at all (easy 
example is clamav, but there are others).

  Can someone explain or point me to where I can read about the distinction 
between what is and is not subjected to automatic upgrade?

Thanks!
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Re: [CentOS] Understanding yum automatic upgrades

2011-04-05 Thread email builder

   Sorry if this is somewhat naive, but I'm a little confused  as to what the 

 criteria is for that which will get upgraded automatically by  yum and what 
will 

 not.
 
   I see in our logwatch messages from  time to time that yum upgraded a bunch 
of 

 stuff, but I also notice that yum  will not upgrade other packages at all 
 (easy 

 example is clamav, but there  are others).
 
   Can someone explain or point me to where I can read  about the distinction 
 between what is and is not subjected to automatic  upgrade?

More info: yum-updatesd is running and I do not have yum-cron.  yum-updatesd 
does a fine job from what I can tell, but I still cannot understand what 
criteria it applies to know which packages get upgraded and which do not.  (?)  


The yum-updatesd configuration file is ultra-simple, so that doesn't seem to be 
where the update choice/distinction is being made.

There seem to be people posting in various places that they prefer to use 
yum-cron, but I have no problems with yum-updatesd and I suspect yum-cron 
wouldn't address/answer my question anyway.

Help?

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Re: [CentOS] Understanding yum automatic upgrades

2011-04-05 Thread Kai Schaetzl
Simple answer: yum update will update *all* packages in the repo's that 
are *enabled*.

Kai


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Re: [CentOS] Understanding yum automatic upgrades

2011-04-05 Thread Ljubomir Ljubojevic

email builder wrote:
 Hello,
 
   Sorry if this is somewhat naive, but I'm a little confused as to what the 
 criteria is for that which will get upgraded automatically by yum and what 
 will 
 not.
 
   I see in our logwatch messages from time to time that yum upgraded a bunch 
 of 
 stuff, but I also notice that yum will not upgrade other packages at all 
 (easy 
 example is clamav, but there are others).
 
   Can someone explain or point me to where I can read about the distinction 
 between what is and is not subjected to automatic upgrade?
 

Automatic upgrade (if yum upgrade is run), will upgrade all newer rpm 
packages that are in *enabled* repositories. If you installed from 
external repository that you keep disabled, those packages will not be 
automatically upgraded.

Ljubomir
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Re: [CentOS] Understanding yum automatic upgrades

2011-04-05 Thread Brian Mathis
On Tue, Apr 5, 2011 at 6:14 PM, email builder emailbuilde...@yahoo.com wrote:
 Sorry if this is somewhat naive, but I'm a little confused  as to what the
 criteria is for that which will get upgraded automatically by  yum and what
 will not.

 I see in our logwatch messages from  time to time that yum upgraded
 a bunch of stuff, but I also notice that yum  will not upgrade other
 packages at all (easy example is clamav, but there  are others).

  Can someone explain or point me to where I can read  about the distinction
 between what is and is not subjected to automatic  upgrade?

 More info: yum-updatesd is running and I do not have yum-cron.  yum-updatesd
 does a fine job from what I can tell, but I still cannot understand what
 criteria it applies to know which packages get upgraded and which do not.  (?)

 The yum-updatesd configuration file is ultra-simple, so that doesn't seem to 
 be
 where the update choice/distinction is being made.

 There seem to be people posting in various places that they prefer to use
 yum-cron, but I have no problems with yum-updatesd and I suspect yum-cron
 wouldn't address/answer my question anyway.

 Help?


Yum-updatesd does not automatically install packages (unless you
configure it to), it only notifies you of ones that need updating.  If
no one is manually doing it, and you don't have do_update = yes in
/etc/yum/yum-updatesd.conf, then you have installed something else
that is performing the updates automatically.

Are you sure the updates are actually getting installed, and it's not
just noise in the log from yum-updatesd?


// Brian Mathis


P.S. The yum log doesn't have the year in the timestamp, and if it's
not active it might not get rotated by logrotate.  This can cause
false messages sent from logwatch about packages that were installed
last year.
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Re: [CentOS] Understanding yum automatic upgrades

2011-04-05 Thread email builder

  Sorry if this is somewhat naive, but I'm a little confused   as to what the

  criteria is for that which will get upgraded  automatically by  yum and 
what
  will not.
 
  I  see in our logwatch messages from  time to time that yum upgraded
  a  bunch of stuff, but I also notice that yum  will not upgrade other
   packages at all (easy example is clamav, but there  are  others).
 
   Can someone explain or point me to where I can  read  about the 
distinction
  between what is and is not subjected to  automatic  upgrade?
 
  More info: yum-updatesd is running and I do  not have yum-cron. 
 yum-updatesd
  does a fine job from what I can tell,  but I still cannot understand what
  criteria it applies to know which  packages get upgraded and which do not. 
 (?)
 
  The yum-updatesd  configuration file is ultra-simple, so that doesn't seem 
  to 
be
  where the  update choice/distinction is being made.
 
  There seem to be people  posting in various places that they prefer to use
  yum-cron, but I have  no problems with yum-updatesd and I suspect yum-cron
  wouldn't  address/answer my question anyway.
 
  Help?
 
 Yum-updatesd  does not automatically install packages (unless you
 configure it to), it only  notifies you of ones that need updating.  If
 no one is manually doing  it, and you don't have do_update = yes in
 /etc/yum/yum-updatesd.conf, then  you have installed something else
 that is performing the updates  automatically.

It does look like updates are happening, but it's not clear to me by whom.  
do_update is set to no, but notification is by dbus, so I assumed that 
dbus is notifying another process to do the actual updates.  Is there a way I 
can track that down?

 Are you sure the updates are actually getting installed,  and it's not
 just noise in the log from yum-updatesd?

Well, if I can take it at its word, updates *are* happening.  Here is a snippet 
I clipped out of a logwatch a few months ago:

 - yum Begin  

 
 Packages Updated:
php-dba - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
php - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
php-devel - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
php-cli - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
php-common - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
php-gd - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
php-pdo - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
php-mysql - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
 
 -- yum End -

 P.S. The yum log doesn't have the year in the timestamp, and  if it's
 not active it might not get rotated by logrotate.  This can  cause
 false messages sent from logwatch about packages that were  installed
 last  year.

Hmm, is there a known fix for this?

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Re: [CentOS] Understanding yum automatic upgrades

2011-04-05 Thread email builder
Sorry if this is  somewhat naive, but I'm a little confused as to what 
  the 


  criteria is  for that which will get upgraded automatically by yum and what 
will 

   not.
  
I see in our logwatch messages from time to time  that yum upgraded a 
  bunch 
of 

  stuff, but I also notice that yum will not  upgrade other packages at all 
(easy 

  example is clamav, but there are  others).
  
Can someone explain or point me to where I can  read about the 
  distinction 

  between what is and is not subjected to  automatic upgrade?
  
 
 Automatic upgrade (if yum upgrade is run),  will upgrade all newer rpm 
 packages that are in *enabled* repositories. If  you installed from 
 external repository that you keep disabled, those  packages will not be 
 automatically  upgraded.

Well, as I mentioned, yum-updatesd is running and doing the automatic updates.  
I'm specifically referring to the automatic updates and not manual command line 
updates by me.

But assuming that yum-updatesd does the same thing as yum upgrade (how do I 
confirm this?), then the outstanding question is how to figure out why certain 
packages are not being updated.

To take my easy example, clamav, when I need to update clamav, I have to go to 
the command line and do a yum upgrade clamav and it works as expected.  
Doesn't that mean its repo is enabled?  If so, why isn't yum-updatesd updating 
it for me?  If not, how do I find which repo it's coming from so I can enable 
it?  (yum info just says installed for the Repo field).

TIA!

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Re: [CentOS] Understanding yum automatic upgrades

2011-04-05 Thread Brian Mathis
On Tue, Apr 5, 2011 at 7:40 PM, email builder emailbuilde...@yahoo.com wrote:
  Sorry if this is somewhat naive, but I'm a little confused   as to what 
  the
  criteria is for that which will get upgraded  automatically by  yum and
 what
  will not.
 
  I  see in our logwatch messages from  time to time that yum upgraded
  a  bunch of stuff, but I also notice that yum  will not upgrade other
   packages at all (easy example is clamav, but there  are  others).
 
   Can someone explain or point me to where I can  read  about the
 distinction
  between what is and is not subjected to  automatic  upgrade?
 
  More info: yum-updatesd is running and I do  not have yum-cron.
  yum-updatesd
  does a fine job from what I can tell,  but I still cannot understand what
  criteria it applies to know which  packages get upgraded and which do not.
 (?)
 
  The yum-updatesd  configuration file is ultra-simple, so that doesn't seem 
  to
be
  where the  update choice/distinction is being made.
 
  There seem to be people  posting in various places that they prefer to use
  yum-cron, but I have  no problems with yum-updatesd and I suspect yum-cron
  wouldn't  address/answer my question anyway.
 
  Help?

 Yum-updatesd  does not automatically install packages (unless you
 configure it to), it only  notifies you of ones that need updating.  If
 no one is manually doing  it, and you don't have do_update = yes in
 /etc/yum/yum-updatesd.conf, then  you have installed something else
 that is performing the updates  automatically.

 It does look like updates are happening, but it's not clear to me by whom.
 do_update is set to no, but notification is by dbus, so I assumed that
 dbus is notifying another process to do the actual updates.  Is there a way 
 I
 can track that down?

 Are you sure the updates are actually getting installed,  and it's not
 just noise in the log from yum-updatesd?

 Well, if I can take it at its word, updates *are* happening.  Here is a 
 snippet
 I clipped out of a logwatch a few months ago:

  - yum Begin 


  Packages Updated:
    php-dba - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
    php - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
    php-devel - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
    php-cli - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
    php-common - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
    php-gd - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
    php-pdo - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
    php-mysql - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386

  -- yum End -

 P.S. The yum log doesn't have the year in the timestamp, and  if it's
 not active it might not get rotated by logrotate.  This can  cause
 false messages sent from logwatch about packages that were  installed
 last  year.

 Hmm, is there a known fix for this?


Rotate the log file yourself once a year.  You can check if you are
seeing this bug by looking at the /var/log/yum.log last modified time.
 If it was yesterday, then I suppose the packages were installed.

As far as your other questions, how does it determine what packages to
update, I think you will find it's not actually doing any updating.  I
have not used yum-updatesd to auto-update packages myself, but I would
think it would automatically install any updated package.


// Brian Mathis
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Re: [CentOS] Understanding yum automatic upgrades

2011-04-05 Thread email builder

   Sorry if this is somewhat naive, but I'm a little  confused   as to 
   what 
the

   criteria is for that which will  get upgraded  automatically by  yum and
  what
   will  not.
  
   I  see in our logwatch messages  from  time to time that yum upgraded
   a  bunch of stuff, but  I also notice that yum  will not upgrade other
packages at  all (easy example is clamav, but there  are  others).
   
Can someone explain or point me to where I can   read  about the
  distinction
   between what is and is  not subjected to  automatic  upgrade?
  
   More  info: yum-updatesd is running and I do  not have yum-cron.
yum-updatesd
   does a fine job from what I can tell,  but I  still cannot understand 
what
   criteria it applies to know which   packages get upgraded and which do 
not.
  (?)
   
   The yum-updatesd  configuration file is ultra-simple, so  that doesn't 
seem to
 be
   where the  update  choice/distinction is being made.
  
   There seem  to be people  posting in various places that they prefer to 
use
yum-cron, but I have  no problems with yum-updatesd and I suspect  
yum-cron
   wouldn't  address/answer my question  anyway.
  
   Help?
 
   Yum-updatesd  does not automatically install packages (unless you
   configure it to), it only  notifies you of ones that need updating.   If
  no one is manually doing  it, and you don't have do_update =  yes in
  /etc/yum/yum-updatesd.conf, then  you have installed  something else
  that is performing the updates   automatically.
 
  It does look like updates are happening, but  it's not clear to me by whom.
  do_update is set to no, but notification  is by dbus, so I assumed that
  dbus is notifying another process to  do the actual updates.  Is there a 
way I
  can track that  down?
 
  Are you sure the updates are actually getting  installed,  and it's not
  just noise in the log from  yum-updatesd?
 
  Well, if I can take it at its word, updates *are*  happening.  Here is a 
snippet
  I clipped out of a logwatch a few months  ago:
 
   - yum Begin  
 
 
   Packages Updated:
  php-dba - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
 php - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
  php-devel - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
 php-cli -  5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
 php-common - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
  php-gd - 5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
 php-pdo -  5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
 php-mysql -  5.1.6-27.el5_5.3.i386
 
   -- yum End  -
 
  P.S. The yum log doesn't have the  year in the timestamp, and  if it's
  not active it might not get  rotated by logrotate.  This can  cause
  false messages sent from  logwatch about packages that were  installed
  last   year.
 
  Hmm, is there a known fix for this?
 
 
 Rotate the  log file yourself once a year.  You can check if you are
 seeing this bug  by looking at the /var/log/yum.log last modified time.
  If it was yesterday,  then I suppose the packages were installed.
 
 As far as your other  questions, how does it determine what packages to
 update, I think you will  find it's not actually doing any updating.  I
 have not used yum-updatesd  to auto-update packages myself, but I would
 think it would automatically  install any updated package.

It's dated a couple days ago, so I'd say it's doing what it's supposed to.  I'm 
not sure what the dbus notification does, but I presume it's telling someone 
to do the updating.  It'd probably be more informative if I could understand 
who 
is picking up such notifications.

Do you know how to determine which repo a particular package is from?  For 
example, when I do yum info against clamav (which isn't receiving automatic 
updates), it just says Repo: installed.  I don't know what repo it comes from.

Thanks much

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