Miles O'Neal wrote:
Connie Sieh said...
|Sorry but that is the way TUV has it coded and I agree with them for
|taking it out. I actually like the idea of not allowing a "Everything"
|install. It installs things that exist but are not configured and can
|lead to security issues since they are are not configured. It is also
|hard to support as some packages just conflict.
|
|In the past when it was hard to install packages after a install was done
|I can see how this option could be useful. Today with yum and the gui
|yum front ends making it easy to install packages later I do not see the
|real need for this.
The thing is, some of us like a one step installation
process. Every time I have ever used anything less
than everything (with one exception, see below) it has
caused lots of problems. Inevitably things failed
because of dependancy problems someone missed along
the way, and some package we expected to be somewhere
wasn't, so it took a lot of extra effort. These have
bitten us many times over the years; loading "Everything"
never bit us with conflicts.
I have spent quite some time fixing obscure problems with updates on
machines that had suffered an "Everything" install, so I see it as a
good news that that option is gone now...
Matthias