> On 07/14/13 09:39, Powell, Michael wrote:
> >> On 07/14/13 07:30, Powell, Michael wrote:
> >>> Greshko, Ed wrote:>
> >>>> /var/log/yum.log has date/time updates were applied
> >>> Thanks, Ed. Unfortunately I don't need a timestamp of when the
> >> updates were applied to the machine, but instead, I need a timestamp
> >> of when those updates were posted to the yum server. My thought is
> >> that since I know 191 updates of the 214 worked a few days ago, if I
> >> can narrow down to the newest 23 packages, I might be able to find
> >> the trouble maker.
> >>
> >> I'm not aware of a way to do it via yum.  But, you could always do
> it
> >> manually by connecting to an update server via ftp or http and
> >> checking the dates.  Should give you an idea.
> > Thanks, Ed! I've narrowed it down:
> >
> > - xorg-x11-server-Xorg-1.14.2-3.fc19.x86_64.rpm
> > - xorg-x11-server-common-1.14.2-3.fc19.x86_64.rpm
> >
> > One or both of those packages hose my machine. I'm going to put xorg-
> x11-server* in my yum.conf for a while to avoid any more issues.
> >
> > Maybe I'll open a bug report, but I'm sure without some more info it
> wouldn't help.
> 
> If you can duplicate the problem you really should open a bugzilla.
> You may not know what additional information is needed.....but if more
> info is needed you'll be asked to provide it by the person assigned.

Looks like someone beat me to it :) 
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=984121
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