My install of Fedora 33 was done using a nightly version on October 9, that was built back in July ( according to $ rpm -qi basesystem )
Do I need to do anything to it to clean it up ?
I did a "dnf clean all," and I already forgot if it deleted anything.
Second question,
I just did an update, and got the new kernel. So am I fully in Fedora 33 stable now ?
[david@localhost ~]$ sudo dnf repolist
repo id repo name fedora Fedora 33 - x86_64 fedora-cisco-openh264 Fedora 33 openh264 (From Cisco) - x86_64 fedora-modular Fedora Modular 33 - x86_64 updates Fedora 33 - x86_64 - Updates updates-modular Fedora Modular 33 - x86_64 - Updates
Am I still a Fedora novice ? If this were the B.S.A., I would be a "Tenderfoot." Right ?
David Locklear
On Tue, 3 Nov 2020 03:43:26 -0600 David dlocklear01@gmail.com wrote:
My install of Fedora 33 was done using a nightly version on October 9, that was built back in July ( according to $ rpm -qi basesystem )
Do I need to do anything to it to clean it up ?
The update you did below will clean it up.
Second question,
I just did an update, and got the new kernel. So am I fully in Fedora 33 stable now ?
What does uname -r show? If the running kernel shows fc33, you are in F33.
[david@localhost ~]$ sudo dnf repolist repo id repo name fedora Fedora 33 -
x86_64 fedora-cisco-openh264 Fedora 33 openh264 (From Cisco)
- x86_64 fedora-modular Fedora Modular 33 -
x86_64 updates Fedora 33 - x86_64 - Updates updates-modular Fedora Modular 33 - x86_64 - Updates
Because you are using the F33 repos, it is almost certain that you are in F33. Do all the rpms that dnf installs have fc33 in their name?
On 11/3/20 1:43 AM, David wrote:
I did a "dnf clean all," and I already forgot if it deleted anything.
All this does is remove any metadata files and already downloaded packages. You generally don't want to run that, because next time you run dnf, it will have to download *all* the metadata files again.