11-17-2011
Normally, I would suggest a good backup and recovery process.
Many of these are not PATCHES per se. They are packages. Uninstalling them will not roll you back. They will be removed.
You will not be where you were if you do an rpm -e or yum remove.
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Hi,
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LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
yum-debug-restore
yum-debug-restore(1) yum-debug-restore(1)
NAME
yum-debug-restore - replay Yum transactions captured in a debug-dump file
SYNOPSIS
yum-debug-restore
DESCRIPTION
yum-debug-restore is a program which takes a gzipped file created by yum-debug-dump and acts on the information about installed packages
contained within.
GENERAL OPTIONS
--output
Output the commands that would be run to stdout.
--shell=<file>
Output the commands that would be run to a file.
--install-latest
Ask yum to install the latest version of the given packages, instead of the version that was installed in the debug-dump file.
--ignore-arch
Ignore the architecture of the packages, so you can "restore" an i386 debug-dump on an x86_64 machine.
--filter-types=[install,remove,update,downgrade]
Only perform the given types of commands, so you can filter to just upgrades and installs.
FILES
As yum-debug-restore uses YUM libraries for retrieving all the information, it relies on YUM configuration for its default values like
which repositories to use. Consult YUM documentation for details:
/etc/yum.conf
/etc/yum/repos.d/
/var/cache/yum/
SEE ALSO
yum-debug-dump (1)
yum.conf (5)
http://yum.baseurl.org/
AUTHORS
See the Authors file included with this program.
BUGS
There are of course no bugs, but should you find any, you should first consult the FAQ section on http://yum.baseurl.org/wiki/Faq and if
unsuccessful in finding a resolution contact the mailing list: yum-devel@lists.baseurl.org. To file a bug use http://bugzilla.redhat.com
for Fedora/RHEL/Centos related bugs and http://yum.baseurl.org/report for all other bugs.
James Antill 15 December 2011 yum-debug-restore(1)