I want to list all packages I have installed on a system from a given repo using yum. Usually to do this I use yum list installed | grep "something". But now I am faced with a problem. The repo I am interested in does not have that "something" for me to grep. The packages from that repo do not have any distinctive characteristics. How do I list them?

I looked through yum man pages but did not find anything. I wonder if there are other commands I could use.

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60% accept rate
Not programming. – leppie Jan 11 '11 at 6:34
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closed as off topic by Will Sep 8 '11 at 19:48

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2 Answers

Try

yum list installed | grep reponame

On one of my servers:

yum list installed | grep remi
ImageMagick2.x86_64                       6.6.5.10-1.el5.remi          installed
memcache.x86_64                          1.4.5-2.el5.remi             installed
mysql.x86_64                              5.1.54-1.el5.remi            installed
mysql-devel.x86_64                        5.1.54-1.el5.remi            installed
mysql-libs.x86_64                         5.1.54-1.el5.remi            installed
mysql-server.x86_64                       5.1.54-1.el5.remi            installed
mysqlclient15.x86_64                      5.0.67-1.el5.remi            installed
php.x86_64                                5.3.5-1.el5.remi             installed
php-cli.x86_64                            5.3.5-1.el5.remi             installed
php-common.x86_64                         5.3.5-1.el5.remi             installed
php-domxml-php4-php5.noarch               1.21.2-1.el5.remi            installed
php-fpm.x86_64                            5.3.5-1.el5.remi             installed
php-gd.x86_64                             5.3.5-1.el5.remi             installed
php-mbstring.x86_64                       5.3.5-1.el5.remi             installed
php-mcrypt.x86_64                         5.3.5-1.el5.remi             installed
php-mysql.x86_64                          5.3.5-1.el5.remi             installed
php-pdo.x86_64                            5.3.5-1.el5.remi             installed
php-pear.noarch                           1:1.9.1-6.el5.remi           installed
php-pecl-apc.x86_64                       3.1.6-1.el5.remi             installed
php-pecl-imagick.x86_64                   3.0.1-1.el5.remi.1           installed
php-pecl-memcache.x86_64                  3.0.5-1.el5.remi             installed
php-pecl-xdebug.x86_64                    2.1.0-1.el5.remi             installed
php-soap.x86_64                           5.3.5-1.el5.remi             installed
php-xml.x86_64                            5.3.5-1.el5.remi             installed
remi-release.noarch                       5-8.el5.remi                 installed

It works.

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Unfortunately this only works for repos that put something like "remi" on the end. rpmforge does work (they use "rf") but atrpms don't put anything on the end :/ – Hamish Downer Sep 8 '11 at 16:49
Also, re-reading the question, he says he normally does that, but can't in this case. – Hamish Downer Sep 8 '11 at 16:55
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On newer versions of yum, this information is stored in the "yumdb" when the package is installed. This is the only 100% accurate way to get the information, and you can use "yumdb search from_repo <repoid>"(or repoquery and grep -- don't grep yum output). However the command "find-repos-of-install" was part of yum-utils for a while which did the best guess without that information:

http://james.fedorapeople.org/yum/commands/find-repos-of-install.py

As floyd said, a lot of repos. include a unique "dist" tag in their release, and you can look for that ... however from what you said, I guess that isn't the case for you?

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Doing some research, it appears that yumdb is new in RHEL 6 (and CentOS 6) - so it is not available in older versions. – Hamish Downer Sep 8 '11 at 16:51
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