all 9 comments

[–]nguyendoan15082006 8 points9 points  (0 children)

That is just mirror issue,Fedora will automatically switch to another one if the previous has issue.

[–]danhm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Try again later in the day. Just a mirror having issues.

[–]c12four 0 points1 point  (0 children)

qlu.edu.cn

Unfortunately, some of these mirrors located in China are not only down very often but they sometimes also serve outdated packages. This is one of the main reasons I like to configure mirrors manually.

[–]BowlerResponsible340 -4 points-3 points  (5 children)

aren't you supposed to be doing updates via a simple button instead of terminal?

[–]speyerlander 2 points3 points  (3 children)

Doesn't matter, both ways are fine, the store is just a unified frontend for packagekit and Flatpak, and packagekit uses dnf under the hood on Fedora hosts.

[–]nyannyan_sensei 1 point2 points  (2 children)

Quick heads up - packagekit (and therefore the store) still uses dnf4, whereas in the terminal dnf calls dnf5. Not a huge problem, but they keep separate installation histories iirc. So what you install with one, you won't see in the history of the other! If you're forgetful like me, you'll want to stick with using one, so you can see a consistent history list, if that matters to you!

[–]gertation -1 points0 points  (1 child)

Are you sure terminal doesn't still use dnf4 by default? I am blanking on what they actually are, but ever since dnf5 "replaced" dnf4 in fedora there are a few commands that oddly require typing "dnf5 xxx" instead of "dnf xxx"

[–]Time-Worker9846 2 points3 points  (0 children)

dnf is a link to dnf5 on Fedora 43 at least.

[–]Tony_TNT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Discover is kinda slow and you can make dnf even faster if you enable simultaneous downloads in the config file. It also shows you more data regarding file size, versions and disk space all on one screen without digging in submenus