The other day I had a closer look at the zypper logs (well, I was digging for a time-history of installed packages). First … damn does zypper produce a *lot* of logs on a “productive” (or rather on a maintained – as in up-to-date) system.
But glazing over the logs, I found out something new about zypper. It actually has an internal list, which only purpose is to identify a trusted vendor …
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[zypp::VendorAttr] VendorAttr.cc(VendorAttr):128 Trusted Vendors: { [zypp::VendorAttr] VendorAttr.cc(VendorAttr):128 ati technologies inc. [zypp::VendorAttr] VendorAttr.cc(VendorAttr):128 jpackage project [zypp::VendorAttr] VendorAttr.cc(VendorAttr):128 novell [zypp::VendorAttr] VendorAttr.cc(VendorAttr):128 nvidia [zypp::VendorAttr] VendorAttr.cc(VendorAttr):128 opensuse [zypp::VendorAttr] VendorAttr.cc(VendorAttr):128 sgi [zypp::VendorAttr] VendorAttr.cc(VendorAttr):128 silicon graphics [zypp::VendorAttr] VendorAttr.cc(VendorAttr):128 suse [zypp::VendorAttr] VendorAttr.cc(VendorAttr):128 } |
As you can see from the log, the list of trusted vendors is:
- ati technologies inc.
- jpackage project
- novell
- nvidia
- opensuse
- sgi
- silicon graphics
- suse