What is an rpm
Dear Colin Try man rpm if you have rpm installed. Also, there is extensive information on the rpm home page, http://www.rpm.org which includes a link to a downloadable free book called "Maximum rpm" ( 1997), which is now rather out of date, but still useful. You can install rpms on your system even if it is not rpm-based, I believe, but you do need the rpm program (rpm stands for Redhat Package Manager). Type rpm at your prompt and see what you get. To install an rpm you go $ rpm -Uvh something.rpm which is good, since -U stands for upgrades and makes backups of changed config files of the current package. vh just prints hash marks as the package is installed, I think. (But check this command is correct before using it. I just did so and it looks OK). There are other programs which will provide an interface for doing this, including Yast (on SuSE) and kpackage (if you have KDE installed), and xrpm. I use Yast myself. rpm is cool because among other things it makes installing, removing and upgrading software clean and simple. It has other advantages too. Faheem.
On Mon, 22 May 2000, Colin Knowles wrote:
Forgive my ignorance, but I have not met an .rpm file before. How do I unpack it? Colin
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