On Fri, 2007-10-26 at 23:09 +0200, Sebastian Brandt wrote:
Ben Kevan schrieb:
Also,
Just to lock it down to a certain repo you can do:
zypper update -t package -r Repo Name
Hi!
Is it only on my system, or is it necessary to identify the repository
by URL, and not by name?
Oh,
On Fri, 2007-10-26 at 20:37 +0100, David Bolt wrote:
On Fri, 26 Oct 2007, Aniruddha wrote:-
I think you are far to used to openSUSE :p. I mean searching and
installing from online repositories. With rpm -i you can only install
local rpm's ;)
FSVO local including packages hosted on web
On 27/10/2007, Aniruddha [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Can the rpm system offer something better (similar to above samples)? It
would be great if you can define repositories for usage with rpm.
RPM is a lower level tool than that, it is more equivalent to dpkg in
the debian world. Tools like zypper
On Sat, 27 Oct 2007, Aniruddha wrote:-
On Fri, 2007-10-26 at 20:37 +0100, David Bolt wrote:
FSVO local including packages hosted on web and/or FTP servers. You can
install packages using RPM by passing a URL(s). RPM will then download
the package(s), sort out the correct order of
n Sat, 2007-10-27 at 12:37 +0100, David Bolt wrote:
you mean something like:
rpm -i
http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/openSUSE:10.3/standard/
kdebase
Almost. You need to specify the actual package name.
That's what meant with kdebase ;)
This is hardly a working solution when
Patrick Shanahan wrote:
* Aniruddha [EMAIL PROTECTED] [10-26-07 12:25]:
I wonder how do search and install rpm's from the commandline? I know I
can run yast in curses mode but I am looking for something more basic.
smart
apt/apt-get
And our brand new zypper :O) see
On Fri, 2007-10-26 at 18:46 +0200, Jan Kupec wrote:
Aniruddha wrote:
I wonder how do search and install rpm's from the commandline? I know I
can run yast in curses mode but I am looking for something more basic.
In other words what is the openSUSE equivalent for:
Debian
aptitude
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
* Aniruddha [EMAIL PROTECTED] [10-26-07 12:25]:
I wonder how do search and install rpm's from the commandline? I know I
can run yast in curses mode but I am looking for something more basic.
smart
apt/apt-get
to search only:
pin
webpin
-
I wonder how do search and install rpm's from the commandline? I know I
can run yast in curses mode but I am looking for something more basic.
In other words what is the openSUSE equivalent for:
Debian
aptitude search $ (search in package names)
apt-cache search $ (search package descriptions)
On Fri, 2007-10-26 at 18:46 +0200, Jan Kupec wrote:
Aniruddha wrote:
I wonder how do search and install rpm's from the commandline? I know I
can run yast in curses mode but I am looking for something more basic.
In other words what is the openSUSE equivalent for:
Debian
aptitude
On Fri, 2007-10-26 at 18:22 +0200, Aniruddha wrote:
I wonder how do search and install rpm's from the commandline? I know I
can run yast in curses mode but I am looking for something more basic.
In other words what is the openSUSE equivalent for:
Debian
aptitude search $ (search in
Aniruddha wrote:
I wonder how do search and install rpm's from the commandline? I know I
can run yast in curses mode but I am looking for something more basic.
In other words what is the openSUSE equivalent for:
Debian
aptitude search $ (search in package names)
zypper search $
On Fri, 2007-10-26 at 18:46 +0200, Jan Kupec wrote:
see http://en.opensuse.org/Zypper and man zypper for more
Jano
How do I update my system using zypper? '# zypper update' yields
'Nothing to do.' while according to the 'openSUSE updater applet' I have
over 130 upgradable packages.
--
Aniruddha wrote:
How do I update my system using zypper? '# zypper update' yields
'Nothing to do.' while according to the 'openSUSE updater applet' I have
over 130 upgradable packages.
zypper update package
as told 1 times!
--
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional
On 26/10/2007, Aniruddha [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
zypper is really impressive! Does this belong to the core of openSUSE?
For example when during install I don't select any package for install
(including X11, yast2 KDE etc.), can I still rely on zypper?\
Zypper is in the base install, even if
2007/10/26, Aniruddha [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
How do I update my system using zypper? '# zypper update' yields
'Nothing to do.' while according to the 'openSUSE updater applet' I have
over 130 upgradable packages.
--
Whats the output of #zypper lu
--
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For
On Fri, 2007-10-26 at 18:33 +0100, Benji Weber wrote:
On 26/10/2007, Aniruddha [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
zypper is really impressive! Does this belong to the core of openSUSE?
For example when during install I don't select any package for install
(including X11, yast2 KDE etc.), can I still
On Fri, 2007-10-26 at 11:40 -0500, Bryen wrote:
I'm not sure what you mean by 'search' as it could mean many things.
Could you explain more indepth on that one?
As for installing an rpm package, simply type 'rpm -i (filename.rpm)'
Conversely, to uninstall, you would type 'rpm -e
On Fri, 2007-10-26 at 19:33 +0200, Erik Jakobsen wrote:
Aniruddha wrote:
How do I update my system using zypper? '# zypper update' yields
'Nothing to do.' while according to the 'openSUSE updater applet' I have
over 130 upgradable packages.
zypper update package
as told 1
On Friday 26 October 2007 10:33:39 am Aniruddha wrote:
On Fri, 2007-10-26 at 18:46 +0200, Jan Kupec wrote:
see http://en.opensuse.org/Zypper and man zypper for more
Jano
How do I update my system using zypper? '# zypper update' yields
'Nothing to do.' while according to the 'openSUSE
On Fri, 2007-10-26 at 11:17 -0700, Ben Kevan wrote:
Also,
Just to lock it down to a certain repo you can do:
zypper update -t package -r Repo Name
I am fiddling with the 'zypper update -t package -r Repo Name' I
really wonder if there isn't there a simpler way to:
'Make a solver run
On Fri, 26 Oct 2007, Aniruddha wrote:-
I think you are far to used to openSUSE :p. I mean searching and
installing from online repositories. With rpm -i you can only install
local rpm's ;)
FSVO local including packages hosted on web and/or FTP servers. You can
install packages using RPM by
Ben Kevan schrieb:
Also,
Just to lock it down to a certain repo you can do:
zypper update -t package -r Repo Name
Hi!
Is it only on my system, or is it necessary to identify the repository
by URL, and not by name?
Oh, I just see, the zypper Alias is *not* the yast2 package name ...
The
23 matches
Mail list logo