Rpm: Difference between revisions
(→Querying installed packages: give an example) |
(new OLPC RPMs section) |
||
Line 52: | Line 52: | ||
You can read more about [[rpm]] at the [http://www.rpm.org/ rpm homepage]. |
You can read more about [[rpm]] at the [http://www.rpm.org/ rpm homepage]. |
||
== OLPC RPMs == |
|||
RPMs for OLPC [[OS images]] can be found at http://mock.laptop.org/repos/. Some RPMs for development builds are in http://xs-dev.laptop.org/~cscott/repos/. |
|||
[[Category:Package management]] [[Category:Linux software]] |
[[Category:Package management]] [[Category:Linux software]] |
Revision as of 03:51, 2 April 2009
'rpm' is a command-line utility for downloading, installing, and managing software packages that you run in the Terminal Activity. It is generally better to install packages via the yum utility, but not all software is available this way, so sometimes 'rpm' is the best option. If you are using 'rpm' to download software, the XO will need Wifi_Connectivity.
Querying installed packages
rpm is useful to determine what software is installed on the XO, and why.
rpm -q package
displays information about a package, but you have to know the package. You can query for all packages and search the output for a string:
rpm -qa | grep part
Then you can use rpm -q to query for information about a package, useful options to querying are -i, -l, --requires etc.
Example
There's a libpoppler library for PDF handling, is it on the XO, and what software uses it?
rpm -qa | grep poppler poppler-0.6.2.5.olpc3.i386 rpm -q --whatrequires poppler no package requires poppler Let's see if anything depends on its files rpm -q -l poppler /usr/lib/libpoppler-glib.so.2 ... ... rpm -q --whatrequires libpoppler-glib.so.2 poppler-0.6.2-5.olpc3.i386 sugar-evince-2.20..1-3.olpc3.i386 rpm -qi sugar-evince ... Summary : Document viewer Description: evince is a GNOME-based document viewer. This is the version developed for OLPC. It is built as a library to support embedding.
Note that Activities don't list their dependencies in rpm — the Read activity uses this Evince library.
Installing a package
Generally, you can install a package with 'rpm' like this:
sudo rpm -ivh 'desired_software_package.rpm'
That is, you use sudo to run a command as "superuser" (or "root"), and the command is 'rpm' to install the software. Note the single-quote characters (') around the filename. They are optional, but may be needed if the filename contains spaces or unusual characters.
You can also use 'rpm' to both download and install the software package in one step:
sudo rpm -ivh 'http://www.website.com/path/to/desired_software_package.rpm'
Sometimes 'rpm' has problems downloading the software package. You can try using wget to download the file, as it can sometimes download files that 'rpm' cannot:
wget 'http://www.website.com/path/to/desired_software_package.rpm' sudo rpm -ivh 'desired_software_package.rpm'
You can read more about rpm at the rpm homepage.
OLPC RPMs
RPMs for OLPC OS images can be found at http://mock.laptop.org/repos/. Some RPMs for development builds are in http://xs-dev.laptop.org/~cscott/repos/.