Talk:Yum

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Revision as of 00:06, 10 June 2008 by 76.115.84.114 (talk) (man and info , and what is {package}?)
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My OLPC installation doesn't seem to have "man".

That is correct.--Mokurai 14:09, 7 January 2008 (EST)

How do we get packages?

yum install <package name>

"info yum" doesn't show any useful information.

Repositories

This page needs to document how to add a repository. Where is yum.conf?--Mokurai 14:09, 7 January 2008 (EST)

yum? yuck!

I got brave and made some changes to the article itself, making some of my comments below obsolete.

(my background: I worked with various unix's from about 1980 to 1995, participated in G1G1 to learn a bit about olpc. The machine is nice, but my experience so far has not been very good. I am on this page now because I was at: http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Terminal_Activity and was reading about:

{{ Common Terminal Commands
   * sugar-control-panel - Change nickname, XO Color, time zone and other options
   * ifconfig - View Wireless Network connections
   * nano for editing text files directly. If you want to edit text files in Sugar, use Write.
   * yum for automatically installing new software.
   * rpm - another way to automatically install new software
   * olpc-logbat - log the activity of the battery system. Useful for assisting developers in debugging battery problems.
}}

and I want to learn about yum and what can I install and how )

If "man" is not on olpc, why does the article page say to use it?


So I tried "info yum", and it looked like emacs came up, and the help it gave didn't help at all. Most people won't how to quit if they get put into emacs or vi inadvertantly. I had mostly used vi 10-20 years ago, I know :q!, but I'm not sure in emacs. I thought it might be ctrl-q ctrl-q, or ctrl-c ctrl-q, I did ctrl-q twice, and the terminal process died.

The article page should not tell novice users to run "info".


What I really want to know about yum is what <package>'s can be installed. Are there a bunch of packages that come with olpc, or do I first have to download them first?

Can I (uh, what is the syntax and command line options for yum, I want to view the previous window, but if I go back, I will probably lose all this text I have just typed... (I can copy and go back, not being able to view more than one window at a time, not having tabbed browsing, and not even being able to quickly flip between windows is making "sugar" more difficult to use than it should be...) Anyways, can I

yum -install opera

yum -install firefox

yum -install XP #just joking