Hi, Newbie here... :) I've installed Centos 3.1 with selecting Custom Packages. Now, I want to install some packages not installed the first time. The manual says that I can use redhat-config-packages but there are no packages that's not installed, just installed packages. So, I can only remove packages.... So, how do I install addtional packages from CD without having to reinstall? I've tried installing manually by opening the RPMs but it always complain about dependency... Thanks, Yayan
> Hi,Try installing from the cd with the following command: "rpm -i --aid whatever-package.rpm" in the RPMS directory of the CD. However if you are connected to the internet, try the more convenient "yum install whatever-package". Use "yum list available" to see the list of available packages. Hope this helps: Miklos> > Newbie here... :) > > I've installed Centos 3.1 with selecting Custom Packages. > Now, I want to install some packages not installed the first time. > > The manual says that I can use redhat-config-packages but there are no > packages that's not installed, just installed packages. So, I can only > remove packages.... > > So, how do I install addtional packages from CD without having to > reinstall? I've tried installing manually by opening the RPMs but it always > complain about dependency... > > Thanks, > Yayan > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at caosity.org > http://www.caosity.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
On Thu, 2004-04-29 at 05:15, Yayan wrote:> Hi, > > Newbie here... :) > > I've installed Centos 3.1 with selecting Custom Packages. > Now, I want to install some packages not installed the first time. > > The manual says that I can use redhat-config-packages but there are no > packages that's not installed, just installed packages. So, I can only > remove packages.... > > So, how do I install addtional packages from CD without having to > reinstall? I've tried installing manually by opening the RPMs but it > always complain about dependency... >redhat-config-packages is not good for installing new packages if you have applied updates. (And sometimes even if you haven't). Use yum to do updates and to install new packages. The command: yum provides filename to figure out what package contains a file ... and the command: yum list package-name to provide release number and basic info about a package, and the command: yum info package-name to get more info about a package ... use the command: yum install package-name to install packages. The added advantage to using yum is that only updated packages are used...before getting started doing new packages, use the command: yum upgrade to get the latest upgrades... - Johnny Hughes -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20040429/81457241/attachment-0001.html>