Difference between revisions of "RPM"

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[[dnf Red Hat|dnf]]handles dependency solving, finding files on the network, repository management, and so on. RPM handles the lower-level part of actually putting the files on your system. In most cases as an end user, DNF is all you need to interact with.
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= Redhat Package Manager =
 
= Redhat Package Manager =
 
rpm is a powerful Package Manager, which can be used to build, install,query, verify, update, and erase individual software packages.  A pack-age  consists  of an archive of files and meta-data used to install and erase the archive files. The meta-data includes  helper  scripts,  file attributes,  and  descriptive  information about the package.  Packages come in two varieties: binary packages, used to encapsulate software to be  installed,  and  source  packages,  containing  the source code and recipe necessary to produce binary packages.
 
rpm is a powerful Package Manager, which can be used to build, install,query, verify, update, and erase individual software packages.  A pack-age  consists  of an archive of files and meta-data used to install and erase the archive files. The meta-data includes  helper  scripts,  file attributes,  and  descriptive  information about the package.  Packages come in two varieties: binary packages, used to encapsulate software to be  installed,  and  source  packages,  containing  the source code and recipe necessary to produce binary packages.

Revision as of 09:47, 20 February 2024

dnfhandles dependency solving, finding files on the network, repository management, and so on. RPM handles the lower-level part of actually putting the files on your system. In most cases as an end user, DNF is all you need to interact with.

Redhat Package Manager

rpm is a powerful Package Manager, which can be used to build, install,query, verify, update, and erase individual software packages. A pack-age consists of an archive of files and meta-data used to install and erase the archive files. The meta-data includes helper scripts, file attributes, and descriptive information about the package. Packages come in two varieties: binary packages, used to encapsulate software to be installed, and source packages, containing the source code and recipe necessary to produce binary packages.

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