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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Where can i find staroffice or any other kind office program for unix or linux? Post 15878 by killerserv on Wednesday 20th of February 2002 07:30:57 PM
Old 02-20-2002
Houcous, did you installed Linux from the CD ( retail buy) ? If yes you buy from outside, there should be 2 CD's one is the main installation of the OS cd and another is the Packages cd. All sorts of Packages in it. Check out staroffice in it. I can able to find staroffice in the cd(RH Linux 7.2).
Give a try..
Smilie
 

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dpkg-scanpackages(1)                                                dpkg suite                                                dpkg-scanpackages(1)

NAME
dpkg-scanpackages - create Packages index files SYNOPSIS
dpkg-scanpackages [option...] binary-path [override-file [path-prefix]] > Packages DESCRIPTION
dpkg-scanpackages sorts through a tree of Debian binary packages and creates a Packages file, used by apt(8), dselect(1), etc, to tell the user what packages are available for installation. These Packages files are the same as those found on Debian archive sites and CD-ROMs. You might use dpkg-scanpackages yourself if making a directory of local packages to install on a cluster of machines. Note: If you want to access the generated Packages file with apt you will probably need to compress the file with xz(1) (generating a Packages.xz file), bzip2(1) (generating a Packages.bz2 file) or gzip(1) (generating a Packages.gz file). apt ignores uncompressed Packages files except on local access (i.e. file:// sources). binary-path is the name of the tree of the binary packages to process (for example, contrib/binary-i386). It is best to make this relative to the root of the Debian archive, because every Filename field in the new Packages file will start with this string. override-file is the name of a file to read which contains information about how the package fits into the distribution (the file can be compressed since dpkg 1.15.5); see deb-override(5). path-prefix is an optional string to be prepended to the Filename fields. If more than one version of a package is found only the newest one is included in the output. If they have the same version and only differ in architecture only the first one found is used. OPTIONS
-t, --type type Scan for *.type packages, instead of *.deb. -e, --extra-override file Scan file to find supplementary overrides (the file can be compressed since dpkg 1.15.5). See deb-extra-override(5) for more information on its format. -a, --arch arch Use a pattern consisting of *_all.deb and *_arch.deb instead of scanning for all debs. -h, --hash hash-list Only generate file hashes for the comma-specified list specified (since dpkg 1.17.14). The default is to generate all currently supported hashes. Supported values: md5, sha1, sha256. -m, --multiversion Include all found packages in the output. -M, --medium id-string Add an X-Medium field containing the value id-string (since dpkg 1.15.5). This field is required if you want to generate Packages.cd files for use by the multicd access method of dselect. -?, --help Show the usage message and exit. --version Show the version and exit. DIAGNOSTICS
dpkg-scanpackages outputs the usual self-explanatory errors. It also warns about packages that are in the wrong subdirectory, are duplicated, have a Filename field in their control file, are missing from the override file, or have maintainer substitutions which do not take effect. SEE ALSO
dpkg(1), dselect(1), deb-override(5), deb-extra-override(5), dpkg-scansources(1). 1.19.0.5 2018-04-16 dpkg-scanpackages(1)
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