Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: installing software
Operating Systems Linux SuSE installing software Post 302236822 by starlimac on Tuesday 16th of September 2008 10:31:47 AM
Old 09-16-2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by sysgate
starlimac, you're wrong, yum doesn't come with SuSE by default, though you can have it working, allegedly - here's an article.
Yes sysgate , you are right

sorry , I always used DEBIANSmilie
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

installing software

when i d/l files from net "/usr/port/editor/koffice then make" i don't know what excactly have to do after when it finnished d/l it and configure i guess what its done downloading file it configures :confused: the file what do i have to do next I use FREEBSD 4.5 (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: challenger
3 Replies

2. UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers

installing new software

Hello, I recently downloaded and installed fedora core 3, and I am triyng to install other software like movie players and so on, when ever I download software for this operating system, I recieve with the software a text file explaining how to install it. The installation instrucions are allways... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: st_matan
1 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Installing Software

Hi all, So I remotly log on to one of the unix boxes we have at work. I want to use a software that is not installed on the server. What's better? to install it locally in my home folder and use it, or to ask the system admin to install it on the server? and what's the main difference? I asuume... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Rachel Ross
1 Replies

4. UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers

Installing software

Greetings, all. I'm a newcomer here, and I appreciate the forum to ask questions. Here is the situation: I am installing software on a network hard-drive (NAS), to add functionality to it. The OS is in a read-only flash partition. Someone else hacked the firmware to install Busybox on this... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jhansen
1 Replies

5. Solaris

How to decide installing a Software group

Hello, I need to install a Jboss AS 4.2 asap. But I dont want to use the GUI. I need to install a solaris 10 server with the minimal packages but I dont know how deep I should customize and select the packages. You guys , how you decide to select a package installation level ? Each server's... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: shadowfaxxxx
7 Replies

6. Red Hat

Erro in Installing OPENOFFICE SOFTWARE

Dear All I want to install openoffice on my redhat 5.1 linux os. open office folder is already extracted on Desktop. #cd Desktop/OOO310_m11_native_packed-2_en-US.9399 #./setup After run the setup command, i am getting the Error mentioned below.Please any body can help me. ERROR:- ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sahu.tapan
1 Replies

7. Solaris

Problem installing the software HDLM

I'm trying to install the software HDLM (Hitachi Dynamic Link Manager) and is presenting the following message: -Bash-3.00 #./Installhdlm In KAPL09187-W parameter is specified. I do not know which parameter is that? (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: to.brunoaugusto
3 Replies

8. Solaris

Help installing WINE and other software

ive installed the open solaris 9 and i have downloaded wine but i dont have a clue how to install it ive unzipd the file but when i click it it just does nothing it opens but its just files im new to solaris i would realy like to know how to install and run programs like vlc player and things any... (19 Replies)
Discussion started by: drdex
19 Replies

9. HP-UX

Installing software other than default directory

Hi, I'm using the command(swinstall -s product.pkg product1.cbin) to install software(product1). Here by default the installation is happening on the location(/opt/). Whereas I want the installation directory to be a different one (eg. /sw/). Is there any specific command which will help me to... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Thunderbird288
1 Replies

10. Solaris

Installing software -going insane

I have Solaris 10 update 11 installed on a virtual machine which I use for my lunix class (I'm studying I.T. but have little unix experience). So I have root access* I'm also do C programming in my course and would love to do it on my Solaris machine. So I looked into installing GCC and... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: goformickey
5 Replies
DH_INSTALL(1)							     Debhelper							     DH_INSTALL(1)

NAME
dh_install - install files into package build directories SYNOPSIS
dh_install [-Xitem] [--autodest] [--sourcedir=dir] [debhelperoptions] [file|dir...destdir] DESCRIPTION
dh_install is a debhelper program that handles installing files into package build directories. There are many dh_install* commands that handle installing specific types of files such as documentation, examples, man pages, and so on, and they should be used when possible as they often have extra intelligence for those particular tasks. dh_install, then, is useful for installing everything else, for which no particular intelligence is needed. It is a replacement for the old dh_movefiles command. This program may be used in one of two ways. If you just have a file or two that the upstream Makefile does not install for you, you can run dh_install on them to move them into place. On the other hand, maybe you have a large package that builds multiple binary packages. You can use the upstream Makefile to install it all into debian/tmp, and then use dh_install to copy directories and files from there into the proper package build directories. From debhelper compatibility level 7 on, dh_install will fall back to looking in debian/tmp for files, if it doesn't find them in the current directory (or whereever you've told it to look using --sourcedir). FILES
debian/package.install List the files to install into each package and the directory they should be installed to. The format is a set of lines, where each line lists a file or files to install, and at the end of the line tells the directory it should be installed in. The name of the files (or directories) to install should be given relative to the current directory, while the installation directory is given relative to the package build directory. You may use wildcards in the names of the files to install (in v3 mode and above). Note that if you list exactly one filename or wildcard-pattern on a line by itself, with no explicit destination, then dh_install will automatically guess the destination to use, the same as if the --autodest option were used. OPTIONS
--list-missing This option makes dh_install keep track of the files it installs, and then at the end, compare that list with the files in the source directory. If any of the files (and symlinks) in the source directory were not installed to somewhere, it will warn on stderr about that. This may be useful if you have a large package and want to make sure that you don't miss installing newly added files in new upstream releases. Note that files that are excluded from being moved via the -X option are not warned about. --fail-missing This option is like --list-missing, except if a file was missed, it will not only list the missing files, but also fail with a nonzero exit code. -Xitem, --exclude=item Exclude files that contain item anywhere in their filename from being installed. --sourcedir=dir Look in the specified directory for files to be installed. Note that this is not the same as the --sourcedirectory option used by the dh_auto_* commands. You rarely need to use this option, since dh_install automatically looks for files in debian/tmp in debhelper compatibility level 7 and above. --autodest Guess as the destination directory to install things to. If this is specified, you should not list destination directories in debian/package.install files or on the command line. Instead, dh_install will guess as follows: Strip off debian/tmp (or the sourcedir if one is given) from the front of the filename, if it is present, and install into the dirname of the filename. So if the filename is debian/tmp/usr/bin, then that directory will be copied to debian/package/usr/. If the filename is debian/tmp/etc/passwd, it will be copied to debian/package/etc/. file|dir ... destdir Lists files (or directories) to install and where to install them to. The files will be installed into the first package dh_install acts on. LIMITATIONS
dh_install cannot rename files or directories, it can only install them with the names they already have into wherever you want in the package build tree. SEE ALSO
debhelper(7) This program is a part of debhelper. AUTHOR
Joey Hess <joeyh@debian.org> 9.20120909 2012-05-08 DH_INSTALL(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:13 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy