Well, if you have the package with you, you can use the "rpm -qi" command as suggested. If it's in a Yum repository, you can check the same with "yum info pacakge_name". By default, yum installs 64 bit versions of packages for a 64 bit system.
But, if you do not have access to both of them, and if you know the executable ELF binary file which is being used by the web service deamon (you should know this as an SA), you can do a simple "file" command on that and will see output similar to the below if it's a 64 bit ELF (which necessarily comes from a 64 bit version of the package):
Hello everyone.
I bought a dell laptop (XPS M1330) online which came without a hard drive. There is a Windows Vista Ultimate OEMAct sticker with product key at the bottom case. I checked dell website (here) for this model and it says this model supports both 32 and 64-bit version of Windows... (4 Replies)
Hi,
Here is the issue. From the program snippet I have Base: 0x1800000000, Size: 0x3FFE7FFFFFFFF which are of 40 and 56 bits. SO I used use bignum to do the math but summing them up I always failed having correct result.
perl interpreter info,
perl, v5.8.8 built for... (0 Replies)
Hi all,
I'm looking to cover a corner case for an upcoming test cycle. Is there a way to boot a RedHat Advanced Server 4 (update 3) installed on a Power PC machine to use a 32 bit kernel? This would be similar to what is done here -> https://www.unix.com/aix/26204-aix-platform.html
I've done... (0 Replies)