The question is how can I get full list of dependencies? I mean full list, not only 1lvl from yum deplist "package name"Full list you can see when you do yum install "packages name"
I have downloaded d4x download manager program but I do not know its dpendencies. I tried to install the single deb file with "Gdebi Package installer" but it showed an error of dependency. I downloaded that file too which itself could not be installed due to the same problem. The method of one by one file downloading was exhausting. Is there any program that accepts "d4x_2.5.7.1-5_amd64.deb" as input and givres me a full list of dependencies that must be saitisfied proior to installing the program with a single click? I want to give that list to a download manager.
The question is how can I get full list of dependencies? I mean full list, not only 1lvl from yum deplist "package name" Full list you can see when you do yum install "packages name"
I need this list to my script. So using "yum install" is a little dirty ;/
While trying to install a package using gpk-application ("Add/Remove Software" under System Tools), I accidentally checked the "Do not show this message again" checkbox, and now gpk-application does not list the package dependencies anymore.
I tried to go back to listing the dependencies, however, I could not find a way to do it. How do I revert to the default behavior, i.e., having gpk-application listing the dependencies again?
apt-cache show <package> shows also it's dependencies.yum info <package> does not show dependencies, but it obviously know them.How to ask yum for dependencies of specified package?
I have been trying to install clisp on one of our systems and get the error: Missing Dependency: libsigsegv.so.0()(64bit) for package: clisphowever, I have checked and the library libsigsegv-2.7-1.el5.rf.x86_64 and its associated header file package are, in fact,installed.
Yesterday I used the Live DVD's Rescue Mode to re-install Grub(2) in the MBR of my hard drive. Today, I am surprised to see a very different /etc/apt/sources.list file that only has one line, as follows:
Code: Select alldeb cdrom:[Debian GNU/Linux 8.2.0 _Jessie_ - Official amd64 DVD Binary-1 20150906-11:13]/ jessie contrib main
I installed the latest version of Centos 5.4.It came with Xen version 3.0.2 I think.I am running it on a Dell R510. It supports hardware virtualization.I was able to virtualize Windows XP and Windows 2003 server on it by selecting the install from DVD option.I was having problems trying to get a PCI DekTek card seen by the virtualized Windows domains so I tried to upgrade XEN to 3.4.2.I used the repos available from Gitmo and it went easy.
The only problem is now that when I try to create a "New virtual host" it only allows me to use HTTP, FTP option and not the iso or DVD option. They are greyed out. I was wondering if anyone has had this problem and might know a work around for the Xen 3.4.2 problem. Perhaps a better location for the kernel or something.
I am running 5.2; have not configured or installed anything special; and need to perform an update and get the dependencies installed, too. What is the best way to do that?
I'm trying to track down some dependencies for truecrypt,
libwx_baseu-2.8.so.0 is needed by truecrypt-6.3a-1.el5.i386 libwx_baseu-2.8.so.0(WXU_2.8) is needed by truecrypt-6.3a-1.el5.i386 libwx_gtk2u_adv-2.8.so.0 is needed by truecrypt-6.3a-1.el5.i386 libwx_gtk2u_adv-2.8.so.0(WXU_2.8) is needed by truecrypt-6.3a-1.el5.i386
The upstream provider is supplying samba3x (currently samba 3.3.8) packages in their supplementary repository. I know that most of what is in the supplementary repository is burdened with restrictive or non-free licenses, however, Samba is not.
The samba3x packages are critical for Windows Server 2008 trust relationships as well as Windows 7 client support for a CentOS server acting as a Windows domain controller. I know that I can either roll my own packages or compile from source, but an officially supported version would be a much better option on a production server.Is there any way CentOS can "officially" supply these packages and their associated dependencies?
I am attempting to write an rpm for railo-resin server. To the best of my knowledge the rpm is written correctly, however when I run "rpm -ivh rail-x.x.x.rpm" I get the following error. Quote:error: Failed dependencies: libodbc.so is needed by railo-3.1-2.i386 libodbcinst.so is needed by railo-3.1-2.i386
I am trying to install koha on centos 5.5. The manual tells me to install perl dependencies from companion CD. copy the usr_local.tar.gz to hard drive. But there are seven cd for centos. Which one is the right one for perl dependencies?
Been attempting to upgrade the PHP version to a VPS on Blacknight Ireland hosting (Blacknight Hosting) but am having trouble trying to install the yum package on CentOS 5.5. I've downloaded a suitable yum installer from the hosting companies own downloads site (which you'd presume would work with their CentOS version), uploaded and attempted to run. However, it fails with the following output:
[Code]...
Been reading from various sources through Google searches that these should already be preinstalled with CentOS? Can anyone point me in the right direction to get these?
I do encounter when I try to install this file: [root@mypc]# rpm -ivh sysstat-7.0.2-3.el5.i386.rpm warning: sysstat-7.0.2-3.el5.i386.rpm: V3 DSA signature: NOKEY, key ID 37017186 error: Failed dependencies: libc.so.6(GLIBC_2.4) is needed by sysstat-7.0.2-3.el5.i386 rtld(GNU_HASH) is needed by sysstat-7.0.2-3.el5.i386
Also when I try this also not work # yum install sysstat -bash: yum: command not found However the os and email server working fine on it. What should I check and try it.
I have installed centos 5 64 bit in my machine but all the dependencies like php, httpd, glibc, gcc, gd, openssl and others are 32 bit, I need them to be updated to 64 bit.
I am a newbie trying to install XMLSec on my server. I have CentOS 5 with OpenSSL 0.9.8b. I downloaded xmlsec1-1.0.3-1.i386.rpm from [URL]. While doing rpm -Uvh xmlsec1-1.0.3-1.i386.rpm I get the following error message.
error: Failed dependencies: libcrypto.so.4 is needed by xmlsec1-1.0.3-1.i386 libxml2.so.2 is needed by xmlsec1-1.0.3-1.i386 libxslt.so.1 is needed by xmlsec1-1.0.3-1.i386
I also downloaded RPM's for libxml2 and libxslt from ftp://xmlsoft.org/libxslt/ but each package give further errors rpm -Uvh libxml2-2.7.3-1.x86_64.rpm warning: libxml2-2.7.3-1.x86_64.rpm: Header V3 DSA signature: NOKEY, key ID de95bc1f error: Failed dependencies: libxml2 = 2.6.26 is needed by (installed) libxml2-python-2.6.26-2.1.2.7.x86_64
Trying to install Google Chrome from the Google repo I get the following error -Setting up Install Process Resolving Dependencies --> Running transaction check ---> Package google-chrome-stable.i386 0:5.0.375.55-47796 set to be updated --> Processing Dependency: lsb >= 3.2 for package: google-chrome-stable --> Finished Dependency Resolution google-chrome-stable-5.0.375.55-47796.i386 from google has depsolving problems --> Missing Dependency: lsb >= 3.2 is needed by package google-chrome-stable-5.0.375.55-47796.i386 (google)
Is it possible to list/find/compare the program versions on a Centos system, against Redhat/Centos Errata/Security/Bug lists? Sort of looking for a way to make sure that all the packages on a system are ok, and not a security risk-- Without having to update every package. A pseudo code, in my mind is:
I'm trying to add a scheduled full backup to the crontab file, but the full backup never completes; it always stops somewhre in the file system. I guess is b/c the os is updating those files or has them open. I've tried to use the --exclude options but still it always hangs somewhere else.... this is what I'm usingtar -zcvpf /mnt/storage/backup/fullbackup1.tar.gz --exclude=/mnt --exclude=/sys --exclude=/proc --exclude=/lost+found --exclude=/net --exclude=/srv / > /mnt/storage/backup/fullbackup.log
I have centos 5.3 with text console onl, not X server, now I try install solaris 10 at xen with full virtualization (hvm)
Now I have some like "zombie domain"
How I can to kill this? If I reboot the server it doesn't help.
No fonts found; this probably means that the fontconfig library is not correctly configured. You may need to edit the fonts.conf configuration file. More information about fontconfig can be found in the fontconfig(3) manual page and on [url] Domain installation does not appear to have been successful. If it was, you can restart your domain by running 'virsh start solhvm123'; otherwise, please restart your installation.
Do you know what this a problem?
If I chagne --vnc to --sdl and run below command on my desktop to appear windows and disappear for 1-3 seconds, virt-install -n solekhvm3 --ram 1024 --hvm --disk path=/dev/vol1/solek --sdl --cdrom /dev/cdrom --os-variant solaris10 --force
OS: Centos 5.4 VNC Viewer Free Edition 4.1.2 for X
Switching between two instances of VNC viewer in full-screen mode takes three key presses and two mouse clicks. How can the viewer be configured to pass a special key combination to the host operating system instead of the remote OS, so it's possible to switch between full-screen viewers in one key press?
e.g. With the default configuration, if I put the viewers in adjascent workspaces, then the sequence to switch is: F8 MouseClick Ctrl+Alt+Left F8 MouseClick If the key combination Ctrl+Alt+Left was passed to the host then it would be possible to switch workspaces (and therefore viewers) in one key press. When working on multiple remote machines, both physical and virtual, it's often necessary to switch between them frequently. I must switch over 100 times some days. Simplifying the key sequence would be both quicker and more intuitive.