Tuesday 10 December 2019

LIBAIO-DEVEL-0.3.106 I386 RPM DOWNLOAD FREE

I wanted a utility that produced a standard output that I could just cut and paste into a report Past versions of Oracle documentation have not distinguished between bit and bit RPMs nor have they been very comprehensive. Do not use it as a template for another application - you will regret it. In the short to medium term, the plan is to support installations of:. The rpmcheck utility is not perfect and the set of XML files is currently incomplete. Some history and other comments follow rpmcheck version 2. libaio-devel-0.3.106 i386 rpm

Uploader: Brajar
Date Added: 1 December 2006
File Size: 56.95 Mb
Operating Systems: Windows NT/2000/XP/2003/2003/7/8/10 MacOS 10/X
Downloads: 7385
Price: Free* [*Free Regsitration Required]





libaio-devel-0.3.106 i386 rpm

I managed to figure out how to use rpmbuild to build an RPM using a spec file containing a list of dependencies. The system administrators need the list of RPMs in libio-devel-0.3.106 to create a certified build that can be passed on to the DBAs; the package checks in the installer do not help in this case My first attempt was to build an RPM package to perform the validation.

Therefore I decided to write a stand-alone utility I initially considered writing the utility in C, but subsequently decided to use Perl for a number of reasons. Some history and other comments follow.

libaio-devel-0.3.106 i386 rpm

I initially considered writing the utility in C, but subsequently decided to use Perl for a number of reasons. The utility consists of a Perl script called rpmcheck. Perl is human-readable; if security departments are concerned about the functionality of the utility, they can read the script.

For the avoidance of doubt, the Perl script rpmcheck. To install the utility. However, this package is not installed on Linux servers by default and has a handful of dependencies.

Perl is available in most Linux builds. I will add these to the library. Do not use it as a template for another application - you will regret it. This might not be desirable in some environments. I have tried to keep to well-formed documents so they can work with any XML-parser. Simple package to read the XML file and was much more elegant. At this point I realized that RPM only supports the native architecture; it is not possible to specify alternate architectures in the dependency list.

I am hoping that this project will gain acceptance in the user community and that others libaio-dvel-0.3.106 contribute additional XML files they have developed and tested in their own environments.

My first attempt was to build an RPM package to perform the validation. Package Name Version Release Architecture binutils 2. Some history and other comments follow rpmcheck version 2. The rlm utility is not perfect and i3866 set of XML files is currently incomplete. For each required package the rpmcheck utility uses RPM to identify whether the package is currently installed and, if so, the architecture, version and release.

Oracle Linux 5 (x86_64) Update 6

Libaio-devel-03.106 wanted a utility that produced a standard output that I could just cut and paste into a report Past versions of Oracle documentation have not distinguished between bit and bit RPMs nor have they been very comprehensive.

Most Oracle users understand XML so the format does not need explaining. To install the utility Download the zip file and copy it to an empty directory.

Also the RPM itself might need a change control and root permissions to install. So creating an RPM libaioo-devel-0.3.106 Linux x would be very complicated. The files are supplied in a ZIP file called rpmcheck.

Therefore I decided to write a stand-alone utility. I have not encountered an Oracle environment that has not supported Perl for a few years now. I wanted a definitive list for each platform from a libaiodevel-0.3.106 source Recent versions Oracle products are now performing much more comprehensive checks for RPMs.

rpmcheck Linux Package Checker

In the short to medium term, the plan is to support installations of:. The problem is that for larger customers, the team that creates the operating system build is often completely separate from the Lihaio-devel-0.3.106 team that runs the Oracle Installer. I am not a professional Perl programmer and therefore my XML parser is only just adequate for the task it was designed for.

No comments:

Post a Comment