Where is VNC, FC11
Tony Nelson
tonynelson at georgeanelson.com
Sun Oct 25 05:39:47 UTC 2009
On 09-10-24 02:30:32, Tait Clarridge wrote:
> On Sat, 2009-10-24 at 00:46 -0400, Tony Nelson wrote:
> > On 09-10-23 14:03:49, Tait Clarridge wrote:
> > > On Fri, 2009-10-23 at 12:55 -0500, Chris Adams wrote:
> > > > Once upon a time, Tait Clarridge <tait at clarridge.ca> said:
> > > > > A good way to search for packages that may not have easy
> > > > > names is:
> > > > >
> > > > > [user @ host ~]$ yum list | grep -i vnc
> > > >
> > > > A little easier is:
> > > >
> > > > # yum list '*vnc*'
> > >
> > > Yes, but I threw the grep -i in there for case insensitivity..
> > > sometimes special packages have a capital letter that yum list
> > > won't get by itself.
> >
> > Are you sure about that? Give an example where it happens.
> > (Hint.)
>
> Well, I'll be. I guess I am just used to doing it my way. Guess I
> should have tested it before opening my mouth.
> Plus, yum list with wildcards is faster than with grep so I will
> start using that now. Thanks for the clarification.
What surprises me from time to time is that `yum install` does not fold
case. I know that, and I'm still surprised.
But `yum install` does have the useful ability to install a command by
name:
# yum install '/*/growisofs'
which is handy if you don't know what package contains the command (or
even where the command will be installed). The leading slash is
required.
`yum provides` can also find files to install, but the leading "/" is
optional, so both work:
# yum provides '*/gobject-2.0.pc'
# yum provides '/*/gobject-2.0.pc'
`yum install` gives a poor guess (here, at least) for that file.
--
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