Sorry, Austin, but in practice, installing an RPM intended for one
distribution on another distribution, is not particularly likely to
work. It may refuse to install unless you "force" it. It may install
and destabilize your system. I find it much easier and safer to install
from source tarballs than to install a "foreign" RPM. In theory an RPM
package could be crafted and tested to be installable on multiple
versions or distributions, but this is rarely done by those who build
RPM packages. Perhaps the Linux Standard Base will change this,
eventually.
On Tuesday 01 April 2003 10:06 am, Austin wrote:
On 2003.04.01 05:06 Anahata wrote:
I was very disappointed with Mandrake when I
found out
that, just because it used RPM patches, that didn't mean you could
download (RedHat) RPM's from anywhere and install them.
That is not accurate.
Mandrake and RedHat do use the same RPM system. You can install
either RPM on either system. The fact is, due to dynamically linked
libraries, you're best to use RPMs built on the distro you're using.
Austin
--
"Can you remember the future? Forget it!"