Solar, all, On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 04:19:43AM +0400, Solar Designer wrote: > > To find out where /etc/mime.types comes from on CentOS, download their > rpmdb-CentOS package (such as rpmdb-CentOS-4.8-0.20090804.i386.rpm), > install it, then issue: > > bash-3.1# rpm --dbpath /usr/lib/rpmdb/i386-redhat-linux/CentOS -qf /etc/mime.types > mailcap-2.1.17-1 > > I just did the above on a chroot'ed test install of Owl-current, and it > worked just fine as you can see. Yes, you have to know about their > rpmdb package, but other package names you can infer using that one. > Feel free to add info on the rpmdb package to our wiki page if you feel > that it is of sufficient relevance. I've just updated the wiki page adding the tip with a couple of examples. However, I'm not that familiar with rpm, so may be I'm doing something wrong, but I see no way to simply ask rpm about what packages should be downloaded and installed if I simply want a particular package to install. I now know how to solve the particular case of the puzzle (that is, when there's a dependency on a file and I don't know from which package does it come); however, I still see no much use of, e.g., rpm -qR (or rpm -qRp) even with the help of the database, as rpm only shows a long-long list of files, libs or whatever, most of them are already in the system, some of them can be acquired from other packages but their names aren't shown. May be there's another useful option of RPM which I simply don't see? Thanks, -- Croco -- To unsubscribe, e-mail owl-users-unsubscribe_at_private and reply to the automated confirmation request that will be sent to you.Received on Wed Sep 30 2009 - 07:54:02 PDT
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