On Wed, 2006-05-31 at 13:20 -0700, Craig White wrote: > On Wed, 2006-05-31 at 14:15 -0600, kevin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > > Hi List; > > > > Sorry for the OT post. However I suspect if anyone outside of RH can help with > > this question it would be this list. > > > > I'm starting a new contract with a shop that knows little about Linux and I'm > > helping pave the way. I've "inherited" an existing Linux install (RHEL4). I > > want to setup some tools but I find that yum is not installed. Is this normal > > for a RH box ? I thought that the RH up2date tool used yum under the covers. > > > > Anyhow, is there an easy way to get yum installed on this box ? > > I do have VNC access - and I can run KDE in the VNC connection even though > > according to the add/remove software tool KDE is not installed by changing the > > xstartup file forthat user under ~/.vnc (wierd!!) > > > > I suspect the answer is to find & download a yum rpm for redhat and install it > > via rpm but I want to be sure I dont do something stupid on a client system. > ---- > RHEL uses 'up2date' > > up2date -u > man up2date > > There is a list for RHEL 4 There are also NO repositories for RHEL. Everything is done via the RHN and/or up2date. That is just how RHEL works ... they do not have repo trees that are browse-able. up2date can do installs, you can also install via RHN. If the person does not have a valid RHN subscription then there is no way to install packages ... unless they have never done updates, then system-config-packages can be used.
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