Non-root rpm installs: howto acquire existing db info?

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Scenario:

I want the users of the rpm packages I'm building for my project to be able to install said packages as a non-root user.


I see that rpm has a '--root' parameter, and that appears to work when installing my package (eg, using '--root /home/<my-non-root-user>'). However, my .rpm packages tend to have many dependencies that may be typically installed as "root" system packages, eg, PostgreSQL, MySQL, Boost libraries, bzip2 compression libs, libpqxx, OpenSSL libs, xerces-c libs, and possibly more...not to mention all the "standard" dependencies like libc/libstdc++/libpthread/libgcc, etc. Therefore, when running the '--root /home/<my-non-root-user>' command, all sorts of missing dependencies show up, even though all of the above modules/libraries may already be installed on my system...but not in the rpm database found in /home/<my-non-root-user>.

One way I'm thinking about solving this problem:

What if the non-root user could acquire the *existing* root-rpm-database info (from /usr/lib/rpmdb/i386-redhat-linux/CentOS, what I understand is the typical db info...for a CentOS install, anyway) and copy it into /home/<my-non-root-user>/usr/lib/rpmdb/i386-redhat-linux/CentOS?

This way I'm hoping that a non-root user could copy the existing system package info that points to the existing modules/packages, and then said non-root user can install the new package(s) into their own database and /home/<my-non-root-user> filesystem?

Are there any other ways to solve the install-the-package-as-a-non-root-user problem?

-Matt

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