You have to tell us what you are trying to accomplish, otherwise we are not going to be able to help you. If you want to know all of the packages RHEL5 contains, that is simple, it's in the errata. You can get that from having an eval subscription, but you can also get it right off the ISO. You are going to be forever going through the errata if you don't know what you want though. If you know what package(s) you are looking for, give us those package names or use rpmfind. Another thing you can do is check out the CentOS mirrors, as CentOS is a clone of RHEL and is usually not far behind them in releases. http://mirror.centos.org/centos/5/updates/i386/repodata/ I warn you, the main XML file list alone, gzipped, is 2.1MB, and not fun to search through. You could try opening the sqlite file. If you are trying to sell RHEL to a customer, you should have this sort of thing prepared before you even go into the meeting. I always keep ISOs of the latest stable versions so I can look this kind of thing up for myself. If you really want to do your homework, keep a local copy of the entire manpages library on your laptop (even a Windoze machine can do that). I can almost guarantee that if your potential client is looking for a very recent version of almost anything, it's not going to be in RHEL 5. RedHat is about stability. I had to use Fedora (never again!) to give a client the versions of PHP5, GD and ImageMagick he wanted, because his 'amazing uber bleeding edge deveoper' (his 17 year old nephew who was experimenting with more than just the latest PHP extensions) required them for website features. If a client is demanding bleeding edge stuff, be very wary of taking them on, because they will cause you grief beyond the value of the contract 9 times out of 10. Cheers, - Paul ESGLinux wrote: > Hi, > > This is not the solution I´m looking for, > > Think about this situation, I am in a meeting with a possible customer that > is not sure if RHEL has a rpm he thinks is necessary to have to decide to > buy RHEL. I´m looking for a way to get this info with my laptop with a poor > connection to internet, without downloading an ISO or eval. > > I´m looking for the tipical ls-lR that has the ftp servers.... > > Do you konw what I mean? > > Greetigns, > > ESG > > 2010/2/24 Laszlo Beres <laszlo@xxxxxxxx> > > >> On Wed, Feb 24, 2010 at 11:23 AM, ESGLinux <esggrupos@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> >>> I have a doubt. Suposse I am new customer that wants to begin use RHEL 5. >>> Where can I see all the avaliable rpms that comes with it? >>> >>> Now, I have an ISO and I look in it, but I think there is a bette way to >>> >> do >> >>> it if you haven´t the ISO. >>> >> I'd recommend getting an evaluation subscription: >> >> http://www.redhat.com/rhel/details/eval/ >> >> -- >> László Béres Unix system engineer >> http://www.google.com/profiles/beres.laszlo >> >> -- >> redhat-list mailing list >> unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe >> https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list >> -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list