When you need to do apt upgrade but you cannot get the Ubuntu PC connected the internet, you will use following command in order to know urls of packages that the Ubuntu needs for upgrade.
sudo apt --print-uris upgrade
Then, you will download all deb files at another PC connected the internet and get the Ubuntu PC read these files via flash drive or something to upgrade with below command.
sudo dpkg -i *.deb
I'd like to know how to do same operation with yum manager in OracleLinux8. I am very beginner of radhat.
Thank you,
Related
I am using CentOS7 and PostgreSQL-13. As it is very difficult to work database-related queries in the command line I want to install pgadmin3. Aas it is available on the yum repository and in my CentOS, I do not have any internet connection. So I have installed pgadmin3 with the following installation command only: yum install pgadmin3.
I have seen in some tutorials they modified the sudo /usr/pgadmin4/bin/setup-web.sh file. But I did not find such a file in my CentOS machine after pgadmin3 installation. Now I have no idea how to configure it with my already installed PostgreSQL-13 and httpd and how I can use this. I have not found any documentation regarding this.
PostgreSQL-13 not supported for pgadmin3, you must install pgadmin4
I am a traditional Windows user and therefore you have to excuse me for my lack of experience with other OS. I installed Ubuntu in order to install FSL in my computer (seems the Windows installation failed so I tried this). However, the download goes right, but at the end it says "[FAILED] Unable to unpack FSL".
How can I solve it?
Thanks a lot
First of all, this is not a programming question. If it can still be moved to AskUbuntu (or SuperUser) it may be better appreciated.
In Ubuntu the easy way to install software is through the package manager. This is by far the least amount of work and installs binary packages in default locations (FSL is in the path straight away), plus it takes care of all the dependencies!
FSL is in the NeuroDebian repository, and if you add this to one of your 'software sources' then you can install it via Ubuntu's package manager, APT:
go to https://neuro.debian.net and find out how to add the right repository, e.g.
$ wget -O- http://neuro.debian.net/lists/focal.de-fzj.full | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/neurodebian.sources.list
$ sudo apt-key adv --recv-keys --keyserver hkp://pool.sks-keyservers.net:80 0xA5D32F012649A5A9
update the list of packages APT can find:
$ sudo apt update
install the fsl packages you want, e.g.
$ sudo apt install fsl-5.0 fsl-harvard-oxford-cortical-lateralized-atlas
OK, so this is my first SO question so I'm gonna try my best to lay this out.
I have a Windows 10 laptop on which I am trying to install gcc. I have in the past tried alternatives such as netbeans, cygwin and various emulators and virtual machines all to no avail.
What has been working so far is that I enabled the 'new' windows developer mode which allowed me to download a Linux bash shell from the windows store. It works for all the regular Linux commands, but doesn't have gcc installed.
When I type in gcc (or gcc --version) in the shell, it prints the following line:
The program 'gcc' is currently not installed. You can install it by typing:
sudo apt install gcc
Which I tried, it then ran through a bunch of installer stuff but consistently seemed to run into errors such as the following:
Err:7 http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu xenial-updates/main amd64 libdpkg- >perl all 1.18.4ubuntu1.2
404 Not Found [IP: INSERT IP ADDRESS HERE ]
where the ip address is different on each error line.
It ultimately fails with the following line:
Unable to fetch some archives, maybe run apt-get update or try with --fix-missing?
I have tried but again I get the same kinds of errors as above.
I would really like to get gcc working in the Windows/Linux shell as it is working great for everything else, and I'm trying to keep the number of programs on my computer to a minimum.
Does anyone know why this isn't working, or how (if possible) I can make it work?
P.S I do need it to be gcc because of school reasons
For what it's worth: I landed on this SO topic after having a similar issue.
What fixed it for me was to run
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get upgrade
I guess the repo URLs were too old, even though my Ubuntu was in a recent version.
I just ran into the same thing attempting to install python-pip. According to this article, this happens when you have the Windows 10 Anniversary Update (older) instead of the Creators update (newer). The solution is to either uninstall and re-install Ubuntu, or upgrade it (from 14.04 to 16.04). I found the upgrade to be simple and painless:
sudo do-release-upgrade
To check what you have, before and after via:
lsb_release -a
I had the same problem. Pinging the IP resulted in no response and visiting the website returned a 404.
I found a ppa with most current GCC and registered the PPA and was able to successfully install GCC with it; ppa website. I used GCC to build some software I wanted that was not found with apt-get.
From their page:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ubuntu-toolchain-r/test
sudo apt-get update
Try to run Ubuntu application in Windows with an option "Run as Administrator".
I need to install dpkg for my mac and the easiest way I have seen for doing that is to install Macports. Unfortunately the machine I want to install it on is not connected to the internet.
Is there a way to download dpkg and its dependencies for macports and install the packages on the offline machine?
I have seen people mention to set it up on an online machine and move the whole macports folder, however the only machine I have online is running a different OSX version which could cause issues.
Thanks in advance.
You could try to download all sourcefiles using
sudo port fetch rdepof:dpkg
and then copy everything in (/opt/local/var/macports/distfiles/) to the offline machine and put it in the same folder there.
Then you should be able to build dpkg using
sudo port install -s dpkg
The -s option forces macports to build from source. (Prevent MacPorts from installing pre-built package?)
I'm working on a redhat server which isn't connected to the internet, so I can't download things directly onto the server. I can transfer them via SCP from another server.
Is there a step by step guide to compiling ffmpeg for redhat?
If you can scp from another server that is connected to the Internet and wish to install using rpm's rather than compiling, I suggest the following:
Install yum-downloadonly on the server in question:
yum -y install yum-downloadonly
Simulate an install of ffmpeg using downloadonly to save all required packages locally:
yum -y install ffmpeg --downloadonly --downloaddir=your_download_directory
Transfer all the downloaded rpm's to the server without Internet access
cd to the directory with the rpm's on that server and run this to install all of them:
rpm -ivh --nodeps *.rpm
That should do it!