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I'm looking for some package manager for my web server.
I wonder to know is there any program same as YUM for windows 7?
TNX
There is a solution named chocolatay http://chocolatey.org. I never try it personally but I heard about it during puppet windows conf. You can find slides here http://www.slideshare.net/PuppetLabs/puppet-and-windowspuppetconf2013
UPDATE: I'm just trying it atm, and it's really nice solution. Is not yum but it's the closest way to simulate yum on windows.
Moreover if your program you want to install has a msi package it's easy to create your own package.
There is a software called "win-get".
win-get is an automated install system and software repository for Microsoft Windows written in pascal (for the command line client) and php for the online repository. The ideas for its creation come from apt-get and other related tools for the *nix platforms.
The system works by connecting to a link repository. Finding an application and downloading it from the stored link using wget.exe . Then performing the installation routine (silent or standard). And finnally deleting the install file.
http://sourceforge.net/projects/windows-get/
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Generally, I wanted to use the tool as shown in the video: https://youtu.be/tPRv-ATUBe4. But when I run it, a strange thing happens. This chocolatey package manager installs for me. With this command, which I run the program in this video, I also install the chocolatey package manager. I've removed this manager before, and even environment variables, but still nothing.
Not that strange at all, if you have a look at the source, as the tool installs chocolatey if it's not installed.
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I was trying to install Atom in Kali Linux Live.
And after command
dpkg -i ~/Downloads/atom-amd64.deb
I get error
dpkg: error: cannot access archive '/root/Downloads/atom-amd64.deb': No such file or directory
I have tried as both root and non-root users
I am using Kali Linux Live with Persistence (Bootable USB)
Same kind of thing happens with Visual Studio code too.
You may have to install kali Linux on the device as Kali Linux Live provides the tools for hacking. If you want to install software, then you have to install Kali or manually install it without a package.
Check out this Reddit post about the issue: https://www.reddit.com/r/linuxquestions/comments/4zgrzs/is_it_possible_to_install_software_on_kali_linux/
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I have an exisiting automated Installer for Ubuntu based on Kickstart and want to build one for the Debian. In the interest of uniformity using Kickstart seems to be the best option.
a. Can Kickstart be used for the automated installation of Debian?
b. Any merits of using FAI for Debian instead of kickstart?
c. Any solutions thats used and tried as reference will be highly appreciated.
On Debian you can use "preseed" (https://wiki.debian.org/DebianInstaller/Preseed) to build you automated Debian install ;)
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I am looking for a way to remotely install a program to other computer units running Windows on the fly ,without the need of running the installer steps on each computer (next,next,finish...) all over again , .exe installers don't usually have an easy way to do this without using the GUI installer.
a solution that i came up with , running the installer on a single pc
and try to trace each file the installer adds (location,file names,registry files) using FileSystemWatcher then copy these files and send them to the desired hosts that need the program installed with the location of each file will this work ? is there any easier implementation
the problem with FileSystemWatcher that although it detectes which files have been added,edited or deleted its not capable to tell which process did the change ,Why would i need to know ?,other programs depends alot on files and will keep editing them so i need to isolate the installer process to easily study how its functioning and what files are added..
the only way that i know to overcome this problem is developing a file system filter driver...
please give me your opinion or some recommendations on which is the best way to do this ,sorry for my bad english .
Almost every modern installer has some way to perform a silent install. You may need to do some digging to find the answers, or ask the publisher. Try running the installer with /? as a command line switch and see what it tells you.
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I am looking for a framework to create an install kit for my Java web application.
I need something that would install JBoss, a Database Server, Java, and of course the application itself with all the dependencies and settings on a Windows platform.
I prefer free tools. What do you recommend and why?
Install4J: Not free but easy to use and extensible.
http://www.ej-technologies.com/products/install4j/overview.html
As pointed out earlier in a comment there is another similar thread, which anwsers my question. Thanks to #Zaki for this info.
You can use the SetupBuilder Gradle Plugin to create a native msi installer with a simple Gradle script.