Ah poor man.. RPM rocks and you are missing out on a lot of coolness.

The only times it doesn't work so well is when
the user doesn't understand exactly how it works or why it does
something a certain way. Reading Maximum RPM showed me the depth of RPM
and why it is definitely not just an eye candy thing like a Windows
installer and is actually a system level solution to difficult problems
in the Unix structure.

In countless RedHat installs I've never had any problems with RPM other
than my own mistakes or misunderstandings. And it's been working fine on
my home install for more than a year. No database problems at all..

And --force is definitely the stone age man's club in the RPM toolkit, I
would recommend playing along rather than trying to fight like a real
hard core Unix man.

Regards,

Chuck

Wrote lloy0076 on Wed, Mar 01, 2000 at 12:58:02PM +1030:
> 
> HEHEHE
> 
> I avoid use RPM as much as I can. If I ever use it I always use --force.
> The RPM database seems to fall over even worse then the Windows Registry
> if I may say so myself. It's good for a system where ALL YOU EVER
> install is RPM'ed, and it's on high reliability but other than that it's
> caused me far too much grief to be bothered.
> 
> I don't try to pretend that Linux is Windows and just use make and
> ./configure.
> 
> DAVID
> 
> 
> -- 
> To unsubscribe: mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe"
> as the Subject.


-- 
To unsubscribe: mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe"
as the Subject.

Reply via email to