Hi Zane and folks,
Your advice noted with tks.
B.R.
SL
> Hello,
>
> On Thu, Jul 27, 2006 at 09:39:40PM +0800, Stephen Liu wrote:
> | Hi folks,
> |
> | What commands on Debian equivalent to "yum list installed
> package_name"
> | OR "rpm -qa | grep package-name" to find out whether the package
On Thu, Jul 27, 2006 at 09:39:40PM +0800, Stephen Liu wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> What commands on Debian equivalent to "yum list installed package_name"
> OR "rpm -qa | grep package-name" to find out whether the package has
> been installed.
dpkg -l|grep packagename
Sven
--
If you won't forgive me t
On Thu, Jul 27, 2006 at 05:44:48PM +0300, Michael F wrote:
> apt-get install for installing a package and apt-cache search for
> searching package. man apt-get for many information:) Btw, witch is
> the diference berween apt and aptitude?
I think the main difference is that apt has super cow power
Stephen Liu wrote:
Hi folks,
What commands on Debian equivalent to "yum list installed package_name"
OR "rpm -qa | grep package-name" to find out whether the package has
been installed.
TIA
B.R.
SL
I use dpkg --get-selections as a chose.
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apt-get install for installing a package and apt-cache search for
searching package. man apt-get for many information:) Btw, witch is
the diference berween apt and aptitude?
On 7/27/06, Rick Pasotto <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Thu, Jul 27, 2006 at 09:39:40PM +0800, Stephen Liu wrote:
> Hi folk
On Thu, Jul 27, 2006 at 09:39:40PM +0800, Stephen Liu wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> What commands on Debian equivalent to "yum list installed package_name"
> OR "rpm -qa | grep package-name" to find out whether the package has
> been installed.
I generally use 'apt-cache policy package_name'.
--
"One
Hi Stephen.
> What commands on Debian equivalent to "yum list installed
> package_name" OR "rpm -qa | grep package-name" to find out whether
> the package has been installed.
Try this:
dpkg -l package-name
Regards, Mathias
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Description: OpenPGP digital signature
Hello,
On Thu, Jul 27, 2006 at 09:39:40PM +0800, Stephen Liu wrote:
| Hi folks,
|
| What commands on Debian equivalent to "yum list installed package_name"
| OR "rpm -qa | grep package-name" to find out whether the package has
| been installed.
`dpkg -l' or `dpkg --list' will list all installed
On Thu, Jul 27, 2006 at 09:39:40PM +0800, Stephen Liu wrote:
> What commands on Debian equivalent to "yum list installed package_name"
> OR "rpm -qa | grep package-name" to find out whether the package has
> been installed.
To search all packages which are installed and have the package
name '
Stephen Liu wrote:
Hi folks,
What commands on Debian equivalent to "yum list installed package_name"
OR "rpm -qa | grep package-name" to find out whether the package has
been installed.
TIA
B.R.
SL
Hi,
'dpkg -l' should be good for that !! :-)
Regards
Guillaume
--
Guillaume
E-mail: sile
Hi folks,
What commands on Debian equivalent to "yum list installed package_name"
OR "rpm -qa | grep package-name" to find out whether the package has
been installed.
TIA
B.R.
SL
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with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Thu, 2001-09-06 at 11:33, Timeboy wrote:
>
> On 2001.09.06 17:25 Wayne wrote:
> > Hi Timeboy,
> > Yes, I use the same port. I leave the cord to the
> > camera plug into the USB port and unconnect the
> > end to the camera.
> > Wayne
>
> Hi Wayne!
>
> Then i have no more ideas. I don't use USB
On 2001.09.06 17:25 Wayne wrote:
> Hi Timeboy,
> Yes, I use the same port. I leave the cord to the
> camera plug into the USB port and unconnect the
> end to the camera.
> Wayne
Hi Wayne!
Then i have no more ideas. I don't use USB. Its new for me to
hear about mounting a camera. The only i can s
Timeboy wrote:
> On 2001.09.06 11:49 Wayne wrote:
> > Hi,
> > Yesterday morning I was able to look at pictures on my
> > digital camera by the afternoon I couldn't.
> > My camera has a USB connection. The command I use
> > to get access to my camera is-
> > mount -t vfat /dev/sda1 /mnt/camera
> >
On 2001.09.06 11:49 Wayne wrote:
> Hi,
> Yesterday morning I was able to look at pictures on my
> digital camera by the afternoon I couldn't.
> My camera has a USB connection. The command I use
> to get access to my camera is-
> mount -t vfat /dev/sda1 /mnt/camera
>
> When I issue the command now
Hi,
Yesterday morning I was able to look at pictures on my
digital camera by the afternoon I couldn't.
My camera has a USB connection. The command I use
to get access to my camera is-
mount -t vfat /dev/sda1 /mnt/camera
When I issue the command now I get this responds
mount: /dev/sda1: unknown de
Mark Wagnon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Cool. Thanks. I needed an example of how to get the script to
> receive the text to be filtered. This'll help a lot. Thanks again.
You might also be interested in the filterm program from the konwert
package. I came across that today and from a brief ins
On Wed 09/01/99 01:30PM, Marc Mongeon wrote:
> I'm trying to improve my shell programming skills anyway, so I made a
> first pass at a program that will strip backspaces from an input file. I
> stopped short of making it robust enough to handle edits that cross
> a newline; for example, the follow
I'm trying to improve my shell programming skills anyway, so I made a
first pass at a program that will strip backspaces from an input file. I
stopped short of making it robust enough to handle edits that cross
a newline; for example, the following backspaces will be left in the
output:
Here come
On Tue 08/31/99 09:46AM, Michael Stenner wrote:
> I use ls with color and also use a cool prompt setting in bash (see
> below) which does REALLY nasty things to script. If you find a clever
> way to keep the colors and fix the script output, I'd be happy to hear
> it!
I'm not sure what kind of st
On Mon, Aug 30, 1999 at 09:17:38PM -0700, Mark Wagnon wrote:
> I'm taking a C class this semester and my instructer want us to use
> the script command to verify our work: cat the program, compile it,
> and enter test data while scripting.
>
> The program itself is easy to use, but I get control c
On Tue 08/31/99 01:58AM, Brad wrote:
> i'm hoping you don't have to print it all out then... That's a huge pain,
> and waste of paper! (if you do, look into a2ps or mpage to put multiple
> pages on one sheet)
Unfortunately I do, but at this stage, the programs are very short.
I've been using a2ps
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
On Mon, 30 Aug 1999, Mark Wagnon wrote:
> I'm taking a C class this semester and my instructer want us to use
> the script command to verify our work: cat the program, compile it,
> and enter test data while scripting.
i'm hoping you don't have to print it all
Hi all:
I'm taking a C class this semester and my instructer want us to use
the script command to verify our work: cat the program, compile it,
and enter test data while scripting.
The program itself is easy to use, but I get control codes embedded
in the file. Things like ^G, ^H, and ^M. Has any
Hi there,
On Mon, Feb 01, 1999 at 07:22:57PM +1100, Jiri Baum wrote:
>
> Note that if you want to use this on a non-Debian system, some versions of
> tar don't take the "z" switch. In that case, compress or gzip separately.
It's only GNU tar that supports the -z switch. On onther systems use:
g
Hello,
> tar czf /path/to/archive.tar.gz /path/to/directory
Note that if you want to use this on a non-Debian system, some versions of
tar don't take the "z" switch. In that case, compress or gzip separately.
Jiri
Thanks,
I am reading more into the command than I needed.
olly@lfix.co.uk wrote:
Bill Bell wrote:
>Could someone give me a tar command that I can use to backup my Debian 2.0
>system to a compressed file? I will ftp this backup file to another system
>after it has been written.
>
>I hav
Bill Bell wrote:
>Could someone give me a tar command that I can use to backup my Debian 2.0
>system to a compressed file? I will ftp this backup file to another system
>after it has been written.
>
>I have RTFM for tar, but after several tries, I have not created a file that
> I
Could someone give me a tar command that I can use to backup my Debian 2.0
system to a compressed file? I will ftp this backup file to another system
after it has been written.
I have RTFM for tar, but after several tries, I have not created a file that I
trust.
Thanks in advanced,
Bill Bell
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