include("site.inc"); $template = new Page; $template->initCommon(); $template->displayHeader(); ?>
Fedora software and documentation is supplied in the form of files called RPM packages. Each package is a compressed archive containing product information, program files, icons, documentation and management scripts. Management applications use these files to safely locate, install, update and remove software. For example, the Fedora installation process uses the packages supplied with Fedora Core to build or upgrade a system to your requirements.
Packages also include a digital signature to prove their source.
Software management utilities verify this digital signature by
using a GPG public key. The
yum
and rpm
utilities
share a common keyring that stores all of
the public keys for approved package sources. The system
administrator configures these approved package sources.
All Fedora Packages are Open Source Software | |
---|---|
All of the software provided by the Fedora Project is open source software. You may download and install Fedora packages on as many systems as desired. |
A repository is a prepared directory or
Web site that contains software packages and index files.
Software management utilities such as yum
automatically locate and obtain the correct RPM packages from
these repositories. This method frees you from having to
manually find and install new applications or updates. You may
use a single command to update all system software, or search
for new software by specifying criteria.
A network of servers provide several repositories for each version of Fedora Core. The package management utilities in Fedora Core are already configured to use three of these repositories:
The packages that make up a Fedora Core release, as it is on disc
Updated versions of packages that are provided in Base
Packages for a large selection of additional software
Fedora Development Repositories | |
---|---|
Fedora Core also includes settings for several alternative
repositories. These provide packages for various types of test
system, and replace one or more of the standard repositories.
Only enable support for one of the following repositories if
you test or develop Fedora software:
|
Third-party software developers also provide repositories for their Fedora compatible packages. To learn how to configure your Fedora system to use third-party repositories, read Section 7, “Configuring Access to Software Repositories”.
You may also use the package groups provided by the Fedora repositories to manage related packages as sets. Some third-party repositories add packages to these groups, or provide their packages as additional groups.
Available Package Groups | |
---|---|
To view a list of all of the available package groups for your
Fedora system, run the command |
Use repositories to ensure that you always receive current versions of software. If several versions of the same package are available, your management utility automatically selects the latest version.
Installing Software not from a Repository | |
---|---|
Install software using manual methods only when you are confident there is no repository which can currently provide it. You may have to manage that software with manual methods, instead of with Fedora software management utilities.
The |
Some of the files installed on a Fedora distribution are libraries which may provide functions to multiple applications. When an application requires a specific library, the package which contains that library is a dependency. To properly install a package, Fedora must first satisfy its dependencies. The dependency information for a RPM package is stored within the RPM file.
The yum
utility uses package dependency data
to ensure that all of requirements for an application are met
during installation. It automatically installs the packages for
any dependencies not already present on your system. If a new
application has requirements that conflict with existing
software, yum
aborts without making any
changes to your system.
Each package file has a long name that indicates several key
pieces of information. For example, this is the full name of a
tsclient
package:
tsclient-0.132-6.i386.rpm
Management utilities commonly refer to packages with one of three formats:
Package name: tsclient
Package name with version and release numbers:
tsclient-0.132-6
Package name with hardware architecture:
tsclient.i386
For clarity, yum
lists packages in the format
name.architecture
. Repositories also
commonly store packages in separate directories by architecture.
In each case, the hardware architecture specified for the
package is the minimum type of machine
required to use the package.
Suitable for any current Intel-compatible computer
Compatible with all computer architectures
Suitable for PowerPC systems, such as Apple Power Macintosh
Suitable for 64-bit Intel-compatible processors, such as Opterons
Some software may be optimized for particular types of
Intel-compatible machine. Separate packages may be provided for
i386
, i586
,
i686
and x86_64
computers. A
machine with at least an Intel Pentium, VIA C3 or compatible CPU
may use i586
packages. Computers with an Intel
Pentium Pro and above, or a current model of AMD chip, may use
i686
packages.
Use the short name of the package for yum
commands. This causes yum
to automatically
select the most recent package in the repositories that matches
the hardware architecture of your computer.
Specify a package with other name formats to override the
default behavior and force yum
to use the
package that matches that version or architecture. Only override
yum
when you know that the default package
selection has a bug or other fault that makes it unsuitable for
installation.
Package Names | |
---|---|
You may use any of the following formats to specify a package
in a |