Hi List I have SUSE 9.0 installed with KDE 3.1. As an occasional user I am attempting to update to KDE 3.3.1. and need some handholding. I have downloaded all the KDE rpm files from the SUSE download site dated 12 Nov 2004. Then I have tried to install using YAST by first of all installing KDEbase3 when that failed due to dependency conflicts, I tried to install Kdelibs3 and that failed with different dependency conflict. So I suppose what I am asking is, is there an order in which the rpm files need installing or is there another way of installing KDE 3.3.1 and if so can someone let me have the idiots guide. Thanks in anticipation Regards Kelvin
On Saturday 13 November 2004 21:33, kelvin.mcwha wrote:
Hi List
I have SUSE 9.0 installed with KDE 3.1. As an occasional user I am attempting to update to KDE 3.3.1. and need some handholding. I have downloaded all the KDE rpm files from the SUSE download site dated 12 Nov 2004. Then I have tried to install using YAST by first of all installing KDEbase3 when that failed due to dependency conflicts, I tried to install Kdelibs3 and that failed with different dependency conflict.
So I suppose what I am asking is, is there an order in which the rpm files need installing or is there another way of installing KDE 3.3.1 and if so can someone let me have the idiots guide.
Upgrade all kde packages all together, not one by one. Cheers, Leen
On Saturday 13 November 2004 05:38 pm, Leendert Meyer wrote:
On Saturday 13 November 2004 21:33, kelvin.mcwha wrote:
Hi List
I have SUSE 9.0 installed with KDE 3.1. As an occasional user I am attempting to update to KDE 3.3.1. and need some handholding. I have downloaded all the KDE rpm files from the SUSE download site dated 12 Nov 2004. Then I have tried to install using YAST by first of all installing KDEbase3 when that failed due to dependency conflicts, I tried to install Kdelibs3 and that failed with different dependency conflict.
So I suppose what I am asking is, is there an order in which the rpm files need installing or is there another way of installing KDE 3.3.1 and if so can someone let me have the idiots guide.
Upgrade all kde packages all together, not one by one.
Cheers,
Leen ===========
Yep, Leen is right, just toss all the apps-base-devel files into one directory and have at it. rpm -Uhv *.rpm Any conflicts or dependencies that show up then should be minor to deal with. Regards, Lee
BandiPat wrote:
On Saturday 13 November 2004 05:38 pm, Leendert Meyer wrote:
On Saturday 13 November 2004 21:33, kelvin.mcwha wrote:
Hi List
I have SUSE 9.0 installed with KDE 3.1. As an occasional user I am attempting to update to KDE 3.3.1. and need some handholding. I have downloaded all the KDE rpm files from the SUSE download site dated 12 Nov 2004. Then I have tried to install using YAST by first of all installing KDEbase3 when that failed due to dependency conflicts, I tried to install Kdelibs3 and that failed with different dependency conflict.
So I suppose what I am asking is, is there an order in which the rpm files need installing or is there another way of installing KDE 3.3.1 and if so can someone let me have the idiots guide.
Upgrade all kde packages all together, not one by one.
Cheers,
Leen
===========
Yep, Leen is right, just toss all the apps-base-devel files into one directory and have at it. rpm -Uhv *.rpm
Any conflicts or dependencies that show up then should be minor to deal with.
Regards, Lee
Why the -U option? rpm -F *.rpm is the initial way to go, it just upgrades the packages you have installed. If you get error-messages from that, you can look at their cause and take appropriate action. The -hv options look nice though, I had never noticed them before. -- opinions personal, facts suspect. http://home.arcor.de/36bit/samba.html
On Sunday 14 November 2004 06:30 am, Andrew Williams wrote:
BandiPat wrote:
Yep, Leen is right, just toss all the apps-base-devel files into one directory and have at it. rpm -Uhv *.rpm
Any conflicts or dependencies that show up then should be minor to deal with.
Regards, Lee
Why the -U option?
rpm -F *.rpm is the initial way to go, it just upgrades the packages you have installed. If you get error-messages from that, you can look at their cause and take appropriate action. The -hv options look nice though, I had never noticed them before. ==========
Hi Andy, Use the -U to install all the packages, since many of the KDE packages have been split now into separate or stand alone rpms. You can, of course, check the packages you aren't sure of beforehand. The -F does in fact only update those installed, but then you start having trouble finding programs you have been using. Also, many new programs are added that may very well prove to be helpful or just fun. :o) The "hv" just gives you something to watch as they do their work. regards, Lee -- --- KMail v1.7.1 --- SuSE Linux Pro v9.1 --- Registered Linux User #225206 "Don't let the fear of striking out keep you from playing the game!"
On Sunday 14 November 2004 12:30, Andrew Williams wrote:
BandiPat wrote:
On Saturday 13 November 2004 05:38 pm, Leendert Meyer wrote:
On Saturday 13 November 2004 21:33, kelvin.mcwha wrote:
Hi List
I have SUSE 9.0 installed with KDE 3.1. As an occasional user I am attempting to update to KDE 3.3.1. and need some handholding. I have downloaded all the KDE rpm files from the SUSE download site dated 12 Nov 2004. Then I have tried to install using YAST by first of all installing KDEbase3 when that failed due to dependency conflicts, I tried to install Kdelibs3 and that failed with different dependency conflict.
So I suppose what I am asking is, is there an order in which the rpm files need installing or is there another way of installing KDE 3.3.1 and if so can someone let me have the idiots guide.
Upgrade all kde packages all together, not one by one.
Cheers,
Leen
===========
Yep, Leen is right, just toss all the apps-base-devel files into one directory and have at it. rpm -Uhv *.rpm
Any conflicts or dependencies that show up then should be minor to deal with.
Regards, Lee
Why the -U option?
rpm -F *.rpm is the initial way to go, it just upgrades the packages you have installed. If you get error-messages from that, you can look at their cause and take appropriate action.
This sounds not wrong. ;) I guess the same goes for the -U option. But perhaps with the -U option rpm would barf and refuse to continue if an already installed package were found, and with the -F option rpm would just continue?
The -hv options look nice though, I had never noticed them before.
These are not required. A siingle -U or -F would suffice. But see 'man rpm' or 'rpm --help' for their descriptions. ;) Cheers, Leen
participants (4)
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Andrew Williams
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BandiPat
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kelvin.mcwha
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Leendert Meyer