I’m an former Archlinux user(don’t stone mee!) and I got hooked on opensuse do it its feature set and Btrfs integration.
I saw that now you can even boot into snapshots, yay!
Anyways, I’m a terminal guy so is there any way I can use ymp files in the terminal. There has to be some way to extract the repo url and
application name.
I’m loving openSuse and will be nagging you for info in the future!
Hi
Just use zypper to add the repository and then the application your after?
For example;
zypper ar -f http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/home:/malcolmlewis:/Miscellanous/openSUSE_13.2/ "Misc"
zypper ref
zypper in medit
or
zypper in http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/home:/malcolmlewis:/Miscellanous/openSUSE_13.2/x86_64/medit-1.2.0-3.1.x86_64.rpm
or if you create a login to OBS (https://build.opensuse.org/) You can directly grab any binary that exists, you just need to be root user to install.
osc se medit
No matches found for 'medit' in projects
####################################################################
matches for 'medit' in packages:
# Project # Package
home:Lazy_Kent:xfce medit
home:colAflash medit
home:malcolmlewis:Miscellanous medit
home:malcolmlewis:SLE_11_SPn_General medit
home:malcolmlewis:SLE_12_General medit
home:roman-neuhauser:arch-community medit
home:zhonghuaren medit
osc getbinaries home:malcolmlewis:Miscellanous medit openSUSE_13.2 x86_64
Creating binaries
_buildenv 100% |=================================| 33 kB 00:00
_statistics 100% |=================================| 716 B 00:00
medit-1.2.0-3.1.x86_64.rpm 100% |=================================| 1.1 MB 00:03
medit-lang-1.2.0-3.1.noarch.rpm 100% |=================================| 160 kB 00:00
rpmlint.log 100% |=================================| 58 B 00:00
Now that creates a directory called binaries, you could then copy that to a local directory and then use createrepo or a plain rpm directory for you to install from, without ever going near a GUI
Hi
The ymp (1-click) files just add the repo and install the package and dependences, which if you add the repo and install manually will also happen. If you use zypper you can also see and install patterns (collections of rpms).
Between zypper and osc, can’t go wrong from the command line, but with osc, if the package isn’t built you can do that yourself most of the time.