I have a file with a .rpm extension that I need to install on redhat. I'm guessing pkgadd would do the trick but it can't find pkgadd anywhere on the system, I did a type, a whereis, a which, no luck.
If you like the latest and greatest version of everything and you use an RPM based system you probably want to learn how to create RPMs. You don't have to, you can ...
my current version of RPM do not allow me to open certain rpm files.<P>how can I upgrade it?<P>when I go to Redhat site, they have a RPM-4 in "rpm" format which I can't open.<P>is it something I did ...