[I'm guessing you probably aren't subscribed to this mailing list, so I've cc'ed you. Apologies if that was wrong. In future, you might find debian-user a better forum for this kind of question - ask for a copy of replies if you don't want to subscribe.]
On Tue, Feb 11, 2003 at 10:11:39AM -0600, Julie R. Clausen wrote: > I would like to install the gnucap project on my laptop. I have SuSe > Linux and don't know how to unzip the .deb file. Can you help?? A .deb file is an ar archive containing three members: * debian-binary, a version number which you can ignore for your purpose; * control.tar.gz, which contains metadata such as dependencies and post-installation scripts; * data.tar.gz, which is a filesystem archive that dpkg unpacks in /. To install from the .deb on a non-Debian system, you'll need to do something like 'mkdir tmp; cd tmp; ar x whateveritis.deb; tar -xzvf data.tar.gz', and then copy the resulting files to the right place on your system. If there are 'preinst' or 'postinst' files in control.tar.gz then you may want to look at them and manually do some of the things they would do. All that said, however, it's likely to be easier for you to use the standard upstream package rather than the one customized for Debian. http://www.gnu.org/software/gnucap/ has download links. It doesn't seem to need anything unusual to build - just standard C and C++ development libraries, plus ncurses and readline development. Regards, -- Colin Watson [EMAIL PROTECTED]