On 10/03/2018 10:17 AM, Michael Torrie wrote:
> On 10/02/2018 07:59 AM, mchathuran...@gmail.com wrote:
>> I guess from the little knowledge I have I should have executed
>> altinstall instead of install. Anyone know how to resolve this?
>
> Actually you probably should not have used a tarball at a
On 10/02/2018 07:59 AM, mchathuran...@gmail.com wrote:
> I guess from the little knowledge I have I should have executed
> altinstall instead of install. Anyone know how to resolve this?
Actually you probably should not have used a tarball at all. For some
time now, Red Hat has offered more recen
On 03/10/2018 13:17, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Wed, Oct 3, 2018 at 9:11 PM Dan Purgert wrote:
Chris Angelico wrote:
On Wed, Oct 3, 2018 at 5:17 AM Thomas Jollans wrote:
[...]
Whether we agree on the terminology here or not, of course we can agree
that you have to be bloody careful if you *do
On Wed, Oct 3, 2018 at 9:11 PM Dan Purgert wrote:
>
> Chris Angelico wrote:
> > On Wed, Oct 3, 2018 at 5:17 AM Thomas Jollans wrote:
> >> [...]
> >> Whether we agree on the terminology here or not, of course we can agree
> >> that you have to be bloody careful if you *do* decide to put things in
Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Wed, Oct 3, 2018 at 5:17 AM Thomas Jollans wrote:
>> [...]
>> Whether we agree on the terminology here or not, of course we can agree
>> that you have to be bloody careful if you *do* decide to put things in
>> /usr/bin yourself :-)
>
> [...] On my system (Debian GNU/Lin
Thomas Jollans wrote:
> On 02/10/2018 19:22, Dan Purgert wrote:
>> Thomas Jollans wrote:
>>> [...] (preferably, not in /usr - that's for OS-installed files only.
>>> /usr/local is a nice place to put things you installed from source).
>>
>> While I agree that /usr(/bin) is incorrect, I believe tha
On Wed, Oct 3, 2018 at 5:17 AM Thomas Jollans wrote:
>
> On 02/10/2018 19:22, Dan Purgert wrote:
> > Thomas Jollans wrote:
> >> [...] (preferably, not in /usr - that's for OS-installed files only.
> >> /usr/local is a nice place to put things you installed from source).
> >
> > While I agree that
On 02/10/2018 19:22, Dan Purgert wrote:
Thomas Jollans wrote:
[...] (preferably, not in /usr - that's for OS-installed files only.
/usr/local is a nice place to put things you installed from source).
While I agree that /usr(/bin) is incorrect, I believe that "for
OS-installed files only" is ta
Thomas Jollans wrote:
> [...] (preferably, not in /usr - that's for OS-installed files only.
> /usr/local is a nice place to put things you installed from source).
While I agree that /usr(/bin) is incorrect, I believe that "for
OS-installed files only" is taking it a bit far.
My (admittedly, dim)
On 2018-10-02 15:59, mchathuran...@gmail.com wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> I'm a beginner on this. I was trying to install a new python version which is
> 2.7.5. My OS(RHEL6) had already installed version 2.6. so I downloaded the
> tar and unzipped it then executed
>
> ./configure --prefix=/usr \
On Wed, Oct 3, 2018 at 12:20 AM Madushan Chathuranga
wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> when I type python2.6 terminal opens for python. So no issue on that. but
> when I type python2.7, python or any yum command It gives the error,
> python: error while loading shared libraries: libpython2.7.so.1.0: cannot
> o
Hi,
when I type python2.6 terminal opens for python. So no issue on that. but when
I type python2.7, python or any yum command It gives the error,
python: error while loading shared libraries: libpython2.7.so.1.0: cannot open
shared object file: No such file or directory
Thanks
--
https://mai
On Wed, Oct 3, 2018 at 12:01 AM wrote:
>
> Hi All,
>
> I'm a beginner on this. I was trying to install a new python version which is
> 2.7.5. My OS(RHEL6) had already installed version 2.6. so I downloaded the
> tar and unzipped it then executed
>
> ./configure --prefix=/usr \
>
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