Lines Matching refs:RPM
15 your module distribution: for users of RPM-based Linux systems, it's a binary
16 RPM; for Windows users, it's an executable installer; for Debian-based Linux
56 built distributions, such as an RPM package or an executable installer for
85 | ``rpm`` | RPM | \(5) |
153 Creating RPM packages
156 The RPM format is used by many popular Linux distributions, including Red Hat,
157 SuSE, and Mandrake. If one of these (or any of the other RPM-based Linux
158 distributions) is your usual environment, creating RPM packages for other users
161 to create RPMs that work on different RPM-based distributions.
163 The usual way to create an RPM of your module distribution is to run the
172 The former allows you to specify RPM-specific options; the latter allows you to
179 Creating RPM packages is driven by a :file:`.spec` file, much as using the
187 | RPM :file:`.spec` file option or section | Distutils setup script option |
211 | RPM :file:`.spec` file option | :command:`bdist_rpm` option | default value |
245 There are three steps to building a binary RPM package, all of which are
252 #. create the source RPM
254 #. create the "binary" RPM (which may or may not contain binary code, depending
257 Normally, RPM bundles the last two steps together; when you use the Distutils,