On a SUSE or Red Hat system, RPM is the only way software should be installed.  
As you mention, there have been "things" wrapped around it to make software 
installation easier.  YaST is SUSE's method.  Red Carpet is a Novell product.  
Red Hat's is up2date.  Both call RPM for you, after all dependencies have been 
satisfied.

I strongly suggest you get a least a little familiarity with the rpm command, 
as there will be times when you want to install software that doesn't come 
directly from SUSE or Red Hat.  If there are any packages you can only get in 
source form, you'll also want to learn how to build your own RPM packages from 
that.  Installing software on an RPM-based system without using RPM is not a 
good idea at all.  A lot of people do it, but if their luck runs out, then big 
problems can result.


Mark Post

-----Original Message-----
From: Linux on 390 Port [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Tim
Hare
Sent: Wednesday, April 12, 2006 4:39 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: install methods


Wow - we haven't learned much from our mainframe (well, z/OS) experiences,
I guess - where you mostly use SMP/E but some vendors try to put stuff
around it to make it easier, some use a different install method, etc.

This is the third method I will have used (other than the initial install)
and I haven't really installed much..  Yast, Red Carpet, now RPM?  Much as
in z/OS, I'd love for all to adhere to one standard for packages to be
installed.

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