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  2. Environment Modules (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environment_Modules_(software)

    One of the advantages of Environment Modules is a single modulefile that supports bash, ksh, zsh, sh as well as tcsh and csh shell users for environment setup and initialization. This makes managing complex environments a bit less complicated. For a source build the automation for all users can be manually configured.

  3. PackageKit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PackageKit

    PackageKit seeks to introduce automatic updates without having to authenticate as root, fast-user-switching, warnings translated into the correct locale, common upstream GNOME and KDE tools and one software over multiple Linux distributions.

  4. yum (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yum_(software)

    The Yellowdog Updater Modified (YUM) is a free and open-source command-line package-management utility for computers running the Linux operating system using the RPM Package Manager. [4] Though YUM has a command-line interface, several other tools provide graphical user interfaces to YUM functionality.

  5. sudo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sudo

    As a security and auditing feature, sudo may be configured to log each command run. When a user attempts to invoke sudo without being listed in the configuration file, an exception indication is presented to the user indicating that the attempt has been recorded. If configured, the root user will be alerted via mail. By default, an entry is ...

  6. Help:Entering special characters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Entering_special...

    If not already installed along with GNOME, it is usually available as "gucharmap" (which can be installed with "yum install gucharmap" as root on a Redhat-like Linux distribution, for example). In KDE, a similar application is named "KCharSelect". In Debian Linux specifically, you can type "sudo apt install kcharselect" to install it.

  7. AppImage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AppImage

    AppImage aims to be an application deployment system for Linux with the following objectives: simplicity, binary compatibility, portability, distro agnosticism, no installation, no root permission, and keeping the underlying operating system untouched. [10] Because of this, AppImage does not install software by placing executables in various ...

  8. install (Unix) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Install_(Unix)

    The install command is a Unix program used to copy files and set file permissions. Some implementations offer to invoke strip while installing executable files. The command is not defined in POSIX. It has mostly split into two camps in terms of compatibility, a GNU type and a BSD type.

  9. Dependency hell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dependency_hell

    Dependency hell is a colloquial term for the frustration of some software users who have installed software packages which have dependencies on specific versions of other software packages. [ 1 ] The dependency issue arises when several packages have dependencies on the same shared packages or libraries, but they depend on different and ...