diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'source/a/aaa_base/_aaa_base/var/spool/mail/root.new')
-rw-r--r-- | source/a/aaa_base/_aaa_base/var/spool/mail/root.new | 12 |
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/source/a/aaa_base/_aaa_base/var/spool/mail/root.new b/source/a/aaa_base/_aaa_base/var/spool/mail/root.new index 073e57a77..c1872523e 100644 --- a/source/a/aaa_base/_aaa_base/var/spool/mail/root.new +++ b/source/a/aaa_base/_aaa_base/var/spool/mail/root.new @@ -23,12 +23,12 @@ Tools to help configure your system: installing? You can see all that information (and more) again. The simplest way is to use the 'pkgtool' utility to view the package contents. Another way is to use 'less' or a text editor to read the -files in /var/log/packages and /var/log/scripts (this is the method I -use). The pkgtool script serves as a frontend to the command line -package tools, so it's a menu based program that will enable you to -remove, install, or view packages that are currently installed on the -system. pkgtool will also allow you to re-run some of the system admin -scripts that you may have seen during the installation process. +files in /var/lib/pkgtools/packages and /var/lib/pkgtools/scripts (this +is the method I use). The pkgtool script serves as a frontend to the +command line package tools, so it's a menu based program that will enable +you to remove, install, or view packages that are currently installed on +the system. pkgtool will also allow you to re-run some of the system +admin scripts that you may have seen during the installation process. Slackware's command line package tools: I use these utilities most of the time when I have packages to install, remove, or upgrade. These |