How to Install and Uninstall psmisc.x86_64 Package on CentOS Stream 9
Last updated: November 26,2024
1. Install "psmisc.x86_64" package
Please follow the guidance below to install psmisc.x86_64 on CentOS Stream 9
$
sudo dnf update
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$
sudo dnf install
psmisc.x86_64
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2. Uninstall "psmisc.x86_64" package
This guide covers the steps necessary to uninstall psmisc.x86_64 on CentOS Stream 9:
$
sudo dnf remove
psmisc.x86_64
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$
sudo dnf autoremove
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3. Information about the psmisc.x86_64 package on CentOS Stream 9
Last metadata expiration check: 0:24:52 ago on Sat Mar 16 16:03:45 2024.
Available Packages
Name : psmisc
Version : 23.4
Release : 3.el9
Architecture : x86_64
Size : 243 k
Source : psmisc-23.4-3.el9.src.rpm
Repository : baseos
Summary : Utilities for managing processes on your system
URL : https://gitlab.com/psmisc/psmisc
License : GPLv2+
Description : The psmisc package contains utilities for managing processes on your
: system: pstree, killall, fuser and pslog. The pstree command displays
: a tree structure of all of the running processes on your system. The
: killall command sends a specified signal (SIGTERM if nothing is specified)
: to processes identified by name. The fuser command identifies the PIDs
: of processes that are using specified files or filesystems. The pslog
: command shows the path of log files owned by a given process.
Available Packages
Name : psmisc
Version : 23.4
Release : 3.el9
Architecture : x86_64
Size : 243 k
Source : psmisc-23.4-3.el9.src.rpm
Repository : baseos
Summary : Utilities for managing processes on your system
URL : https://gitlab.com/psmisc/psmisc
License : GPLv2+
Description : The psmisc package contains utilities for managing processes on your
: system: pstree, killall, fuser and pslog. The pstree command displays
: a tree structure of all of the running processes on your system. The
: killall command sends a specified signal (SIGTERM if nothing is specified)
: to processes identified by name. The fuser command identifies the PIDs
: of processes that are using specified files or filesystems. The pslog
: command shows the path of log files owned by a given process.