How to Install and Uninstall libxmlb.x86_64 Package on Fedora 36
Last updated: January 12,2025
1. Install "libxmlb.x86_64" package
This tutorial shows how to install libxmlb.x86_64 on Fedora 36
$
sudo dnf update
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$
sudo dnf install
libxmlb.x86_64
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2. Uninstall "libxmlb.x86_64" package
Learn how to uninstall libxmlb.x86_64 on Fedora 36:
$
sudo dnf remove
libxmlb.x86_64
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$
sudo dnf autoremove
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3. Information about the libxmlb.x86_64 package on Fedora 36
Last metadata expiration check: 4:56:38 ago on Thu Sep 8 02:05:26 2022.
Available Packages
Name : libxmlb
Version : 0.3.9
Release : 1.fc36
Architecture : x86_64
Size : 117 k
Source : libxmlb-0.3.9-1.fc36.src.rpm
Repository : updates
Summary : Library for querying compressed XML metadata
URL : https://github.com/hughsie/libxmlb
License : LGPLv2+
Description : XML is slow to parse and strings inside the document cannot be memory mapped as
: they do not have a trailing NUL char. The libxmlb library takes XML source, and
: converts it to a structured binary representation with a deduplicated string
: table -- where the strings have the NULs included.
:
: This allows an application to mmap the binary XML file, do an XPath query and
: return some strings without actually parsing the entire document. This is all
: done using (almost) zero allocations and no actual copying of the binary data.
Available Packages
Name : libxmlb
Version : 0.3.9
Release : 1.fc36
Architecture : x86_64
Size : 117 k
Source : libxmlb-0.3.9-1.fc36.src.rpm
Repository : updates
Summary : Library for querying compressed XML metadata
URL : https://github.com/hughsie/libxmlb
License : LGPLv2+
Description : XML is slow to parse and strings inside the document cannot be memory mapped as
: they do not have a trailing NUL char. The libxmlb library takes XML source, and
: converts it to a structured binary representation with a deduplicated string
: table -- where the strings have the NULs included.
:
: This allows an application to mmap the binary XML file, do an XPath query and
: return some strings without actually parsing the entire document. This is all
: done using (almost) zero allocations and no actual copying of the binary data.