How to Install and Uninstall python3-h11.noarch Package on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 (RHEL 8)
Last updated: January 12,2025
1. Install "python3-h11.noarch" package
Please follow the guidance below to install python3-h11.noarch on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 (RHEL 8)
$
sudo dnf update
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$
sudo dnf install
python3-h11.noarch
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2. Uninstall "python3-h11.noarch" package
Please follow the guidance below to uninstall python3-h11.noarch on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 (RHEL 8):
$
sudo dnf remove
python3-h11.noarch
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$
sudo dnf autoremove
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3. Information about the python3-h11.noarch package on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 (RHEL 8)
Last metadata expiration check: 0:48:41 ago on Mon Feb 26 15:59:38 2024.
Available Packages
Name : python3-h11
Version : 0.13.0
Release : 1.el8
Architecture : noarch
Size : 105 k
Source : python-h11-0.13.0-1.el8.src.rpm
Repository : epel
Summary : A pure-Python, bring-your-own-I/O implementation of HTTP/1.1
URL : https://github.com/python-hyper/h11
License : MIT
Description : This is a little HTTP/1.1 library written from scratch in Python, heavily
: inspired by hyper-h2. It is a "bring-your-own-I/O" library; h11 contains no IO
: code whatsoever. This means you can hook h11 up to your favorite network API,
: and that could be anything you want: synchronous, threaded, asynchronous, or
: your own implementation of RFC 6214 -- h11 will not judge you. This also means
: that h11 is not immediately useful out of the box: it is a toolkit for building
: programs that speak HTTP, not something that could directly replace requests or
: twisted.web or whatever. But h11 makes it much easier to implement something
: like requests or twisted.web.
Available Packages
Name : python3-h11
Version : 0.13.0
Release : 1.el8
Architecture : noarch
Size : 105 k
Source : python-h11-0.13.0-1.el8.src.rpm
Repository : epel
Summary : A pure-Python, bring-your-own-I/O implementation of HTTP/1.1
URL : https://github.com/python-hyper/h11
License : MIT
Description : This is a little HTTP/1.1 library written from scratch in Python, heavily
: inspired by hyper-h2. It is a "bring-your-own-I/O" library; h11 contains no IO
: code whatsoever. This means you can hook h11 up to your favorite network API,
: and that could be anything you want: synchronous, threaded, asynchronous, or
: your own implementation of RFC 6214 -- h11 will not judge you. This also means
: that h11 is not immediately useful out of the box: it is a toolkit for building
: programs that speak HTTP, not something that could directly replace requests or
: twisted.web or whatever. But h11 makes it much easier to implement something
: like requests or twisted.web.