How to Install and Uninstall perl-IPC-System-Simple.noarch Package on Rocky Linux 8
Last updated: November 14,2024
1. Install "perl-IPC-System-Simple.noarch" package
This guide let you learn how to install perl-IPC-System-Simple.noarch on Rocky Linux 8
$
sudo dnf update
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$
sudo dnf install
perl-IPC-System-Simple.noarch
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2. Uninstall "perl-IPC-System-Simple.noarch" package
Learn how to uninstall perl-IPC-System-Simple.noarch on Rocky Linux 8:
$
sudo dnf remove
perl-IPC-System-Simple.noarch
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$
sudo dnf autoremove
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3. Information about the perl-IPC-System-Simple.noarch package on Rocky Linux 8
Last metadata expiration check: 2:07:10 ago on Mon Sep 12 10:27:18 2022.
Available Packages
Name : perl-IPC-System-Simple
Version : 1.25
Release : 17.el8
Architecture : noarch
Size : 42 k
Source : perl-IPC-System-Simple-1.25-17.el8.src.rpm
Repository : appstream
Summary : Run commands simply, with detailed diagnostics
URL : http://search.cpan.org/dist/IPC-System-Simple
License : GPL+ or Artistic
Description : Calling Perl's in-built 'system()' function is easy; determining if it
: was successful is _hard_. Let's face it, '$?' isn't the nicest variable
: in the world to play with, and even if you _do_ check it, producing a
: well-formatted error string takes a lot of work. 'IPC::System::Simple'
: takes the hard work out of calling external commands. In fact, if you
: want to be really lazy, you can just write:
:
: use IPC::System::Simple qw(system);
:
: and all of your "system" commands will either succeed (run to completion and
: return a zero exit value), or die with rich diagnostic messages.
Available Packages
Name : perl-IPC-System-Simple
Version : 1.25
Release : 17.el8
Architecture : noarch
Size : 42 k
Source : perl-IPC-System-Simple-1.25-17.el8.src.rpm
Repository : appstream
Summary : Run commands simply, with detailed diagnostics
URL : http://search.cpan.org/dist/IPC-System-Simple
License : GPL+ or Artistic
Description : Calling Perl's in-built 'system()' function is easy; determining if it
: was successful is _hard_. Let's face it, '$?' isn't the nicest variable
: in the world to play with, and even if you _do_ check it, producing a
: well-formatted error string takes a lot of work. 'IPC::System::Simple'
: takes the hard work out of calling external commands. In fact, if you
: want to be really lazy, you can just write:
:
: use IPC::System::Simple qw(system);
:
: and all of your "system" commands will either succeed (run to completion and
: return a zero exit value), or die with rich diagnostic messages.