How to install oracle 18c XE rpm package on Ubuntu 18.04 [duplicate]
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This question already has an answer here:
How do I install and manage RPMs?
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I have downloaded the rpm file. But not knowing how to install the db!
Any sort of help please?
server 18.04 software-installation oracle rpm
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marked as duplicate by karel, Thomas, guntbert, Eric Carvalho, Melebius 2 days ago
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
This question already has an answer here:
How do I install and manage RPMs?
11 answers
I have downloaded the rpm file. But not knowing how to install the db!
Any sort of help please?
server 18.04 software-installation oracle rpm
New contributor
marked as duplicate by karel, Thomas, guntbert, Eric Carvalho, Melebius 2 days ago
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
2
Be careful when trying to install RPMs in Ubuntu, the underlying package management system is NOT RPM based for Ubuntu, so you may end up clobbering software dependencies, already installed libraries, etc. in your attempts to install the RPM. (RPMs are for Red Hat based systems like RHEL or CentOS, not Ubuntu)
– Thomas Ward♦
Nov 24 at 21:42
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
This question already has an answer here:
How do I install and manage RPMs?
11 answers
I have downloaded the rpm file. But not knowing how to install the db!
Any sort of help please?
server 18.04 software-installation oracle rpm
New contributor
This question already has an answer here:
How do I install and manage RPMs?
11 answers
I have downloaded the rpm file. But not knowing how to install the db!
Any sort of help please?
This question already has an answer here:
How do I install and manage RPMs?
11 answers
server 18.04 software-installation oracle rpm
server 18.04 software-installation oracle rpm
New contributor
New contributor
edited Nov 25 at 0:40
abu_bua
3,05281023
3,05281023
New contributor
asked Nov 24 at 20:08
venky513
32
32
New contributor
New contributor
marked as duplicate by karel, Thomas, guntbert, Eric Carvalho, Melebius 2 days ago
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
marked as duplicate by karel, Thomas, guntbert, Eric Carvalho, Melebius 2 days ago
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
2
Be careful when trying to install RPMs in Ubuntu, the underlying package management system is NOT RPM based for Ubuntu, so you may end up clobbering software dependencies, already installed libraries, etc. in your attempts to install the RPM. (RPMs are for Red Hat based systems like RHEL or CentOS, not Ubuntu)
– Thomas Ward♦
Nov 24 at 21:42
add a comment |
2
Be careful when trying to install RPMs in Ubuntu, the underlying package management system is NOT RPM based for Ubuntu, so you may end up clobbering software dependencies, already installed libraries, etc. in your attempts to install the RPM. (RPMs are for Red Hat based systems like RHEL or CentOS, not Ubuntu)
– Thomas Ward♦
Nov 24 at 21:42
2
2
Be careful when trying to install RPMs in Ubuntu, the underlying package management system is NOT RPM based for Ubuntu, so you may end up clobbering software dependencies, already installed libraries, etc. in your attempts to install the RPM. (RPMs are for Red Hat based systems like RHEL or CentOS, not Ubuntu)
– Thomas Ward♦
Nov 24 at 21:42
Be careful when trying to install RPMs in Ubuntu, the underlying package management system is NOT RPM based for Ubuntu, so you may end up clobbering software dependencies, already installed libraries, etc. in your attempts to install the RPM. (RPMs are for Red Hat based systems like RHEL or CentOS, not Ubuntu)
– Thomas Ward♦
Nov 24 at 21:42
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
accepted
Alien
Description
Convert and install rpm and other packages.
Alien allows you to convert LSB, Red Hat, Stampede and Slackware Packages into Debian packages, which can be installed with dpkg or apt.
It can also generate packages of any of the other formats.
This is a tool only suitable for binary packages.
Install
sudo apt install alien
Usage
alien -d your_rpm_file.rpm
Then install it with apt:
sudo install ./your_rpm_file.deb
I would google for a snap or docker image instead of converting a rpm pkg, eg
- https://github.com/oracle/docker-images/tree/master/OracleDatabase/SingleInstance/dockerfiles
For more info visit:
- https://github.com/oracle/docker-images
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
On MY Ubuntu 16.04.5 LTS (YMMV),
$ man -k RPM
rpm (8) - RPM Package Manager
rpm2archive (8) - Extract archive archive from RPM Package Manager (RPM) package.
rpm2cpio (8) - Extract cpio archive from RPM Package Manager (RPM) package.
rpm_execcon (3) - get or set the SELinux security context used for executing a new process
rpmatch (3) - determine if the answer to a question is affirmative or negative
rpmbuild (8) - Build RPM Package(s)
rpmdb (8) - RPM Database Tool
rpmdeps (8) - Generate RPM Package Dependencies
rpmgraph (8) - Display RPM Package Dependency Graph
rpmkeys (8) - RPM Keyring
rpmquery (8) - RPM Package Manager
rpmsearch (1sr) - surfraw(1) search tools
rpmsign (8) - RPM Package Signing
rpmspec (8) - RPM Spec Tool
rpmverify (8) - RPM Package Manager
tap2rpm (1) - create RPM packages which wrap .tap files
These are available from the package manager:
$ for i in rpm rpm2archive rpm2cpio rpm_execcon rpmatch rpmbuild rpmdb rpmdeps rpmgraph rpmkeys rpmquery rpmsearch rpmsign rpmspec rpmverify tap2rpm ; do dpkg -S $(type -p $i) 2>/dev/null; done
rpm: /usr/bin/rpm
rpm2cpio: /usr/bin/rpm2archive
rpm2cpio: /usr/bin/rpm2cpio
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmbuild
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmdb
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmgraph
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmkeys
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmquery
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmsign
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmspec
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmverify
python-twisted-core: /usr/bin/tap2rpm
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
accepted
Alien
Description
Convert and install rpm and other packages.
Alien allows you to convert LSB, Red Hat, Stampede and Slackware Packages into Debian packages, which can be installed with dpkg or apt.
It can also generate packages of any of the other formats.
This is a tool only suitable for binary packages.
Install
sudo apt install alien
Usage
alien -d your_rpm_file.rpm
Then install it with apt:
sudo install ./your_rpm_file.deb
I would google for a snap or docker image instead of converting a rpm pkg, eg
- https://github.com/oracle/docker-images/tree/master/OracleDatabase/SingleInstance/dockerfiles
For more info visit:
- https://github.com/oracle/docker-images
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
accepted
Alien
Description
Convert and install rpm and other packages.
Alien allows you to convert LSB, Red Hat, Stampede and Slackware Packages into Debian packages, which can be installed with dpkg or apt.
It can also generate packages of any of the other formats.
This is a tool only suitable for binary packages.
Install
sudo apt install alien
Usage
alien -d your_rpm_file.rpm
Then install it with apt:
sudo install ./your_rpm_file.deb
I would google for a snap or docker image instead of converting a rpm pkg, eg
- https://github.com/oracle/docker-images/tree/master/OracleDatabase/SingleInstance/dockerfiles
For more info visit:
- https://github.com/oracle/docker-images
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
accepted
up vote
0
down vote
accepted
Alien
Description
Convert and install rpm and other packages.
Alien allows you to convert LSB, Red Hat, Stampede and Slackware Packages into Debian packages, which can be installed with dpkg or apt.
It can also generate packages of any of the other formats.
This is a tool only suitable for binary packages.
Install
sudo apt install alien
Usage
alien -d your_rpm_file.rpm
Then install it with apt:
sudo install ./your_rpm_file.deb
I would google for a snap or docker image instead of converting a rpm pkg, eg
- https://github.com/oracle/docker-images/tree/master/OracleDatabase/SingleInstance/dockerfiles
For more info visit:
- https://github.com/oracle/docker-images
Alien
Description
Convert and install rpm and other packages.
Alien allows you to convert LSB, Red Hat, Stampede and Slackware Packages into Debian packages, which can be installed with dpkg or apt.
It can also generate packages of any of the other formats.
This is a tool only suitable for binary packages.
Install
sudo apt install alien
Usage
alien -d your_rpm_file.rpm
Then install it with apt:
sudo install ./your_rpm_file.deb
I would google for a snap or docker image instead of converting a rpm pkg, eg
- https://github.com/oracle/docker-images/tree/master/OracleDatabase/SingleInstance/dockerfiles
For more info visit:
- https://github.com/oracle/docker-images
edited Nov 25 at 0:37
answered Nov 25 at 0:29
abu_bua
3,05281023
3,05281023
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
On MY Ubuntu 16.04.5 LTS (YMMV),
$ man -k RPM
rpm (8) - RPM Package Manager
rpm2archive (8) - Extract archive archive from RPM Package Manager (RPM) package.
rpm2cpio (8) - Extract cpio archive from RPM Package Manager (RPM) package.
rpm_execcon (3) - get or set the SELinux security context used for executing a new process
rpmatch (3) - determine if the answer to a question is affirmative or negative
rpmbuild (8) - Build RPM Package(s)
rpmdb (8) - RPM Database Tool
rpmdeps (8) - Generate RPM Package Dependencies
rpmgraph (8) - Display RPM Package Dependency Graph
rpmkeys (8) - RPM Keyring
rpmquery (8) - RPM Package Manager
rpmsearch (1sr) - surfraw(1) search tools
rpmsign (8) - RPM Package Signing
rpmspec (8) - RPM Spec Tool
rpmverify (8) - RPM Package Manager
tap2rpm (1) - create RPM packages which wrap .tap files
These are available from the package manager:
$ for i in rpm rpm2archive rpm2cpio rpm_execcon rpmatch rpmbuild rpmdb rpmdeps rpmgraph rpmkeys rpmquery rpmsearch rpmsign rpmspec rpmverify tap2rpm ; do dpkg -S $(type -p $i) 2>/dev/null; done
rpm: /usr/bin/rpm
rpm2cpio: /usr/bin/rpm2archive
rpm2cpio: /usr/bin/rpm2cpio
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmbuild
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmdb
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmgraph
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmkeys
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmquery
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmsign
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmspec
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmverify
python-twisted-core: /usr/bin/tap2rpm
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
On MY Ubuntu 16.04.5 LTS (YMMV),
$ man -k RPM
rpm (8) - RPM Package Manager
rpm2archive (8) - Extract archive archive from RPM Package Manager (RPM) package.
rpm2cpio (8) - Extract cpio archive from RPM Package Manager (RPM) package.
rpm_execcon (3) - get or set the SELinux security context used for executing a new process
rpmatch (3) - determine if the answer to a question is affirmative or negative
rpmbuild (8) - Build RPM Package(s)
rpmdb (8) - RPM Database Tool
rpmdeps (8) - Generate RPM Package Dependencies
rpmgraph (8) - Display RPM Package Dependency Graph
rpmkeys (8) - RPM Keyring
rpmquery (8) - RPM Package Manager
rpmsearch (1sr) - surfraw(1) search tools
rpmsign (8) - RPM Package Signing
rpmspec (8) - RPM Spec Tool
rpmverify (8) - RPM Package Manager
tap2rpm (1) - create RPM packages which wrap .tap files
These are available from the package manager:
$ for i in rpm rpm2archive rpm2cpio rpm_execcon rpmatch rpmbuild rpmdb rpmdeps rpmgraph rpmkeys rpmquery rpmsearch rpmsign rpmspec rpmverify tap2rpm ; do dpkg -S $(type -p $i) 2>/dev/null; done
rpm: /usr/bin/rpm
rpm2cpio: /usr/bin/rpm2archive
rpm2cpio: /usr/bin/rpm2cpio
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmbuild
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmdb
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmgraph
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmkeys
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmquery
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmsign
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmspec
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmverify
python-twisted-core: /usr/bin/tap2rpm
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
On MY Ubuntu 16.04.5 LTS (YMMV),
$ man -k RPM
rpm (8) - RPM Package Manager
rpm2archive (8) - Extract archive archive from RPM Package Manager (RPM) package.
rpm2cpio (8) - Extract cpio archive from RPM Package Manager (RPM) package.
rpm_execcon (3) - get or set the SELinux security context used for executing a new process
rpmatch (3) - determine if the answer to a question is affirmative or negative
rpmbuild (8) - Build RPM Package(s)
rpmdb (8) - RPM Database Tool
rpmdeps (8) - Generate RPM Package Dependencies
rpmgraph (8) - Display RPM Package Dependency Graph
rpmkeys (8) - RPM Keyring
rpmquery (8) - RPM Package Manager
rpmsearch (1sr) - surfraw(1) search tools
rpmsign (8) - RPM Package Signing
rpmspec (8) - RPM Spec Tool
rpmverify (8) - RPM Package Manager
tap2rpm (1) - create RPM packages which wrap .tap files
These are available from the package manager:
$ for i in rpm rpm2archive rpm2cpio rpm_execcon rpmatch rpmbuild rpmdb rpmdeps rpmgraph rpmkeys rpmquery rpmsearch rpmsign rpmspec rpmverify tap2rpm ; do dpkg -S $(type -p $i) 2>/dev/null; done
rpm: /usr/bin/rpm
rpm2cpio: /usr/bin/rpm2archive
rpm2cpio: /usr/bin/rpm2cpio
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmbuild
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmdb
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmgraph
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmkeys
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmquery
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmsign
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmspec
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmverify
python-twisted-core: /usr/bin/tap2rpm
On MY Ubuntu 16.04.5 LTS (YMMV),
$ man -k RPM
rpm (8) - RPM Package Manager
rpm2archive (8) - Extract archive archive from RPM Package Manager (RPM) package.
rpm2cpio (8) - Extract cpio archive from RPM Package Manager (RPM) package.
rpm_execcon (3) - get or set the SELinux security context used for executing a new process
rpmatch (3) - determine if the answer to a question is affirmative or negative
rpmbuild (8) - Build RPM Package(s)
rpmdb (8) - RPM Database Tool
rpmdeps (8) - Generate RPM Package Dependencies
rpmgraph (8) - Display RPM Package Dependency Graph
rpmkeys (8) - RPM Keyring
rpmquery (8) - RPM Package Manager
rpmsearch (1sr) - surfraw(1) search tools
rpmsign (8) - RPM Package Signing
rpmspec (8) - RPM Spec Tool
rpmverify (8) - RPM Package Manager
tap2rpm (1) - create RPM packages which wrap .tap files
These are available from the package manager:
$ for i in rpm rpm2archive rpm2cpio rpm_execcon rpmatch rpmbuild rpmdb rpmdeps rpmgraph rpmkeys rpmquery rpmsearch rpmsign rpmspec rpmverify tap2rpm ; do dpkg -S $(type -p $i) 2>/dev/null; done
rpm: /usr/bin/rpm
rpm2cpio: /usr/bin/rpm2archive
rpm2cpio: /usr/bin/rpm2cpio
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmbuild
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmdb
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmgraph
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmkeys
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmquery
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmsign
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmspec
rpm: /usr/bin/rpmverify
python-twisted-core: /usr/bin/tap2rpm
answered Nov 24 at 20:33
waltinator
21.6k74169
21.6k74169
add a comment |
add a comment |
2
Be careful when trying to install RPMs in Ubuntu, the underlying package management system is NOT RPM based for Ubuntu, so you may end up clobbering software dependencies, already installed libraries, etc. in your attempts to install the RPM. (RPMs are for Red Hat based systems like RHEL or CentOS, not Ubuntu)
– Thomas Ward♦
Nov 24 at 21:42