The Python FAQ seems to answer your question. Would someone else please chime in if they do not get the same meaning from this answer. Q) Is it safe to install these RPMs on a Red Hat system? Will they over-write the system python and cause problems with other Red Hat applications that expect a different version of Python? A) The RPMs that start with "python2.3" are built to not interfere with the system Python. They install as "/usr/bin/python2.3" and will not conflict with the system Python unless you are running on a system that ships the a version of Python which has the same major/minor number. To invoke the interpreter with these packages, you will explicitly have to run "python2.3". Note that all Python RPMs provided by Python.org and Red Hat provide a "/usr/bin/python2.3" (or similar, with major/minor number), even if they also provide "/usr/bin/python". So, yes, it should be safe. Note that you may need to build and install a second copy of any packages which you need access to with the supplemental version of Python. You can build packages of these files for the Python 2.3 interpreters for packages which use Distutils, by using the command "python2.3 setup.py bdist_rpm". -Leon David Smith said: > Is there a particular reason that Fedora Core 1 is still running python > 2.2.3? Is there any problem with any of the redhat-config tools or > anything else that would cause me not to want to update to 2.3.3 from > http://python.org/2.3.3/rpms.html? > > Thanks in advance, > David > > > -- > fedora-list mailing list > fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx > To unsubscribe: http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list >