On 02/02/07, Steven W. Orr <steveo@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I read this thread and I have a question on why this problem is not handled in a more direct approach instead of the blood&guts reload approach: If you simply reinstall the rpm package (something like) rpm --replacepkgs -vh rpm-4.4.1-22.i386.rpm then you know that the binaries are good. From there all you have to do is
Well that's not quite true, is it. Presumably you suggest is to reinstall rpm because of the possibility that it has been hacked. But if you're using a hacked version of rpm to reinstall it, you can't be sure that it is doing as it is supposed to - i.e. the hacked rpm could be just spitting the package into /dev/null whilst appearing to reinstall it. -- Mark Knoop