How To Install resteasy on Fedora 34
Introduction
In this tutorial we learn how to install resteasy
on Fedora 34.
What is resteasy
RESTEasy contains a JBoss project that provides frameworks to help build RESTful Web Services and RESTful Java applications. It is a fully certified and portable implementation of the JAX-RS specification.
We can use yum
or dnf
to install resteasy
on Fedora 34. In this tutorial we discuss both methods but you only need to choose one of method to install resteasy.
Install resteasy on Fedora 34 Using dnf
Update yum database with dnf
using the following command.
sudo dnf makecache --refresh
The output should look something like this:
Fedora 34 - x86_64 20 kB/s | 6.6 kB 00:00
Fedora 34 openh264 (From Cisco) - x86_64 1.4 kB/s | 989 B 00:00
Fedora Modular 34 - x86_64 68 kB/s | 6.5 kB 00:00
Fedora 34 - x86_64 - Updates 3.5 kB/s | 6.2 kB 00:01
Fedora Modular 34 - x86_64 - Updates 17 kB/s | 5.9 kB 00:00
Metadata cache created.
After updating yum database, We can install resteasy
using dnf
by running the following command:
sudo dnf -y install resteasy
Install resteasy on Fedora 34 Using yum
Update yum database with yum
using the following command.
sudo yum makecache --refresh
The output should look something like this:
Fedora 34 - x86_64 20 kB/s | 6.6 kB 00:00
Fedora 34 openh264 (From Cisco) - x86_64 1.4 kB/s | 989 B 00:00
Fedora Modular 34 - x86_64 68 kB/s | 6.5 kB 00:00
Fedora 34 - x86_64 - Updates 3.5 kB/s | 6.2 kB 00:01
Fedora Modular 34 - x86_64 - Updates 17 kB/s | 5.9 kB 00:00
Metadata cache created.
After updating yum database, We can install resteasy
using yum
by running the following command:
sudo yum -y install resteasy
How To Uninstall resteasy on Fedora 34
To uninstall only the resteasy
package we can use the following command:
sudo dnf remove resteasy
resteasy Package Contents on Fedora 34
/usr/share/doc/resteasy
/usr/share/doc/resteasy/README.md
/usr/share/licenses/resteasy
/usr/share/licenses/resteasy/License.html
References
Summary
In this tutorial we learn how to install resteasy
on Fedora 34 using yum and dnf.