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<blockquote
cite="mid:20150924073927.953e813d64589a0e18d4c051@inbox.com"
type="cite">
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I am using Fedora 22. There is indeed a docker but I am not sure (sudo dnf info docker) that this is the same docker we are talking abiut.
$ sudo dnf info docker
Last metadata expiration check performed 0:12:36 ago on Thu Sep 24 07:18:51 2015.
Available Packages
Name : docker
Arch : x86_64
Epoch : 0
Version : 1.8.1
Release : 3.git32b8b25.fc22
Size : 6.3 M
Repo : updates
Summary : Automates deployment of containerized applications
URL : <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://www.docker.com">http://www.docker.com</a>
License : ASL 2.0
Description : Docker is an open-source engine that automates the deployment of
: any application as a lightweight, portable, self-sufficient
: container that will run virtually anywhere.
:
: Docker containers can encapsulate any payload, and will run
: consistently on and between virtually any server. The same
: container that a developer builds and tests on a laptop will run
: at scale, in production*, on VMs, bare-metal servers, OpenStack
: clusters, public instances, or combinations of the above.</pre>
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it indeed isn't.<br>
you must broaden your search - maybe it's called docker-panel or
something.<br>
it seems that "dnf info" only returns packages with that exact name.
there must be an option for a fuzzy search.<br>
try "man dnf" (or, isn't there a graphical packet management?).<br>
<br>
and "we" are not talking about it, you are.<br>
i just pointed out the first handful of panels and docks that
crossed my mind.<br>
<br>
and don't call me sir (oh, you didn't).<br>
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