

Once you get the rpm to your stand-alone system, copy it to a location such as /tmp/firefox-45.1.0-1.el6_7.x86_64.rpm and either do a yum update /tmp/firefox-45.1.0-1.el6_7.x86_64.rpm or if not installed, yum install /tmp/firefox-45.1.0-1.el6_7.x86_64. If you already have firefox installed at a lower version, chances are you already have the needed dependencies. I'd personally recommend grabbing the needed firefox rpm.


See the link in this paragraph for more specifics on backporting. An abbreviated/incomplete description of backporting is where Red Hat takes features from the upstream version and puts it into their own versioning scheme. Get the customizable mobile browser for Android smartphones. Part of that is due to something called backporting, explained at this link. Get the not-for-profit-backed browser on Windows, Mac or Linux. You will see the version Red Hat has for Firefox is different from what's available from the upstream provider. See if your email has appeared in a company’s data breach. At that page, click on "New Versions" and if there's a newer version, it will get it for you. Get the details on the latest Firefox updates. Instead of installing the upstream version of firefox, consider using the rpm provided by Red Hat at their download page, and the newest version for 64-bit RHEL 6 is here (firefox-45.1.0-1.el6_7.x86_64.rpm, at the time I type this). Open Mozilla Firefox and click on the Menu button at the right side of the toolbar.
