I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of Thermostat 1.2 on
CentOS Linux 7 x86_64, delivered via a Software Collection (SCL) built
by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps:
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install thermostat1
$ scl enable thermostat1 bash
At this point you should be able to use thermostat just as a normal
application. Examples of commands run might be:
$ thermostat-setup
$ thermostat
In order to view the individual components included in this collection,
you can run:
$ sudo yum list thermostat1\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection thermostat1 delivers versions 1.2 of the Thermostat, an
instrumentation tool for the Hotspot JVM, with support for monitoring
multiple JVM instances on multiple hosts.
For more on the Thermostat, see
http://icedtea.classpath.org/wiki/Thermostat.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the Thermostat
collections being released here, we also build and deliver databases,
web servers, and language stacks including multiple versions of
PostgreSQL, MariaDB, Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of Thermostat 1.2 on
CentOS Linux 6 x86_64, delivered via a Software Collection (SCL) built
by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps:
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install thermostat1
$ scl enable thermostat1 bash
At this point you should be able to use thermostat just as a normal
application. Examples of commands run might be:
$ thermostat-setup
$ thermostat
In order to view the individual components included in this collection,
you can run:
$ sudo yum list thermostat1\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection thermostat1 delivers versions 1.2 of the Thermostat, an
instrumentation tool for the Hotspot JVM, with support for monitoring
multiple JVM instances on multiple hosts.
For more on the Thermostat, see
http://icedtea.classpath.org/wiki/Thermostat.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the Thermostat
collections being released here, we also build and deliver databases,
web servers, and language stacks including multiple versions of
PostgreSQL, MariaDB, Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of Git 1.9 on CentOS
Linux 7 x86_64, delivered via a Software Collection (SCL) built by the
SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps:
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install git19
$ scl enable git19 bash
At this point you should be able to use git just as a normal
application. Examples of commands run might be:
$ git clone https://github.com/openshift/mysql.git
$ git commit -m "Initial commit"
In order to view the individual components included in this collection,
including additional conversion tools, you can run:
$ sudo yum list git19\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection git19 delivers version 1.9 of the git, fast, scalable and
distributed revision control system, plus additional conversion tools
and plugins also available as RPMs.
For more on the Git, see https://git-scm.com.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the Git collection being
released here, we also build and deliver databases, web servers, and
language stacks including multiple versions of PostgreSQL, MariaDB,
Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of Git 1.9 on CentOS
Linux 6 x86_64, delivered via a Software Collection (SCL) built by the
SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps:
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install git19
$ scl enable git19 bash
At this point you should be able to use git just as a normal
application. Examples of commands run might be:
$ git clone https://github.com/openshift/mysql.git
$ git commit -m "Initial commit"
In order to view the individual components included in this collection,
including additional conversion tools, you can run:
$ sudo yum list git19\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection git19 delivers version 1.9 of the git, fast, scalable and
distributed revision control system, plus additional conversion tools
and plugins also available as RPMs.
For more on the Git, see https://git-scm.com.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the Git collection being
released here, we also build and deliver databases, web servers, and
language stacks including multiple versions of PostgreSQL, MariaDB,
Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of Developer Toolset
3 on CentOS Linux 7 x86_64, delivered via a Software Collection (SCL)
built by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps:
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install devtoolset-3-toolchain
$ scl enable devtoolset-3 bash
At this point you should be able to use gcc and other tools just as a
normal application. Examples of commands run might be:
$ gcc hello.c
$ sudo yum install devtoolset-3-valgrind
$ valgrind ./a.out
$ gdb ./a.out
In order to view the individual components included in this collection,
including additional development tools, you can run:
$ sudo yum list devtoolset-3\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection devtoolset-3 delivers version 4.9.0 of the GNU Compiler
Collection, GNU Debugger, Eclipse development platform, and other
development, debugging, and performance monitoring tools as RPMs.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the Developer Toolset
collection being released here, we also build and deliver databases, web
servers, and language stacks including multiple versions of PostgreSQL,
MariaDB, Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of Developer Toolset
3 on CentOS Linux 6 x86_64, delivered via a Software Collection (SCL)
built by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps:
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install devtoolset-3-toolchain
$ scl enable devtoolset-3 bash
At this point you should be able to use gcc and other tools just as a
normal application. Examples of commands run might be:
$ gcc hello.c
$ sudo yum install devtoolset-3-valgrind
$ valgrind ./a.out
$ gdb ./a.out
In order to view the individual components included in this collection,
including additional development tools, you can run:
$ sudo yum list devtoolset-3\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection devtoolset-3 delivers version 4.9.0 of the GNU Compiler
Collection, GNU Debugger, and other development, debugging, and
performance monitoring tools as RPMs.
However, in comparison to Developer Toolset 3 collection as available
for CentOS 7, this collection does not include Eclipse development
platform, because SCLo SIG does not have enough resources for rebuilding
many depended packages.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the Developer Toolset
collection being released here, we also build and deliver databases, web
servers, and language stacks including multiple versions of PostgreSQL,
MariaDB, Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
CentOS Errata and Security Advisory 2015:2694 Important
Upstream details at : https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHSA-2015-2694.html
The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename )
i386:
b696390d8917ac773ee6aec7aea75dc0b45e05987ef9d75af804fc55ee4c1beb qemu-guest-agent-0.12.1.2-2.479.el6_7.3.i686.rpm
x86_64:
84f0bb42e2a41afb55ef562f922c1cf3930c2e6693c461f3f0e437b37616e2dc qemu-guest-agent-0.12.1.2-2.479.el6_7.3.x86_64.rpm
5fec2687a04c15616dee3d8bc3461783e3e32ec9e665a103242a14d9cfc1ca0a qemu-img-0.12.1.2-2.479.el6_7.3.x86_64.rpm
2d8f0b102815b4d4d3b33daa489d31879bea053d1f391ef280b5aaedb1198b34 qemu-kvm-0.12.1.2-2.479.el6_7.3.x86_64.rpm
26d6611cbece4dc9fb708a57c4051129059b407704b6367ec2744be3883d3d26 qemu-kvm-tools-0.12.1.2-2.479.el6_7.3.x86_64.rpm
Source:
d66c3e7a3148aac6f2c8925c8e48829429bd1cc856ece2ca8d30626145028f83 qemu-kvm-0.12.1.2-2.479.el6_7.3.src.rpm
--
Johnny Hughes
CentOS Project { http://www.centos.org/ }
irc: hughesjr, #centos(a)irc.freenode.net
Twitter: @JohnnyCentOS
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of versions 5.16 and
5.20 of the Perl language stack on CentOS Linux 6 x86_64, delivered via
a Software Collection (SCL) built by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps (example of Perl 5.20):
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install rh-perl520
$ scl enable rh-perl520 bash
At this point you should be able to use perl just as a normal
application. Examples of commands run might be:
$ perl my-app.pl
$ sudo yum install rh-perl520-perl-CPAN make
$ sudo cpan App::cpanminus
$ sudo cpanm -n Furl
In order to view the individual components included in this collection,
including additional Perl modules, you can run:
$ sudo yum list rh-perl520\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collections perl516 and rh-perl520 deliver versions 5.16 and 5.20 of
the Perl language stack, cpan installer and some other modules that are
also included in the collections as RPMs.
For more on the Perl, see https://www.perl.org.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the Perl collections
being released here, we also build and deliver databases, web servers,
and language stacks including multiple versions of PostgreSQL, MariaDB,
Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby, Python, PHP and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of versions 5.16 and
5.20 of the Perl language stack on CentOS Linux 7 x86_64, delivered via
a Software Collection (SCL) built by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps (example of Perl 5.20):
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install rh-perl520
$ scl enable rh-perl520 bash
At this point you should be able to use perl just as a normal
application. Examples of commands run might be:
$ perl my-app.pl
$ sudo yum install rh-perl520-perl-CPAN make
$ sudo cpan App::cpanminus
$ sudo cpanm -n Furl
In order to view the individual components included in this collection,
including additional Perl modules, you can run:
$ sudo yum list rh-perl520\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collections perl516 and rh-perl520 deliver versions 5.16 and 5.20 of
the Perl language stack, cpan installer and some other modules that are
also included in the collections as RPMs.
For more on the Perl, see https://www.perl.org.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the Perl collections
being released here, we also build and deliver databases, web servers,
and language stacks including multiple versions of PostgreSQL, MariaDB,
Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby, Python, PHP and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of versions 5.4, 5.5
and 5.6 of the PHP on CentOS Linux 7 x86_64, delivered via a Software
Collection (SCL) built by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps (example of PHP 5.6):
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install rh-php56
$ scl enable rh-php56 bash
At this point you should be able to use php just as a normal
application. Examples of commands run might be:
$ php my-app.php
$ sudo yum install rh-php56-php-devel yum install libxml2-devel
$ sudo pear install Cache_Lite
$ sudo pecl install xmldiff
In order to view the individual components included in this
collection, including additional PHP modules, you can run:
$ sudo yum list rh-php56\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collections php54, php55 and rh-php56 deliver versions 5.4, 5.5 and
5.6 of the PHP interpreter, pecl and perl installers and some other
modules that are also included in the collections as RPMs.
For more on the PHP, see http://www.php.net.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the PHP collections being
released here, we also build and deliver databases, web servers, and
language stacks including multiple versions of PostgreSQL, MariaDB,
Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of versions 5.4, 5.5
and 5.6 of the PHP on CentOS Linux 6 x86_64, delivered via a Software
Collection (SCL) built by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps (example of PHP 5.6):
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install rh-php56
$ scl enable rh-php56 bash
At this point you should be able to use php just as a normal
application. Examples of commands run might be:
$ php my-app.php
$ sudo yum install rh-php56-php-devel yum install libxml2-devel
$ sudo pear install Cache_Lite
$ sudo pecl install xmldiff
In order to view the individual components included in this
collection, including additional PHP modules, you can run:
$ sudo yum list rh-php56\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collections php54, php55 and rh-php56 deliver versions 5.4, 5.5 and
5.6 of the PHP interpreter, pecl and perl installers and some other
modules that are also included in the collections as RPMs.
For more on the PHP, see http://www.php.net.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the PHP collections being
released here, we also build and deliver databases, web servers, and
language stacks including multiple versions of PostgreSQL, MariaDB,
Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of versions 1.6 and
1.8 of the nginx HTTP and reverse proxy server on CentOS Linux 7 x86_64,
delivered via a Software Collection (SCL) built by the SCLo Special
Interest Group (https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps:
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install rh-nginx18
$ scl enable rh-nginx18 bash
At this point you should be able to use nginx just as a normal
application. An example of commands run might be:
$ nginx -v
$ systemctl start rh-nginx18-nginx
In order to view the individual components included in this collection,
including additional subpackages, you can run:
$ sudo yum list rh-nginx18\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection nginx16 and rh-nginx18 deliver versions 1.6 and 1.8 of
the nginx, an HTTP and reverse proxy server with a focus on high
concurrency, performance and low memory usage. The collection nginx16
delivers a daemon called nginx16-nginx and the collection rh-nginx18
delivers a daemon called rh-nginx18-nginx.
For more on the nginx, see http://nginx.org.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the nginx collections
being released here, we also build and deliver other databases, web
servers, and language stacks including multiple versions of PostgreSQL,
MariaDB, Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of versions 1.6 and
1.8 of the nginx HTTP and reverse proxy server on CentOS Linux 6 x86_64,
delivered via a Software Collection (SCL) built by the SCLo Special
Interest Group (https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps:
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install rh-nginx18
$ scl enable rh-nginx18 bash
At this point you should be able to use nginx just as a normal
application. An example of commands run might be:
$ nginx -v
$ service rh-nginx18-nginx start
In order to view the individual components included in this collection,
including additional subpackages, you can run:
$ sudo yum list rh-nginx18\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection nginx16 and rh-nginx18 deliver versions 1.6 and 1.8 of
the nginx, an HTTP and reverse proxy server with a focus on high
concurrency, performance and low memory usage. The collection nginx16
delivers a daemon called nginx16-nginx and the collection rh-nginx18
delivers a daemon called rh-nginx18-nginx.
For more on the nginx, see http://nginx.org.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the nginx collections
being released here, we also build and deliver other databases, web
servers, and language stacks including multiple versions of PostgreSQL,
MariaDB, Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of Phusion
Passenger in version 4.0 on CentOS Linux 6 x86_64, delivered via a
Software Collection (SCL) built by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps:
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install rh-passenger40 rh-passenger40-ruby22 nginx16
$ scl enable rh-passenger40 rh-ruby22 bash
At this point you should be able to use passenger just as a normal
application. An examples of commands run might be:
$ passenger start
$ passenger status
In order to view the individual components included in this collection,
including other packages that allow you to use passenger with Ruby 2.0
or 1.9.3, instead of 2.2 as in example above, you can run:
$ sudo yum list rh-passenger40\*
The rh-passenger40 collection relies either on the rh-ruby22, ruby200 or
ruby193 collection and the nginx16 collection, so you need to install
one of the following packages: rh-passenger40-ruby193,
rh-passenger40-ruby200, or rh-passenger40-ruby22.
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection rh-passenger40 delivers Phusion Passenger, a web and
application server designed to be fast, robust and lightweight. The
rh-passenger40 Software Collection can also be used with Apache HTTP
Server from the httpd24 Software Collection. To do so, install the
rh-passenger40-mod_passenger package.
For more on the Phusion Passenger, see https://www.phusionpassenger.com.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the Phusion Passenger
collections being released here, we also build and deliver databases,
web servers, and language stacks including multiple versions of
PostgreSQL, MariaDB, Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of Phusion
Passenger in version 4.0 on CentOS Linux 7 x86_64, delivered via a
Software Collection (SCL) built by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps:
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install rh-passenger40 rh-passenger40-ruby22 nginx16
$ scl enable rh-passenger40 rh-ruby22 bash
At this point you should be able to use passenger just as a normal
application. An examples of commands run might be:
$ passenger start
$ passenger status
In order to view the individual components included in this collection,
including other packages that allow you to use passenger with Ruby 2.0
or 1.9.3, instead of 2.2 as in example above, you can run:
$ sudo yum list rh-passenger40\*
The rh-passenger40 collection relies either on the rh-ruby22, ruby200 or
ruby193 collection and the nginx16 collection, so you need to install
one of the following packages: rh-passenger40-ruby193,
rh-passenger40-ruby200, or rh-passenger40-ruby22.
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection rh-passenger40 delivers Phusion Passenger, a web and
application server designed to be fast, robust and lightweight. The
rh-passenger40 Software Collection can also be used with Apache HTTP
Server from the httpd24 Software Collection. To do so, install the
rh-passenger40-mod_passenger package.
For more on the Phusion Passenger, see https://www.phusionpassenger.com.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the Phusion Passenger
collections being released here, we also build and deliver databases,
web servers, and language stacks including multiple versions of
PostgreSQL, MariaDB, Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of version 4 of the
Varnish Cache Server on CentOS Linux 6 x86_64, delivered via a Software
Collection (SCL) built by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps:
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install rh-varnish4
$ scl enable rh-varnish4 bash
At this point you should be able to use varnish just as a normal
application. An example of commands run might be:
$ service rh-varnish4-varnish start
$ varnishtop
In order to view the individual components included in this collection,
including additional subpackages, you can run:
$ sudo yum list rh-varnish4\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection rh-varnish4 delivers version 4 of the Varnish Cache, a
high-performance HTTP reverse proxy. The daemon is called
rh-varnish4-varnish.
For more on the Varnish HTTP, see https://www.varnish-cache.org.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the Varnish Cache
collection being released here, we also build and deliver other
databases, web servers, and language stacks including multiple versions
of PostgreSQL, MariaDB, Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of version 4 of the
Varnish Cache Server on CentOS Linux 7 x86_64, delivered via a Software
Collection (SCL) built by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps:
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install rh-varnish4
$ scl enable rh-varnish4 bash
At this point you should be able to use varnish just as a normal
application. An example of commands run might be:
$ systemctl start rh-varnish4-varnish
$ varnishtop
In order to view the individual components included in this collection,
including additional subpackages, you can run:
$ sudo yum list rh-varnish4\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection rh-varnish4 delivers version 4 of the Varnish Cache, a
high-performance HTTP reverse proxy. The daemon is called
rh-varnish4-varnish.
For more on the Varnish HTTP, see https://www.varnish-cache.org.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the Varnish Cache
collection being released here, we also build and deliver other
databases, web servers, and language stacks including multiple versions
of PostgreSQL, MariaDB, Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of version 2.4 of
the Apache HTTP Server on CentOS Linux 7 x86_64, delivered via a
Software Collection (SCL) built by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps:
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install httpd24-httpd
$ scl enable httpd24 bash
At this point you should be able to use httpd just as a normal
application. An examples of commands run might be:
$ service httpd24-httpd start
$ httpd -h
In order to view the individual components included in this collection,
including additional subpackages, you can run:
$ sudo yum list httpd24\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection httpd24 delivers version 2.4 of the Apache HTTP server
(with a daemon called httpd24-httpd) and related server modules, like
mode_ldap, mod_ssl, mod_auth_kerb and others.
For more on the Apatch HTTP, see https://httpd.apache.org.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the Apache HTTP Server
collection being released here, we also build and deliver other
databases, web servers, and language stacks including multiple versions
of PostgreSQL, MariaDB, NodeJS, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of version 2.4 of
the Apache HTTP Server on CentOS Linux 6 x86_64, delivered via a
Software Collection (SCL) built by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps:
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install httpd24-httpd
$ scl enable httpd24 bash
At this point you should be able to use httpd just as a normal
application. An examples of commands run might be:
$ service httpd24-httpd start
$ httpd -h
In order to view the individual components included in this collection,
including additional subpackages, you can run:
$ sudo yum list httpd24\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection httpd24 delivers version 2.4 of the Apache HTTP server
(with a daemon called httpd24-httpd) and related server modules, like
mode_ldap, mod_ssl, mod_auth_kerb and others.
For more on the Apatch HTTP, see https://httpd.apache.org.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the Apache HTTP Server
collection being released here, we also build and deliver other
databases, web servers, and language stacks including multiple versions
of PostgreSQL, MariaDB, NodeJS, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of versions 5.5 and
10.0 of the MariaDB server on CentOS Linux 7 x86_64, delivered via a
Software Collection (SCL) built by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps (example of MariaDB 10.0):
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install rh-mariadb100
$ scl enable rh-mariadb100 bash
At this point you should be able to use MariaDB just as a normal
application. An examples of commands run might be:
$ systemctl start rh-mariadb100-mariadb
$ mysql
In order to view the individual components included in this collection,
including additional subpackages plugins, you can run:
$ sudo yum list rh-mariadb100\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection rh-mariadb100 delivers version 10.0 of the MariaDB server
(with daemon called rh-mariadb100-mariadb) and related client tools. The
collection mariadb55 delivers version 5.5 of the MariaDB server (with
daemon called mariadb55-mariadb) and related client tools.
Both the collections include no client library libmysqlclient.so and
client applications are advised to use the client library available in
mysql-libs package from base system.
For more on the MariaDB, see https://mariadb.org.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the MariaDB collections
being released here, we also build and deliver other databases, web
servers, and language stacks including multiple versions of MySQL,
PostgreSQL, MongoDB Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of versions 5.5 and
10.0 of the MariaDB server on CentOS Linux 6 x86_64, delivered via a
Software Collection (SCL) built by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps (example of MariaDB 10.0):
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install rh-mariadb100
$ scl enable rh-mariadb100 bash
At this point you should be able to use MariaDB just as a normal
application. An examples of commands run might be:
$ service rh-mariadb100-mariadb start
$ mysql
In order to view the individual components included in this collection,
including additional subpackages plugins, you can run:
$ sudo yum list rh-mariadb100\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection rh-mariadb100 delivers version 10.0 of the MariaDB server
(with daemon called rh-mariadb100-mariadb) and related client tools. The
collection mariadb55 delivers version 5.5 of the MariaDB server (with
daemon called mariadb55-mariadb) and related client tools.
Both the collections include no client library libmysqlclient.so and
client applications are advised to use the client library available in
mysql-libs package from base system.
For more on the MariaDB, see https://mariadb.org.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the MariaDB collections
being released here, we also build and deliver other databases, web
servers, and language stacks including multiple versions of MySQL,
PostgreSQL, MongoDB Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of versions 5.5 and
5.6 of the MySQL on CentOS Linux 6 x86_64, delivered via a Software
Collection (SCL) built by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps (example of MySQL 5.6):
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install rh-mysql56
$ scl enable rh-mysql56 bash
At this point you should be able to use MySQL just as a normal
application. An examples of commands run might be:
$ service rh-mysql56-mysqld start
$ mysql
In order to view the individual components included in this collection,
including additional subpackages plugins, you can run:
$ sudo yum list rh-mysql56\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection rh-mysql56 delivers version 5.6 of the MySQL server (with
daemon called rh-mysql56-mysqld) and related client tools. The
collection mysql55 delivers version 5.5 of the MySQL server (with daemon
called mysql55-mysqld) and related client tools.
Both the collections include no client library libmysqlclient.so and
client applications are advised to use the client library available in
mysql-libs package from base system.
For more on the MySQL, see https://www.mysql.com.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the MySQL collections
being released here, we also build and deliver other databases, web
servers, and language stacks including multiple versions of MariaDB,
PostgreSQL, MongoDB Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of versions 5.5 and
5.6 of the MySQL on CentOS Linux 7 x86_64, delivered via a Software
Collection (SCL) built by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps (example of MySQL 5.6):
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install rh-mysql56
$ scl enable rh-mysql56 bash
At this point you should be able to use MySQL just as a normal
application. An examples of commands run might be:
$ systemctl start rh-mysql56-mysqld
$ mysql
In order to view the individual components included in this collection,
including additional subpackages plugins, you can run:
$ sudo yum list rh-mysql56\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection rh-mysql56 delivers version 5.6 of the MySQL server (with
daemon called rh-mysql56-mysqld) and related client tools. The
collection mysql55 delivers version 5.5 of the MySQL server (with daemon
called mysql55-mysqld) and related client tools.
Both the collections include no client library libmysqlclient.so and
client applications are advised to use the client library available in
mysql-libs package from base system.
For more on the MySQL, see https://www.mysql.com.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the MySQL collections
being released here, we also build and deliver other databases, web
servers, and language stacks including multiple versions of MariaDB,
PostgreSQL, MongoDB Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of versions 2.4 and
2.6 of the MongoDB server on CentOS Linux 7 x86_64, delivered via a
Software Collection (SCL) built by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps (example of MongoDB 2.6):
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install rh-mongodb26 rh-mongodb26-mongodb
$ scl enable rh-mongodb26 bash
At this point you should be able to use MongoDB just as a normal
application. An examples of commands run might be:
$ systemctl start rh-mongodb26-mongod
$ mongo
In order to view the individual components included in this collection,
including additional subpackages, you can run:
$ sudo yum list rh-mongodb26\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection rh-mongodb26 delivers version 2.6 of the MongoDB server
(with daemon called rh-mongodb26-mongod) and related client tools. The
collection mongodb24 delivers version 2.4 of the MongoDB server (with
daemon called mongodb24-mongodb) and related client tools. Both
collections also include mongo-java-driver to connect to MongoDB server
in Java.
For more on the MongoDB, see http://mongodb.org.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the MongoDB collections
being released here, we also build and deliver other databases, web
servers, and language stacks including multiple versions of PostgreSQL,
MariaDB, Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of versions 2.4 and
2.6 of the MongoDB server on CentOS Linux 6 x86_64, delivered via a
Software Collection (SCL) built by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps (example of MongoDB 2.6):
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install rh-mongodb26 rh-mongodb26-mongodb
$ scl enable rh-mongodb26 bash
At this point you should be able to use MongoDB just as a normal
application. An examples of commands run might be:
$ service rh-mongodb26-mongod start
$ mongo
In order to view the individual components included in this collection,
including additional subpackages, you can run:
$ sudo yum list rh-mongodb26\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection rh-mongodb26 delivers version 2.6 of the MongoDB server
(with daemon called rh-mongodb26-mongod) and related client tools. The
collection mongodb24 delivers version 2.4 of the MongoDB server (with
daemon called mongodb24-mongodb) and related client tools. Both
collections also include mongo-java-driver to connect to MongoDB server
in Java.
For more on the MongoDB, see http://mongodb.org.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the MongoDB collections
being released here, we also build and deliver other databases, web
servers, and language stacks including multiple versions of PostgreSQL,
MariaDB, Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of versions 9.2 and
9.4 of the PostgreSQL server on CentOS Linux 7 x86_64, delivered via a
Software Collection (SCL) built by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps (example of PostgreSQL 9.4):
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install rh-postgresql94
$ scl enable rh-postgresql94 bash
At this point you should be able to use PostgreSQL just as a normal
application. An examples of commands run might be:
$ postgresql-setup --initdb
$ systemctl start rh-postgresql94-postgresql
$ psql
Since su and sudo commands clear environment variables, we need to run
scl enable once again for example after switching to postgres user role:
$ su - postgres -c 'scl enable rh-postgresql94 -- psql'
In order to view the individual components included in this collection,
including additional subpackages, you can run:
$ sudo yum list rh-postgresql94\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection rh-postgresql94 delivers version 9.4 of the PostgreSQL
server and related client tools. The collection postgresql92 delivers
version 9.2 of the PostgreSQL server and related client tools. The
collections also include client library libpq.so, which is however only
meant to be used by the server, while other client applications are
advised to use the client library available in postgresql-libs package
from base system.
For more on the PostgreSQL, see http://www.postgresql.org.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the PostgreSQL
collections being released here, we also build and deliver other
databases, web servers, and language stacks including multiple versions
of MySQL, MariaDB, Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of versions 9.2 and
9.4 of the PostgreSQL server on CentOS Linux 6 x86_64, delivered via a
Software Collection (SCL) built by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps (example of PostgreSQL 9.4):
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install rh-postgresql94
$ scl enable rh-postgresql94 bash
At this point you should be able to use PostgreSQL just as a normal
application. An examples of commands run might be:
$ postgresql-setup --initdb
$ service rh-postgresql94-postgresql start
$ psql
Since su and sudo commands clear environment variables, we need to run
scl enable once again for example after switching to postgres user role:
$ su - postgres -c 'scl enable rh-postgresql94 -- psql'
In order to view the individual components included in this collection,
including additional subpackages, you can run:
$ sudo yum list rh-postgresql94\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection rh-postgresql94 delivers version 9.4 of the PostgreSQL
server and related client tools. The collection postgresql92 delivers
version 9.2 of the PostgreSQL server and related client tools. The
collections also include client library libpq.so, which is however only
meant to be used by the server, while other client applications are
advised to use the client library available in postgresql-libs package
from base system.
For more on the PostgreSQL, see http://www.postgresql.org.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the PostgreSQL
collections being released here, we also build and deliver other
databases, web servers, and language stacks including multiple versions
of MySQL, MariaDB, Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of version 0.10 of
the NodeJS on CentOS Linux 6 x86_64, delivered via a Software Collection
(SCL) built by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps:
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install nodejs010
$ scl enable nodejs010 bash
At this point you should be able to use NodeJS just as a normal
application. An examples of commands run might be:
$ node my-app.js
$ npm install uglify-js --global
$ uglifyjs my-app.js -o my-app.min.js
In order to view the individual components included in this
collection, including additional NodeJS modules, you can run:
$ sudo yum list nodejs010\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection nodejs010 delivers version 0.10 of the NodeJS Javascript
interpreter, npm installer and some other modules that are also included
in the collections as RPMs.
For more on the NodeJS, see https://nodejs.org.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the NodeJS collection
being released here, we also build and deliver databases, web servers,
and language stacks including multiple versions of PostgreSQL, MariaDB,
Apache HTTP Server, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of version 0.10 of
the NodeJS on CentOS Linux 7 x86_64, delivered via a Software Collection
(SCL) built by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps:
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install nodejs010
$ scl enable nodejs010 bash
At this point you should be able to use NodeJS just as a normal
application. An examples of commands run might be:
$ node my-app.js
$ npm install uglify-js --global
$ uglifyjs my-app.js -o my-app.min.js
In order to view the individual components included in this
collection, including additional NodeJS modules, you can run:
$ sudo yum list nodejs010\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection nodejs010 delivers version 0.10 of the NodeJS Javascript
interpreter, npm installer and some other modules that are also included
in the collections as RPMs.
For more on the NodeJS, see https://nodejs.org.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the NodeJS collection
being released here, we also build and deliver databases, web servers,
and language stacks including multiple versions of PostgreSQL, MariaDB,
Apache HTTP Server, Ruby, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
CentOS Errata and Bugfix Advisory 2015:2668
Upstream details at : https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHBA-2015-2668.html
The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename )
i386:
d7a9fb01a178a2dbb1a93d5e5ca7d8744e26ade820da1e95c8250d4a88d7acd2 watchdog-5.6-5.el6.i686.rpm
x86_64:
9a8101cf52bba32ec1e6c653683ec5468aeb81ec972785136023c2a2f19923ec watchdog-5.6-5.el6.x86_64.rpm
Source:
d5a4e034185b85e189da7bdf77fad1bf1fea5ff8bf41e18da4f214966b075792 watchdog-5.6-5.el6.src.rpm
--
Johnny Hughes
CentOS Project { http://www.centos.org/ }
irc: hughesjr, #centos(a)irc.freenode.net
Twitter: @JohnnyCentOS
I would like to announce the general availability of the following
CentOS AltArch 7 Releases:
* CentOS AltArch 7 (1511) for i686
* CentOS AltArch UserLand 7 (1511) for Armhfp
* CentOS AltArch 7 (1511) for PowerPC64 (TechPreview)
* CentOS AltArch 7 (1511) for PowerPC8 LE (TechPreview)
We anticipate CentOS AltArch 7 (1511) for Aarch64 will be ready for
release within the coming days, and will be announced independently.
The CentOS AltArch SIG is a group of people working to build alternative
architecture support derived from CentOS Linux's sources. You can find
more details about the AltArch group at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/AltArch including details
on how to get involved and ways to get help for architecture specific
issues.
Releases under the AltArch SIG are hosted at
http://mirror.centos.org/altarch/ and available from external mirrors
via rsync, http, ftp as usual, however under the /altarch/ path. Yum
configs shipped in the altarch builds points at mirror.centos.org
instead of mirrorlist or the external mirrors, as we are still working
through the mechanics to facilitate the wider mirrorlist process. We
hope to have this in place within the next 2 months, and updates to the
yum configs will be issued, when ready, via an updated centos-release rpm.
We are hosting a CentOS Dojo in Brussels, Belgium on the 29th Jan 2016.
Lots of the key people working on the AltArch builds will be present
there and it would be a great forum to engage with these groups. You can
get the details for the event at
https://wiki.centos.org/Events/Dojo/Brussels2016 including the
registration links.
In order to bootstrap these builds, we have turned on direct downloads
of this content from mirror.centos.org. We do encourage people with the
capacity to help seed with external mirrors. Details on howto run a
CentOS Mirror are available at
https://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/CreatePublicMirrors
A key part of our AltArch plans is to make resources available to all
the other SIG's in the CentOS environment, so they are able to build,
test, deliver their content for these architectures. We are working on
setting things up, and hope to start rolling out altarch support for
https://cbs.centos.org/ in the first quarter of 2016. If you are engaged
in any of the SIGs and would like to find out more details, please come
along to our buildsystems meeting that takes place on Mondays in
#centos-devel on irc.freenode.net. Details on this meeting and the other
SIG meetings can be found in our community meetings calendar published
at https://www.centos.org/community/calendar/ .
Bug reports and feedback about specific packages should be filed at
https://bugs.centos.org/ against the relevant package name, for project
CentOS Linux 7, in the same manner as you would for x86_64. However, do
mention the architecture as applicable.
--------
CentOS AltArch 7 (1511) for i686 : This architecture build supports
32-bit Intel/AMD x86 machines and 32 bit IOT x86 boards.
SIG Notes: https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/AltArch/i386
* CentOS-7-i386-DVD-1511.iso
sha256sum :
6af64d8371ed8fb95a56c99530f0dc3eb287e58f72c009c686db0fb80c39f83f
direct link :
http://mirror.centos.org/altarch/7/isos/i386/CentOS-7-i386-DVD-1511.iso
* CentOS-7-i386-Everything-1511.iso
sha256sum :
918e0ade9f642c93531c414defeecfc9b2c2a9589d57642d690e46e42b0af82a
direct link :
http://mirror.centos.org/altarch/7/isos/i386/CentOS-7-i386-Everything-1511.…
* CentOS-7-i386-LiveGNOME-1511.iso
sha256sum :
a03af3c7f6c75c74e1da5d1551ceaf5922427762c5cd6503f4f5e972737134ed
direct link :
http://mirror.centos.org/altarch/7/isos/i386/CentOS-7-i386-LiveGNOME-1511.i…
* CentOS-7-i386-LiveKDE-1511.iso
sha256sum :
9fdef81423b872c361bac3ac55718822b4420de1645a4da8d7a255ae500965fc
direct link :
http://mirror.centos.org/altarch/7/isos/i386/CentOS-7-i386-LiveKDE-1511.iso
* CentOS-7-i386-Minimal-1511.iso
sha256sum :
df6edebec370bdee59e67eb70fab7ddc2fcf4c437803ca9e3213552b3908c4e1
direct link :
http://mirror.centos.org/altarch/7/isos/i386/CentOS-7-i386-Minimal-1511.iso
* CentOS-7-i386-NetInstall-1511.iso
sha256sum :
b106a0c13c86db86aaf821b66da1119063479e8776b8711dbbd35042b16bfd6d
direct link :
http://mirror.centos.org/altarch/7/isos/i386/CentOS-7-i386-NetInstall-1511.…
--------
CentOS AltArch UserLand 7 (1511) for Armhfp : This architecture build
delivers support for ARMv7hl devices including the Raspberry pi2, Cubie
Truck, Bananapi and similar hardware.
SIG Notes: https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/AltArch/Arm32
The armhfp build is delivered as a userland build, implying that kernel
and bootloader delivered is not derived from the CentOS Linux 7 distro,
but comes from either an upstream kernel.org mainline kernel or is a
vendor supported kernel for their own hardware piece. As such, the
Armhfp build does not aim to deliver a complete feature set, and is
labelled as a UserLand release. There are also no installer images
delivered for this architecture. The images shipped are ready to run and
are board specific. While there is plenty of desktop and X related
support available, our focus for these builds has been towards the
server and IoT roles.
We have a dedicated mailing list for the ARM ports ( both Armhfp and
Aarch64 ) at https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/arm-dev ;
questions specific to these builds and images should be posted there.
* CentOS-Userland-7-armv7hl-Minimal-1511-BananaPi.img.xz
sha256sum :
d461144b471434a275268e85828def38c09e265da24b71d2f10771d264532368
direct link :
http://mirror.centos.org/altarch/7/isos/armhfp/CentOS-Userland-7-armv7hl-Mi…
* CentOS-Userland-7-armv7hl-Minimal-1511-CubieTruck.img.xz
sha256sum :
17c3944429ac323c636ee955062d8177219f397fea4416dca87ca19092b646ec
direct link :
http://mirror.centos.org/altarch/7/isos/armhfp/CentOS-Userland-7-armv7hl-Mi…
*CentOS-Userland-7-armv7hl-Minimal-1511-RaspberryPi2.img.xz
sha256sum :
05e8c58cd837b90c0ab423b3730ee20ad185e19f346f531d3717c51358ea72cf
direct link :
http://mirror.centos.org/altarch/7/isos/armhfp/CentOS-Userland-7-armv7hl-Mi…
--------
CentOS AltArch 7 (1511) for PowerPC64 (TechPreview) : This architecture
is for 64-bit IBM POWER7 machines using big endian byte ordering. We are
marking this as a Tech Preview release, as it needs wider testing before
it can be adopted as a GA release.
SIG Notes: https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/AltArch/ppc64
* CentOS-7-AltArch-ppc64-Everything-1511.iso
sha256sum :
40ce665db62483a044a6d1a4996b2d5b507eb7f43c5e7846116dbd72e9e64e6a
direct link :
http://mirror.centos.org/altarch/7/isos/ppc64/CentOS-7-AltArch-ppc64-Everyt…
* CentOS-7-AltArch-ppc64-NetInstall-1511.iso
sha256sum :
46715a965f98901fabed13076aba879c32dd51b7bab63fa035b61a5b051f0b04
direct link :
http://mirror.centos.org/altarch/7/isos/ppc64/CentOS-7-AltArch-ppc64-NetIns…
--------
CentOS AltArch 7 (1511) for PowerPC8 LE (TechPreview) : This
architecture is for 64-bit IBM POWER8 machines using little endian byte
ordering. We are marking this as a Tech Preview release, as it needs
wider testing before it can be adopted as a GA release.
SIG Notes: https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/AltArch/ppc64le
* CentOS-7-AltArch-ppc64le-Everything-1511.iso
sha256sum :
713ea707eea4eb75d7ff27648e6e3a4e97738bc3b2b274d1e9dc629fe537a170
direct link :
http://mirror.centos.org/altarch/7/isos/ppc64le/CentOS-7-AltArch-ppc64le-Ev…
* CentOS-7-AltArch-ppc64le-NetInstall-1511.iso
sha256sum :
fa7c5f504e56ad9115b820b1cf6650e6c20c6ca6224b155ef0c12e1be8e8f666
direct link :
http://mirror.centos.org/altarch/7/isos/ppc64le/CentOS-7-AltArch-ppc64le-Ne…
--------
I'd like to thank everyone involved in this process. We have come a long
way down the route from the initial plans of getting the AltArch project
bootstrapped, and its only down to the dedciated efforts from the people
involved in this process that we are able to deliver support for five
new architectures.
I also want to take this opportunity to point out that we run an office
hours forum, twice a week. Details are available at
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar/#Karanbir_Singh_Office_Hours ,
please feel free to stop by and say hi. We welcome comments and
questions around pretty much anything / everything relevant to the
CentOS community.
enjoy!
--
Karanbir Singh, Project Lead, The CentOS Project
+44-207-0999389 | http://www.centos.org/ | twitter.com/CentOS
GnuPG Key : http://www.karan.org/publickey.asc
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of versions 2.7, 3.3
and 3.4 of the Python on CentOS Linux 6 x86_64 and CentOS Linux 7
x86_64, delivered via a Software Collection (SCL) built by the SCLo
Special Interest Group (https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps (example of Python 3.4):
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install rh-python34
$ scl enable rh-python34 bash
At this point you should be able to use python just as a normal
application. An examples of commands run might be:
$ python my-app.py
$ easy_install Flask
$ easy_install Django
$ bundle
In order to view the individual components included in this
collection, including additional python modules, you can run:
$ sudo yum list rh-python34\*
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collections rh-python34, python33 and python27 deliver versions 3.4,
3.3 and 2.7 of the Python interpreter, pip installer (except python33,
which does not include pip) and some other modules that are also
included in the collections as RPMs.
For more on the Python, see https://www.python.org/.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the Python collections
being released here, we also build and deliver databases, web servers,
and language stacks including multiple versions of PostgreSQL, MariaDB,
Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Ruby and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability versions 1.9.3,
2.0.0, and 2.2 of the Ruby, and versions 3.2, 4.0 and 4.1 of the Ruby on
Rails, now also on CentOS Linux 6 x86_64, delivered via a Software
Collection (SCL) built by the SCLo Special Interest Group
(https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo)
This is an addition for the Ruby collections that are already available
for CentOS 7
(https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-November/021501.html)
QuickStart
----------
You can get started in three easy steps (example of Ruby 2.2 and Ruby on
Rails 4.1):
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
$ sudo yum install rh-ruby22 rh-ror41
$ scl enable rh-ruby22 bash
At this point you should be able to use ruby just as a normal
application. An examples of commands run might be:
$ ruby my-app.rb
$ gem install activeresource
$ bundle
In order to view the individual components included in this
collection, including additional rubygems plugins, you can run:
$ sudo yum list rh-ruby22\* rh-ror41\*
The rh-ror41 collection relies on the rh-ruby22 collection and the ror40
collection relies on the ruby200 collection, so the Ruby collections
will be also installed when the Ruby on Rails collection is installed.
About Software Collections
--------------------------
Software Collections give you the power to build, install, and use
multiple versions of software on the same system, without affecting
system-wide installed packages. Each collection is delivered as a group
of RPMs, with the grouping being done using the name of the collection
as a prefix of all packages that are part of the software collection.
The collection rh-ruby22 delivers bundler and version 2.2 of the Ruby
interpreter, while the collection rh-ror41 delivers version 4.1 of the
Ruby on Rails framework that allows to create and run applications in
Ruby or Ruby on Rails framework.
The collection ruby200 delivers version 2.0.0 of the Ruby interpreter,
while the ror40 collection delivers version 4.0 of the Ruby on Rails
framework and bundler.
The collection ruby193 delivers version 1.9.3 of the Ruby interpreter,
bundler and version 3.2 of the Ruby on Rails framework.
Some of the most common rubygems are also included in the collections as
RPMs, the rest may be installed using bundler or gem tools.
For more on the Ruby and Ruby on Rails, see https://www.ruby-lang.org,
http://rubyonrails.org or https://rubygems.org.
The SCLo SIG in CentOS
----------------------
The Software Collections SIG group is an open community group
co-ordinating the development of the SCL technology, and helping curate
a reference set of collections. In addition to the Ruby and Ruby on
Rails collections being released here, we also build and deliver
databases, web servers, and language stacks including multiple versions
of PostgreSQL, MariaDB, Apache HTTP Server, NodeJS, Python and others.
Software Collections SIG release was announced at
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2015-October/021446.html
You can learn more about Software Collections concepts at:
http://softwarecollections.org
You can find information on the SIG at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo ; this includes howto
get involved and help with the effort.
We meet every second Wednesday at 16:00 UTC in #centos-devel (ref:
https://www.centos.org/community/calendar) for an informal open forum
open to anyone who might have comments, concerns or wants to get started
with SCL's in CentOS.
Enjoy!
Honza
SCLo SIG member
CentOS Errata and Security Advisory 2015:2657 Critical
Upstream details at : https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHSA-2015-2657.html
The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename )
i386:
b943b91d2dbce25e113aa719243add555b7498e06a2e4b66e6cedcbd6346c768 firefox-38.5.0-2.el5.centos.i386.rpm
x86_64:
b943b91d2dbce25e113aa719243add555b7498e06a2e4b66e6cedcbd6346c768 firefox-38.5.0-2.el5.centos.i386.rpm
2e7c936871b39cc73ed59b6bc6bfde2ddc699b986f8309f4fb82294cac8bf5b5 firefox-38.5.0-2.el5.centos.x86_64.rpm
Source:
43039a4056e5fc8eac941e9820314cf3c14a1cae67c4ac42da85ce06def8b377 firefox-38.5.0-2.el5.centos.src.rpm
--
Johnny Hughes
CentOS Project { http://www.centos.org/ }
irc: hughesjr, #centos(a)irc.freenode.net
Twitter: JohnnyCentOS
CentOS Errata and Security Advisory 2015:2657 Critical
Upstream details at : https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHSA-2015-2657.html
The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename )
i386:
d878f9f3704a32b0f6a32031a6d2753fb71e62fa5cdb2946fba1387b83839713 firefox-38.5.0-2.el6.centos.i686.rpm
x86_64:
d878f9f3704a32b0f6a32031a6d2753fb71e62fa5cdb2946fba1387b83839713 firefox-38.5.0-2.el6.centos.i686.rpm
ad885533c10648ffd203624dd51f6d066e4de23ece34439ed12b903b6e34a78c firefox-38.5.0-2.el6.centos.x86_64.rpm
Source:
303db0ec83d7a6ea8fc31b43075a12c87a46f1dea5d7a63b99645a9d6876bc02 firefox-38.5.0-2.el6.centos.src.rpm
--
Johnny Hughes
CentOS Project { http://www.centos.org/ }
irc: hughesjr, #centos(a)irc.freenode.net
Twitter: @JohnnyCentOS
CentOS Errata and Security Advisory 2015:2657 Critical
Upstream details at : https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHSA-2015-2657.html
The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename )
x86_64:
1cc9fba74ceb042a050ed4b678c449be6e3d15590d94b74a70a8dc6c26b1f4a8 firefox-38.5.0-3.el7.centos.i686.rpm
a4fc56d9226dd2355fdf1966851214e989629411ec36db45bb07c3155eeab788 firefox-38.5.0-3.el7.centos.x86_64.rpm
Source:
d638045c394ac43ca2496402727b4f67b264d499230789d70786e5a7fc772f21 firefox-38.5.0-3.el7.centos.src.rpm
--
Johnny Hughes
CentOS Project { http://www.centos.org/ }
irc: hughesjr, #centos(a)irc.freenode.net
Twitter: @JohnnyCentOS
CentOS Errata and Security Advisory 2015:2653 Moderate
Upstream details at : https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHSA-2015-2623.html
The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename )
x86_64:
8603042073286061d4ec3757b5e940aa5e5bbfca1f7f114d8cbaf9e3d27db4e7 grub2-2.02-0.33.el7.centos.1.x86_64.rpm
e2985a01c8c879c855eee9cb61e57ac509ceebc56f6911ee981465e4709e8430 grub2-efi-2.02-0.33.el7.centos.1.x86_64.rpm
f0c0fe813776cc3b948f87fbbe82370f7944babf2ce22d4328379a46f5b2eb7c grub2-efi-modules-2.02-0.33.el7.centos.1.x86_64.rpm
2448ae6c196944fa938a34112fa77d37726ba92db51c362fe1b21c905c43f265 grub2-tools-2.02-0.33.el7.centos.1.x86_64.rpm
Source:
e729b0d48dd2f3ca80b2fccf2defa3bd39b3e541b525bc89d56cbef9c6d0396e grub2-2.02-0.33.el7.centos.1.src.rpm
--
Johnny Hughes
CentOS Project { http://www.centos.org/ }
irc: hughesjr, #centos(a)irc.freenode.net
Twitter: @JohnnyCentOS
CentOS Errata and Bugfix Advisory 2015:2647
Upstream details at : https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHBA-2015-2647.html
The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename )
i386:
8449bfc8305ceabf7e14afcd0a623627cde64ba8bebe8bac676932f8ff8b8011 dvd+rw-tools-7.1-7.el6.i686.rpm
x86_64:
39b09d0fb9a70c107360d999be92535b25a8f2b6fb92b752ca56617349c715b0 dvd+rw-tools-7.1-7.el6.x86_64.rpm
Source:
91264c2f7dce0d97cb5c5087cef13344d5ff62dc1f9a56187d692cdada6cf97a dvd+rw-tools-7.1-7.el6.src.rpm
--
Johnny Hughes
CentOS Project { http://www.centos.org/ }
irc: hughesjr, #centos(a)irc.freenode.net
Twitter: @JohnnyCentOS
CentOS Errata and Bugfix Advisory 2015:2648
Upstream details at : https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHBA-2015-2648.html
The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename )
i386:
bc75df824f61fdb452221ebb69653b2fdd9329cb16dbe069e9fa506055c29612 unzip-6.0-4.el6.i686.rpm
x86_64:
21cbf738e11dd401c608187487fbd9e2dcc808813965544333971f69788816b9 unzip-6.0-4.el6.x86_64.rpm
Source:
bfc2a0a346e99c7d5a7208e079d00073821708663377f391f5e9ed2fd67078fe unzip-6.0-4.el6.src.rpm
--
Johnny Hughes
CentOS Project { http://www.centos.org/ }
irc: hughesjr, #centos(a)irc.freenode.net
Twitter: @JohnnyCentOS
CentOS Errata and Bugfix Advisory 2015:2646
Upstream details at : https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHBA-2015-2646.html
The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename )
i386:
42523a0ac0d9d3b45ebcb6d4c7d1ade6078cf7e84637b5bacd8e7366b4305e60 perl-LDAP-0.40-2.el6.noarch.rpm
x86_64:
42523a0ac0d9d3b45ebcb6d4c7d1ade6078cf7e84637b5bacd8e7366b4305e60 perl-LDAP-0.40-2.el6.noarch.rpm
Source:
484e8c86ba7f0146b08be88295a1e1f3794e99a8842503a66abc9a62f4bac2ec perl-LDAP-0.40-2.el6.src.rpm
--
Johnny Hughes
CentOS Project { http://www.centos.org/ }
irc: hughesjr, #centos(a)irc.freenode.net
Twitter: @JohnnyCentOS
CentOS Errata and Bugfix Advisory 2015:2639
Upstream details at : https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHBA-2015-2639.html
The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename )
i386:
7307112f323038c2ee2a8dbbb3abcc8b13a088c9e8e455db7c550d0f20b1fb11 debugmode-9.03.49-1.el6.centos.3.i686.rpm
074edd127084a5f6404ef2a2b01dda214762a2985a4be17fd900f348142fd6fd initscripts-9.03.49-1.el6.centos.3.i686.rpm
x86_64:
807d7528db7080dcefd1dffce8475c221bdb8fb293fe81c6cd92954634016e18 debugmode-9.03.49-1.el6.centos.3.x86_64.rpm
10279f0bc50754f70082cacdba6051fc1f14dc64072f32c0b4b20bc3f7f31980 initscripts-9.03.49-1.el6.centos.3.x86_64.rpm
Source:
769a4afca60917ad65c0b2fced67c9e12eeeda0846dfed547c0587253466e109 initscripts-9.03.49-1.el6.centos.3.src.rpm
--
Johnny Hughes
CentOS Project { http://www.centos.org/ }
irc: hughesjr, #centos(a)irc.freenode.net
Twitter: @JohnnyCentOS
CentOS Errata and Bugfix Advisory 2015:2638
Upstream details at : https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHBA-2015-2638.html
The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename )
i386:
00817dc771b63741d1ed40898e944e7d0c7bb0e800b0f853f8fa5a6f4020d3b7 logrotate-3.7.8-26.el6_7.i686.rpm
x86_64:
111c2ec5fbe1128ba59efe1f033b8739b85cecee05955e0b1101c8404a6b89a0 logrotate-3.7.8-26.el6_7.x86_64.rpm
Source:
9d033ac1a7bd5fb25ab3204abd2e38b175c0efe0067028642159fef2d246c96c logrotate-3.7.8-26.el6_7.src.rpm
--
Johnny Hughes
CentOS Project { http://www.centos.org/ }
irc: hughesjr, #centos(a)irc.freenode.net
Twitter: @JohnnyCentOS
CentOS Errata and Bugfix Advisory 2015:2632
Upstream details at : https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHBA-2015-2632.html
The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename )
i386:
1172cf519d9d5decd00457dc3c18fca0db880b067a52753c884129dc1c0fc1f7 pcs-0.9.139-9.el6_7.2.i686.rpm
x86_64:
1992b58afcfb4c48ad034884f57da4433b4ee716bb936d196f0ee2cd05d59a7d pcs-0.9.139-9.el6_7.2.x86_64.rpm
Source:
c64febbda2f9ec6b7bdc6b89a4d9a5254d09add84c267ce9f2d4aab6fc5d75b5 pcs-0.9.139-9.el6_7.2.src.rpm
--
Johnny Hughes
CentOS Project { http://www.centos.org/ }
irc: hughesjr, #centos(a)irc.freenode.net
Twitter: @JohnnyCentOS
CentOS Errata and Bugfix Advisory 2015:2631
Upstream details at : https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHBA-2015-2631.html
The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename )
i386:
7cedfd6ba95e7d611ab77d553b24097953f17ea41278923e5c4dcedf1fd0e548 crash-7.1.0-3.el6_7.i686.rpm
b19295aaaa07ffb8c025b297dbfb21f7915f934ad69f3dccb8f52da43e2d2bee crash-devel-7.1.0-3.el6_7.i686.rpm
x86_64:
60c5dd9fb6bbb8552e6a124fedf49a0e08a1599e27d9102cbb35773b3c133272 crash-7.1.0-3.el6_7.x86_64.rpm
b19295aaaa07ffb8c025b297dbfb21f7915f934ad69f3dccb8f52da43e2d2bee crash-devel-7.1.0-3.el6_7.i686.rpm
c889725ffa3088441d2f78e7901206d27e3c0e1388be690544b0976706f57e2f crash-devel-7.1.0-3.el6_7.x86_64.rpm
Source:
3dc6753183df7042e187c8ee275c202fbd3783734296c8298d25c1f952c33db7 crash-7.1.0-3.el6_7.src.rpm
--
Johnny Hughes
CentOS Project { http://www.centos.org/ }
irc: hughesjr, #centos(a)irc.freenode.net
Twitter: @JohnnyCentOS
CentOS Errata and Bugfix Advisory 2015:2643
Upstream details at : https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHBA-2015-2643.html
The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename )
i386:
221d901002d04191fe72c230d7d7fe082655e481bda4189b834b3519a772dc41 procps-3.2.8-35.el6_7.i686.rpm
ad11881c26b0e9677c5b10794c55a12d5676b8e271bf9f99ab59659e0f1a9cf9 procps-devel-3.2.8-35.el6_7.i686.rpm
x86_64:
221d901002d04191fe72c230d7d7fe082655e481bda4189b834b3519a772dc41 procps-3.2.8-35.el6_7.i686.rpm
8f03b5c803ffc261351a38cf320e143b4d8b162fb7d1e3c497c5022798ed95b5 procps-3.2.8-35.el6_7.x86_64.rpm
ad11881c26b0e9677c5b10794c55a12d5676b8e271bf9f99ab59659e0f1a9cf9 procps-devel-3.2.8-35.el6_7.i686.rpm
7d3b505ae19e0f7a420b7d0a9c2ca43c212294604d39ed1306451ae3f09eb806 procps-devel-3.2.8-35.el6_7.x86_64.rpm
Source:
581d5aa29442c8c58c7121b1387932d5b4ea151ac83d7bb8881cdb3fa9c26b3c procps-3.2.8-35.el6_7.src.rpm
--
Johnny Hughes
CentOS Project { http://www.centos.org/ }
irc: hughesjr, #centos(a)irc.freenode.net
Twitter: @JohnnyCentOS
CentOS Errata and Enhancement Advisory 2015:2630
Upstream details at : https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHEA-2015-2630.html
The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename )
i386:
eaa7e72adf29d1b601d8a6ccc861193d1b72efad6f0383ff2e9efe715cd9bc1d NetworkManager-openswan-0.8.0-10.el6_7.i686.rpm
x86_64:
3d5b78e19fd0918cf5dbe160e5f3a3c30e20fdee5cbc6aa8d8e9d61158efbc9f NetworkManager-openswan-0.8.0-10.el6_7.x86_64.rpm
Source:
c64036d084f4f631fbc645f9f47b779dcc9eb265f31cd04411e5f85ca6f918d3 NetworkManager-openswan-0.8.0-10.el6_7.src.rpm
--
Johnny Hughes
CentOS Project { http://www.centos.org/ }
irc: hughesjr, #centos(a)irc.freenode.net
Twitter: @JohnnyCentOS
CentOS Errata and Enhancement Advisory 2015:2637
Upstream details at : https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHEA-2015-2637.html
The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename )
x86_64:
bfbec67eee5ecb78f168b0eafc59846d52113d0af964b2efeb531fe774623ac9 kmod-oracleasm-2.0.8-6.el6_7.x86_64.rpm
Source:
fd6ad905fc2f135851ee95984d4a38fb16ddf07a1df92cc4df332790ba624fcc oracleasm-2.0.8-6.el6_7.src.rpm
--
Johnny Hughes
CentOS Project { http://www.centos.org/ }
irc: hughesjr, #centos(a)irc.freenode.net
Twitter: @JohnnyCentOS
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1
We would like to announce the general availability of CentOS Linux 7
(1511) for 64 bit x86 compatible machines.
This is the third major release for CentOS Linux 7 and is tagged as
1511, derived from Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.2
As always, read through the Release Notes at :
http://wiki.centos.org/Manuals/ReleaseNotes/CentOS7 - these notes
contain important information about the release and details about some
of the content inside the release from the CentOS QA team. These notes
are updated constantly to include issues and incorporate feedback from
the users.
- ----------
Updates, Sources, and DebugInfos
Updates released since we froze the iso and install media content are
posted in the updates repo along with the release. This will include
content from late November 2015 and December 2015, therefore anyone
running a new install is highly encouraged to run a 'yum update'
operation immediate on install completion. You can apply all updates,
including the content released today, on your existing CentOS Linux
7/x86_64 machine by just running 'yum update'. Note that it might be
upto 24 hrs from this announcement before the entire mirror network
has got the updated content.
As with all CentOS Linux 7 components, this release was built from
sources hosted at git.centos.org. In addition, SRPMs that are a
byproduct of the build (and also considered critical in the code and
buildsys process) are being published to match every binary RPM we
release. Sources will be available from vault.centos.org in their own
dedicated directories to match the corresponding binary RPMs. Since
there is far less traffic to the CentOS source RPMs compared with the
binary RPMs, we are not putting this content on the main mirror
network. If users wish to mirror this content they can do so using the
reposync command available in the yum-utils package. All CentOS source
RPMs are signed with the same key used to sign their binary
counterparts. Developers and end users looking at inspecting and
contributing patches to the CentOS Linux distro will find the code
hosted at git.centos.org far simpler to work against. Details on how
to best consume those are documented along with a quick start at :
http://wiki.centos.org/Sources
Debuginfo packages are also being signed and pushed. Yum configs
shipped in the new release file will have all the context required for
debuginfo to be available on every CentOS Linux install.
This release supersedes all previously released content for CentOS
Linux 7, and therefore we highly encourage all users to upgrade their
machines. Information on different upgrade strategies and how to
handle stale content is included in the Release Notes.
As discussed in the mailing list thread
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-devel/2015-November/014035.htm
l
there are no LiveCD images included due to space constraints.
- ----------
Download
In order to conserve donor bandwidth, and to make it possible to get
the mirror content sync'd out as soon as possible, we recommend using
torrents to get your initial installer images:
Details on the images are available on the mirrors at
http://mirror.centos.org/centos/7/isos/x86_64/0_README.txt - that file
clearly highlights the difference in the images, and when one might be
more suitable than the others.
The sizes, sha256 sums and torrents for the ISO files:
==========================================
* CentOS-7-x86_64-NetInstall-1511.iso
Size: 394264576
Torrent:
http://mirror.centos.org/centos/7/isos/x86_64/CentOS-7-x86_64-NetInstall
- -1511.torrent
Sha256Sum:
9ed9ffb5d89ab8cca834afce354daa70a21dcb410f58287d6316259ff89758f5
* CentOS-7-x86_64-Minimal-1511.iso
Size: 632291328
Torrent:
http://mirror.centos.org/centos/7/isos/x86_64/CentOS-7-x86_64-Minimal-15
11.torrent
Sha256Sum:
f90e4d28fa377669b2db16cbcb451fcb9a89d2460e3645993e30e137ac37d284
* CentOS-7-x86_64-DVD-1511.iso
Size: 4329570304
Torrent:
http://mirror.centos.org/centos/7/isos/x86_64/CentOS-7-x86_64-DVD-1511.t
orrent
Sha256sum:
907e5755f824c5848b9c8efbb484f3cd945e93faa024bad6ba875226f9683b16
* CentOS-7-x86_64-Everything-1511.iso
Size: 7769948160
Torrent:
http://mirror.centos.org/centos/7/isos/x86_64/CentOS-7-x86_64-Everything
- -1511.torrent
Sha256Sum:
148449e661535f52aa846aa4a0112798f9153df8526b83e76075560a1de3accf
* CentOS-7-x86_64-LiveGNOME-1511.iso
Size: 1211105280
Torrent:
http://mirror.centos.org/centos/7/isos/x86_64/CentOS-7-x86_64-LiveGNOME-
1511.torrent
Sha256Sum:
10dccb7c028d7afafbe1ade59dacf809edb3af2f24b1b69bafce9e6ec3c6ee17
* CentOS-7-x86_64-LiveKDE-1511.iso
Size: 1784676352
Torrent:
http://mirror.centos.org/centos/7/isos/x86_64/CentOS-7-x86_64-LiveKDE-15
11.torrent
Sha256Sum:
ba9fed39d7e5398f4cd6b96497ba28da9979be12a4e0424d3030277d716c9e3f
The iso files are also available for direct download from
http://mirror.centos.org/centos/7/isos/x86_64
- ----------
The Docker container, Vagrant images, Cloud images and Atomic Host
images are being prepared and will be released in the next few days.
Look for an announcement posted to the centos-announce list for more
information on availability for these in the coming days.
- ----------
Special Interest Groups
The CentOS Linux distribution is built, managed, and released by the
CentOS Core SIG. In addition, we also have the following SIGs that are
doing an amazing job expanding and building on the base Linux platform:
* CentOS Alternative Architectures SIG is working on and testing
CentOS Linux 7 for ARMv7 ( armhfp ), Aarch64 and i686 architectures to
sync with the core CentOS Linux 7 (1511), derived from Red Hat
Enterprise Linux 7.2. We hope to have these released in the coming
days. Further to this work has been ongoing for PowerPC8 Little Endian
and PowerPC Big Endian - we hope to have a Tech Preview installable
tree available in the coming days for these as well. If you are
interested in joining these efforts and helping with the larger
community, please come and talk to us in the centos-devel list (
https://lists.centos.org/ ).
* Cloud SIG @ http://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/Cloud is
working to deliver various cloud controller infrastructure including
OpenStack. They have a fully functional, feature complete RDO stack
now available for CentOS Linux 7/x86_64. You can enable OpenStack
Liberty on your machine by running 'yum install
centos-release-openstack-liberty'. This is a completely tested end to
end content, as curated by the RDO Project.
* Cloud Instance SIG @
http://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/CloudInstance aims to
deliver VM images for use in various cloud and virtualised ecosystems
including AWS
(https://aws.amazon.com/marketplace/seller-profile?id=16cb8b03-256e-4dde
- -8f34-1b0f377efe89
) and Docker ( https://registry.hub.docker.com/_/centos/ ). We are
working to add support for Microsoft Azure Cloud in the near future.
* Virtualization SIG @
http://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/Virtualization includes
upstream virtualization and hypervisor related projects including Xen
http://www.xenproject.org ), oVirt ( http://www.ovirt.org/ ), and
Docker ( http://docker.io ). They also work to build and release
support tools around these virtualization technologies. You can get
started with oVirt node by running 'yum install
centos-release-ovirt36' and the ev version of KVM is available via
'yum install centos-release-qemu-ev'.
* Storage SIG @ http://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/Storage
includes the Gluster Project ( http://www.gluster.org/ ), Ceph
(http://ceph.com ), OpenAFS ( http://www.openafs.org ) and the SCST
project ( http://scst.sourceforge.net/ ). Gluster builds for CentOS
are now released into the main repos, and can be enabled with 'yum
install centos-release-gluster37'
* Software Collections SIG @
http://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/SCLo is working on
documenting and then delivering software collections built for newer
versions of in-distro content. Their aim is to deliver a community and
contributor friendly mechanism for SCL's in an easy to consume format.
A large number of SCL's are now released and available on CentOS Linux
7, you can get started with 'yum install centos-release-scl'.
* Atomic SIG @ http://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/Atomic is
working on building, maintaining, and delivering a CentOS Atomic host
( http://projectatomic.io ). Stable, testing and development builds
including AWS EC2 instances and Vagrant boxes are now available at
http://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/Atomic/Download.
In addition to these, the CentOS Artwork and CentOS Promo SIGs help
with promo content and helping organise Dojos around the world.
SIGs are a great way for people to come together and deliver content
around a specific area into the wider CentOS ecosystem and we welcome
groups to come together with low barriers to entry and plenty of
resources to offer the groups. Details on the process can be found at
http://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup
- ----------
Dojo
We try and organise Dojos in various parts of the world as a one day
event, to bring together people who use CentOS and others who are keen
to learn about CentOS. The day's focus is on sharing technical
knowledge and success stories. It's also a great place to meet and
talk about upcoming technologies and learn how others are using them
on CentOS Linux.
Our next Dojo coming up is in Brussels, on the 29th Jan 2016. Details
are posted at https://wiki.centos.org/Events/Dojo/Brussels2016 - note
that only people who have registered for the event will be allowed to
attend, and we have a limited number of slots open.
In the coming months we hope to host events in London, Bangalore,
Sweden, Germany, Spain, and in many parts of the USA. If you would
like to help organise a Dojo, do drop by the centos-promo list at
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-promo
- ----------
Getting Help
The CentOS ecosystem is sustained by community driven help and
guidance. The best place to start for new users is at
http://wiki.centos.org/GettingHelp
- ----------
Contributors
This release was made possible due to the hard work of many people,
foremost on that list are the Red Hat Engineers for producing a great
distribution, without them CentOS Linux would look very different.
We are also looking for people to get involved with the QA process in
CentOS, if you would like to join this please introduce yourself on
the centos-devel list
(http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-devel ).
- ----------
Thanks
I would also like to thank our donors and sponsors for their continued
support for the project. And to everyone who contributed with ideas,
code, test feedback, and promoting CentOS Linux into the ecosystem.
Enjoy!
- --
Karanbir Singh, Project Lead, The CentOS Project
+44-207-0094455 | http://www.centos.org/ | twitter.com/CentOS
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CentOS Errata and Bugfix Advisory 2015:2511
Upstream details at : https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHBA-2015-2511.html
The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename )
i386:
6e739781cb42d40a379b7bac1d944f738c6dd1069b17752adb90338be81523b5 passwd-0.77-7.el6.i686.rpm
x86_64:
98b6d3dd751b7c633f431bcedc85bdaa70c6a3fded5523bc509146a89b15e9d1 passwd-0.77-7.el6.x86_64.rpm
Source:
b1c817af58eabdd41efa66c7cd98ae9f14eaa367a5f9929a419cfe6bdab1e11c passwd-0.77-7.el6.src.rpm
--
Johnny Hughes
CentOS Project { http://www.centos.org/ }
irc: hughesjr, #centos(a)irc.freenode.net
Twitter: @JohnnyCentOS
CentOS Errata and Bugfix Advisory 2015:2510
Upstream details at : https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHBA-2015-2510.html
The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename )
i386:
bd06ac4a595aeb563b264c6b931745a7c4ed3b7c028c1b7a3f357c0f79d420ff environment-modules-3.2.10-3.el6.i686.rpm
x86_64:
53c283fb6642081efe50b5672127c264d1eee696dadf4b413320eb021d4cf694 environment-modules-3.2.10-3.el6.x86_64.rpm
Source:
840c8ffdcbddbd5f24f8b815973fbe7b0f17f1d07c56a688224e165ece8304d3 environment-modules-3.2.10-3.el6.src.rpm
--
Johnny Hughes
CentOS Project { http://www.centos.org/ }
irc: hughesjr, #centos(a)irc.freenode.net
Twitter: @JohnnyCentOS