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