I am happy to announce the General Availability of Gluster 4.1 for
CentOS 6 on x86_64. These packages are following the upstream Gluster
Community releases, and will receive monthly bugfix updates.
Gluster 4.1 is a Long-Term-Maintenance release, and will receive
updates for approximately 18 months. The difference between
Long-Term-Maintenance and Short-Term-Maintenance releases is explained
on the Gluster release schedule page:
https://www.gluster.org/community/release-schedule/
Users of CentOS 6 can now simply install the Gluster 4.1 clients with
only these two commands:
# yum install centos-release-gluster
# yum install glusterfs-fuse
Note that Gluster 4.x do not provide the glusterfs-server package for
CentOS 6 anymore. Users that run their Gluster Storage Servers on CentOS
6 are strongly encouraged to plan moving to CentOS 7.
The centos-release-gluster package is delivered via CentOS Extras repos.
This contains all the metadata and dependency information, needed to
install Gluster 4.1. The actual package that will get installed is
centos-release-gluster41. Users of the now End-Of-Life
Short-Term-Maintenance Gluster 4.0 will automatically get the update to
Gluster 4.1, whereas users of Gluster 3.12 can stay on that
Long-Term-Maintenance release for an other six months.
Users of Gluster 3.10 will need to manually upgrade by uninstalling the
centos-release-gluster310 package, and replacing it with either the
Gluster 4.1 or 3.12 version. Additional details about the upgrade
process are linked in the announcement from the Gluster Community:
https://lists.gluster.org/pipermail/announce/2018-June/000102.html
We have a quickstart guide specifically built around the packages are
available, it makes for a good introduction to Gluster and will help get
you started in just a few simple steps, this quick start is available at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/Storage/gluster-Quickstart
More details about the packages that the Gluster project provides in the
Storage SIG is available in the documentation:
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/Storage/Gluster
The centos-release-gluster* repositories offer additional packages that
enhance the usability of Gluster itself. Utilities and tools that were
working with previous versions of Gluster are expected to stay working
fine. If there are any problems, or requests for additional tools and
applications to be provided, just send us an email with your
suggestions. The current list of packages that is (planned to become)
available can be found here:
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/Storage/Gluster/Ecosystem-pkgs
We welcome all feedback, comments and contributions. You can get in
touch with the CentOS Storage SIG on the centos-devel mailing list
(https://lists.centos.org ) and with the Gluster developer and user
communities at https://www.gluster.org/mailman/listinfo , we are also
available on irc at #gluster on irc.freenode.net, and on twitter at
@gluster .
Cheers,
Niels de Vos
Storage SIG member & Gluster maintainer
I am happy to announce the General Availability of Gluster 4.1 for
CentOS 7 on x86_64. These packages are following the upstream Gluster
Community releases, and will receive monthly bugfix updates.
Gluster 4.1 is a Long-Term-Maintenance release, and will receive
updates for approximately 18 months. The difference between
Long-Term-Maintenance and Short-Term-Maintenance releases is explained
on the Gluster release schedule page:
https://www.gluster.org/community/release-schedule/
Users of CentOS 7 can now simply install Gluster 4.1 with only these two
commands:
# yum install centos-release-gluster
# yum install glusterfs-server
The centos-release-gluster package is delivered via CentOS Extras repos.
This contains all the metadata and dependency information, needed to
install Gluster 4.1. The actual package that will get installed is
centos-release-gluster41. Users of the now End-Of-Life
Short-Term-Maintenance Gluster 4.0 will automatically get the update to
Gluster 4.1, whereas users of Gluster 3.12 can stay on that
Long-Term-Maintenance release for an other six months.
Users of Gluster 3.10 will need to manually upgrade by uninstalling the
centos-release-gluster310 package, and replacing it with either the
Gluster 4.1 or 3.12 version. Additional details about the upgrade
process are linked in the announcement from the Gluster Community:
https://lists.gluster.org/pipermail/announce/2018-June/000102.html
We have a quickstart guide specifically built around the packages are
available, it makes for a good introduction to Gluster and will help get
you started in just a few simple steps, this quick start is available at
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/Storage/gluster-Quickstart
More details about the packages that the Gluster project provides in the
Storage SIG is available in the documentation:
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/Storage/Gluster
The centos-release-gluster* repositories offer additional packages that
enhance the usability of Gluster itself. Utilities and tools that were
working with previous versions of Gluster are expected to stay working
fine. If there are any problems, or requests for additional tools and
applications to be provided, just send us an email with your
suggestions. The current list of packages that is (planned to become)
available can be found here:
https://wiki.centos.org/SpecialInterestGroup/Storage/Gluster/Ecosystem-pkgs
We welcome all feedback, comments and contributions. You can get in
touch with the CentOS Storage SIG on the centos-devel mailing list
(https://lists.centos.org ) and with the Gluster developer and user
communities at https://www.gluster.org/mailman/listinfo , we are also
available on irc at #gluster on irc.freenode.net, and on twitter at
@gluster .
Cheers,
Niels de Vos
Storage SIG member & Gluster maintainer
CentOS Errata and Security Advisory 2018:1836 Important
Upstream details at : https://access.redhat.com/errata/RHSA-2018:1836
The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename )
x86_64:
9c26560f7b175d6e1455a7b9edf9c56be74c06a98f91074a36c3944a51ea110e plexus-archiver-2.4.2-5.el7_5.noarch.rpm
098c29d9f8e0b7703e1ded196eaa5ec3cbc68521fb4a46c9563cba2a9ceb7649 plexus-archiver-javadoc-2.4.2-5.el7_5.noarch.rpm
Source:
3efde77b61ff8ce194ff060488b029ffbf3d465c8b9192b227ba8e3923d2d9ff plexus-archiver-2.4.2-5.el7_5.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 Varnish Cache in
version 5 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:
# 1. Install a package with repository for your system
# On CentOS, install package centos-release-scl available in CentOS
repository:
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl-rh
# 2. Install the collection:
$ sudo yum install rh-varnish5
# 3. Start using software collections:
$ scl enable rh-varnish5 bash
At this point you should be able to use varnish just as a normal
application.
Some usage examples follow:
$ systemctl start rh-varnish5-varnish
$ varnishtop
This collections is CentOS-based rebuild built by SCLo SIG community,
and the packages have been available in Red Hat Software Collections 3.1
for RHEL:
https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_software_collections/…
So, for RHEL-based builds, follow the steps in the documentation above.
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 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 collection NodeJS
being released here, we also build and deliver databases, web servers,
and language stacks including multiple versions of PostgreSQL, MariaDB,
Apache HTTP Server, Python, Ruby, Ruby on Rails and others.
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 how to get involved and help with the effort.
Enjoy!
--
Jan Staněk
Associate Software Engineer, Brno
Red Hat Czech
jstanek(a)redhat.com IM: jstanek
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of Ruby in version
2.5 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:
# 1. Install a package with repository for your system:
# On CentOS, install package centos-release-scl available in CentOS
repository:
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
# On RHEL, enable RHSCL repository for you system:
$ sudo yum-config-manager --enable rhel-server-rhscl-7-rpms
# 2. Install the collection:
$ sudo yum install rh-ruby25
# 3. Start using software collections:
$ scl enable rh-ruby25 bash
The last command runs the Bash shell in the environment with rh-ruby25
Software Collection enabled, which means that at this point you are able
to use ruby just as a normal application. Some examples of available
commands follow:
$ ruby my-app.rb
$ gem install activeresource
$ bundle
$ irb
This collections is CentOS-based rebuild built by SCLo SIG community,
and the packages have been available in Red Hat Software Collections 3.1
for RHEL:
https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_software_collections/…
So, for RHEL-based builds, follow the steps in the documentation above.
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 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 collection NodeJS
being released here, we also build and deliver databases, web servers,
and language stacks including multiple versions of PostgreSQL, MariaDB,
Apache HTTP Server, Python, Ruby, Ruby on Rails and others.
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 how to get involved and help with the effort.
Enjoy!
--
Jan Staněk
Associate Software Engineer, Brno
Red Hat Czech
jstanek(a)redhat.com IM: jstanek
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of PostgreSQL in
version 10.0 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:
# 1. Install a package with repository for your system:
# On CentOS, install package centos-release-scl available in CentOS
repository:
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
# On RHEL, enable RHSCL repository for you system:
$ sudo yum-config-manager --enable rhel-server-rhscl-7-rpms
# 2. Install the collection:
$ sudo yum install rh-postgresql10
# 3. Start using software collections:
$ scl enable rh-postgresql10 bash
At this point you should be able to use PostgreSQL just as a normal
application. Here are some examples of commands you can run:
$ postgresql-setup --initdb
$ service rh-postgresql10-postgresql start
$ psql
This collections is CentOS-based rebuild built by SCLo SIG community,
and the packages have been available in Red Hat Software Collections 3.1
for RHEL:
https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_software_collections/…
So, for RHEL-based builds, follow the steps in the documentation above.
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 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 collection NodeJS
being released here, we also build and deliver databases, web servers,
and language stacks including multiple versions of PostgreSQL, MariaDB,
Apache HTTP Server, Python, Ruby, Ruby on Rails and others.
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 how to get involved and help with the effort.
Enjoy!
--
Jan Staněk
Associate Software Engineer, Brno
Red Hat Czech
jstanek(a)redhat.com IM: jstanek
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of Perl in version
5.26 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:
# 1. Install a package with repository for your system:
# On CentOS, install package centos-release-scl available in CentOS
repository:
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
# On RHEL, enable RHSCL repository for you system:
$ sudo yum-config-manager --enable rhel-server-rhscl-7-rpms
# 2. Install the collection:
$ sudo yum install rh-perl526
# 3. Start using the software collection:
$ scl enable rh-perl526 bash
At this point you should be able to use perl just as a normal
application. Some examples of new available commands follow:
$ perl my-app.pl
$ sudo yum install rh-perl526-perl-CPAN make
$ sudo cpan App::cpanminus
$ sudo cpanm -n Furl
This collections is CentOS-based rebuild built by SCLo SIG community,
and the packages have been available in Red Hat Software Collections 3.1
for RHEL:
https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_software_collections/…
So, for RHEL-based builds, follow the steps in the documentation above.
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 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 collection NodeJS
being released here, we also build and deliver databases, web servers,
and language stacks including multiple versions of PostgreSQL, MariaDB,
Apache HTTP Server, Python, Ruby, Ruby on Rails and others.
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 how to get involved and help with the effort.
Enjoy!
--
Jan Staněk
Associate Software Engineer, Brno
Red Hat Czech
jstanek(a)redhat.com IM: jstanek
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of MongoDB in
version 3.6 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:
# 1. Install a package with repository for your system:
# On CentOS, install package centos-release-scl available in CentOS
repository:
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
# On RHEL, enable RHSCL repository for you system:
$ sudo yum-config-manager --enable rhel-server-rhscl-7-rpms
# 2. Install the collection:
$ sudo yum install rh-mongodb36
# 3. Start using software collections:
$ scl enable rh-mongodb36 bash
At this point you should be able to use MongoDB just as a normal
application. Some examples of usage follows:
$ service rh-mongodb36-mongod start
$ mongo
This collections is CentOS-based rebuild built by SCLo SIG community,
and the packages have been available in Red Hat Software Collections 3.1
for RHEL:
https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_software_collections/…
So, for RHEL-based builds, follow the steps in the documentation above.
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 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 collection NodeJS
being released here, we also build and deliver databases, web servers,
and language stacks including multiple versions of PostgreSQL, MariaDB,
Apache HTTP Server, Python, Ruby, Ruby on Rails and others.
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 how to get involved and help with the effort.
Enjoy!
--
Jan Staněk
Associate Software Engineer, Brno
Red Hat Czech
jstanek(a)redhat.com IM: jstanek
I am pleased to announce the immediate availability of HAProxy in
version 1.8 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:
# 1. Install a package with repository for your system:
# On CentOS, install package centos-release-scl available in CentOS
repository:
$ sudo yum install centos-release-scl
# On RHEL, enable RHSCL repository for you system:
$ sudo yum-config-manager --enable rhel-server-rhscl-7-rpms
# 2. Install the collection:
$ sudo yum install rh-haproxy18
# 3. Start using software collections:
$ scl enable rh-haproxy18 bash
At this point you should be able to use varnish just as a normal
application. Some usage examples follow:
$ systemctl start rh-haproxy18-haproxy
This collections is CentOS-based rebuild built by SCLo SIG community,
and the packages have been available in Red Hat Software Collections 3.1
for RHEL:
https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_software_collections/…
So, for RHEL-based builds, follow the steps in the documentation above.
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 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 collection NodeJS
being released here, we also build and deliver databases, web servers,
and language stacks including multiple versions of PostgreSQL, MariaDB,
Apache HTTP Server, Python, Ruby, Ruby on Rails and others.
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 how to get involved and help with the effort.
Enjoy!
--
Jan Staněk
Associate Software Engineer, Brno
Red Hat Czech
jstanek(a)redhat.com IM: jstanek
CentOS Errata and Security Advisory 2018:1780 Important
Upstream details at : https://access.redhat.com/errata/RHSA-2018:1780
The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename )
x86_64:
2bad0902c6d8582ef5bb5758c6860951f34cb646b69eda066162ed5cb83aa500 xmlrpc-client-3.1.3-9.el7_5.noarch.rpm
a47c496fc4e85d23172c9fb69e236caecfd9aa8e813ff15eeab908309b203a4f xmlrpc-common-3.1.3-9.el7_5.noarch.rpm
4b0992a8b0e3c18327635bfe9a1a6f4e946eeb8c9db62aacaf16e728ae061390 xmlrpc-javadoc-3.1.3-9.el7_5.noarch.rpm
ac336edfd9e783d9a98e89d517a049e98e6bacfbc4a6564d44c1778aa6b27b69 xmlrpc-server-3.1.3-9.el7_5.noarch.rpm
Source:
6e330c0f41b9a2eb2b51a7de6242c122be29713ee6e9356fe739dbc52225ea84 xmlrpc-3.1.3-9.el7_5.src.rpm
--
Johnny Hughes
CentOS Project { http://www.centos.org/ }
irc: hughesjr, #centos(a)irc.freenode.net
Twitter: @JohnnyCentOS
CentOS Errata and Security Advisory 2018:1777 Important
Upstream details at : https://access.redhat.com/errata/RHSA-2018:1777
The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename )
i386:
5088ad1f19a26726e8847982bdca51ff071b8bf9d48202f26a713052c2527785 procps-3.2.8-45.el6_9.3.i686.rpm
dd01689106c323bea94b4f56f3416482629dd2ce6137921f13258e102ef960f0 procps-devel-3.2.8-45.el6_9.3.i686.rpm
x86_64:
5088ad1f19a26726e8847982bdca51ff071b8bf9d48202f26a713052c2527785 procps-3.2.8-45.el6_9.3.i686.rpm
ba2b604c6da10bf7d2df547760c5db6f91bef6644716c3cd708597c0a80d2179 procps-3.2.8-45.el6_9.3.x86_64.rpm
dd01689106c323bea94b4f56f3416482629dd2ce6137921f13258e102ef960f0 procps-devel-3.2.8-45.el6_9.3.i686.rpm
9310f7af0fd82d64736c7b837a5ed4776418c2c45bd74e1d8df540f3916b2dfc procps-devel-3.2.8-45.el6_9.3.x86_64.rpm
Source:
828effa30b5895235b5db5f2fce5c8f56525e3dbc31d49e90a12741ffc4480de procps-3.2.8-45.el6_9.3.src.rpm
--
Johnny Hughes
CentOS Project { http://www.centos.org/ }
irc: hughesjr, #centos(a)irc.freenode.net
Twitter: @JohnnyCentOS
CentOS Errata and Enhancement Advisory 2018:1774
Upstream details at : https://access.redhat.com/errata/RHEA-2018:1774
The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename )
i386:
e931f163e9536a55e4ce801be0a99e186664f8133888edaf7ade5846824f4422 microcode_ctl-1.17-25.7.el6_9.i686.rpm
x86_64:
c458d93f0a6aab4ab68c11304c8c3d5dd9972bf97d497539e2459a0cca9aed0f microcode_ctl-1.17-25.7.el6_9.x86_64.rpm
Source:
55c74ae1211a4790d87dcd9b4b363bd5e1c09e5cb81b4d17bfef5c9dcf7faa20 microcode_ctl-1.17-25.7.el6_9.src.rpm
--
Johnny Hughes
CentOS Project { http://www.centos.org/ }
irc: hughesjr, #centos(a)irc.freenode.net
Twitter: @JohnnyCentOS