Jim Smith jim_smith2006@yahoo.com wrote:
I could've gotten a better response had I posted to mortuary@centos.org; cummon guys its not that difficult to respond!?
Okay, I'll take a shot ...
Jim Smith jim_smith2006@yahoo.com wrote:
RPMS's rebuilt or upstream one's used Hi I got a cleanly reinstalled 4.2 workstation. However i still needed to build the following SRPMS from Mandriva/Fedora :-
- Chkrootkit
- Logcheck
- Tripwire
- Xboard & Gnuchess
- Rkhunter
There are various SPEC files out there for several of theses. RPMForge is where I start. If not, then I use Checkinstall. Note that you will need to build an x86_64 version of Checkinstall so it works for .x86_64.rpm SPEC/RPM building.
I needed to use the upstream versions of :-
- OpenOffice.org 2.0.1
OpenOffice.org 2.x is a bit of a pain to build with the various dependencies. If you really want leading edge, stick with Fedora Core/Extras.
- RealPlayer Gold
Why not just stick with HelixPlayer and add the relevant RealPlayer codecs? That's what I do. ;->
- Acrobat Reader
There are several SPEC files on the 'Net for Acroread. There are typically additional SPEC files for plugging into browsers, GNOME, KDE, etc... too.
I needed to tweak Bind chroot to log queries and adopt a BSD style UID>1000. All redhat-based systems come with the inevitable tonne of services on by default.
Now I think you're treading into Anaconda/Kickstart territory. Consider the relevant Anaconda list at redhat.com.
Is this the same situation with everyone else?
Yes. But we learn to roll our own, internal package sets, Anaconda modifications, Kickstart scripts, etc... Outside of RPMForge as a centralized, collaborative effort to share SPEC files -- most of this is site-specific and subjective.
I know Karanbir produces some home made rpm' but obviously not all of the above. Dag's repo is also cool but not as extensive as Fedora Extras.
If you want Fedora Extras, run Fedora Core. It's quite reliable IMHO -- as long as you stick with the odd releases, and recognize that not everything has been around as long as with RHEL/CentOS.
That's the good/bad of the 2 projects. Leading, lesser tested edge versus older, proven tested edge.
Are there any plans to provide goodies like
- pup
Whoa whoa whoa! Aren't you getting far ahead of where RHEL is at? Heck, pup is new to Fedora Core 5 -- which only just hit Test 1 last month. Test 2 isn't even scheduled until January now.
- yumex/yum utils
now that Fedora has dropped Up2date?
Yumex wasn't ever well adopted, and I've heard some horror stories.
Yum is supported by CentOS, as RHEL itself.
Fedora's initial inclusion of Up2date was to still give RHN-like access to updates.
I'm kinda confused on what you're asking for?