Category Archives: CentOS

CentOS

Announcing release for Varnish Cache 4 on CentOSLinux 6 x86_64 SCL

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

Announcing release for Varnish Cache 4 on CentOSLinux 7 x86_64 SCL

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

Announcing release for Apache HTTP Server 2.4 on CentOS Linux 7 x86_64 SCL

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

Announcing release for Apache HTTP Server 2.4 on CentOS Linux 6 x86_64 SCL

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

Announcing release for MariaDB 5.5 and 10.0 on CentOS Linux 7 x86_64 SCL

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

Announcing release for MariaDB 5.5 and 10.0 on CentOS Linux 6 x86_64 SCL

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

Announcing release for MySQL 5.5 and 5.6 onCentOS Linux 6 x86_64 SCL

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

Announcing release for MySQL 5.5 and 5.6 onCentOS Linux 7 x86_64 SCL

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

Announcing release for MongoDB 2.4 and 2.6 on CentOS Linux 7 x86_64 SCL

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

Announcing release for MongoDB 2.4 and 2.6 on CentOS Linux 6 x86_64 SCL

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