Posted by
CmdrTaco
on from the here-comes-the-floods dept.
Jan Kautz wrote in to tell us that Red Hat 6.0 has begun
appearing on the mirrors, so all you mad hatters can
cruise on it, avoid the traffic, and download the latest.
but, it's not May 10.
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 1
Correct me if I'm wrong, but wasn't Red Hat 6.0 supposed to be out on May the 10th? Is this the result of pressure from Caldera?
rpmfind
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 1
dselect is not the only tool which has evolved. rpmfind is really pretty cool and seems to work well for me. It probably should be incorporated into glint or gnoRPM.
Debian... there are substitutes :)
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 1
rpmfind --latest `rpm -qa` rpm --freshen *.rpm
will basically do the same thing on a Redhat box, look for the latest upgrades and upgrade them on-the-fly with dependancy checking.
There are of course other methods but I digress...
Another fast mirror
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 1
I haven't even gotten around to building up an OpenLinux 2.2 box yet, and now this. Maybe I'll just wait two or three weeks for venders to make CDs before getting i. Or if I'm bored at work, I could download...
Does it matter whether to run 2.0.36 or 2.2.x? Don't think so, as long as 2.2 kernels keep getting released about every other day I'd stick with 2.0.. but hey, some may argue different;)
I find it quite amusing that......
by
mjwise
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· Score: 1
.....the day RedHat Linux 6.0 comes out is the same day I, a longtime RedHat user, switches to Debian 2.1.
Why update if your system is running good? Let us other guinea pigs try it out first and if it fills the bill and will give you significantly more than you have now then yeah... you might *consider* breaking your uptime consistancy.
i.e.: Don't upgrade yet!:))
-- Codifex Maximus ~
In search of... a shorter sig.
I have found a site that lists mirrors for red hat. I don't know about you but the list of sites at redhat's mirrors seem very busy. This list has many different mirror sites listed and I found one that flew through the download (ftp.real-time.com). The site listing those mirrors is http://www.multithread.co.uk/mirrors.html. Hope that helps for those of us that don't want to wait until the volume of downloads decreases
Re:How to confirm a complete download?
by
gavinhall
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· Score: 1
RPM 3.0 in RedHat 6: is Bug 236 fixed yet?
by
coats
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· Score: 1
It turns out that the RPM in the RH5.2 does not evaluate whether it has enough scratch disk-space to complete an upgrade before it blindly goes ahead. If it does not have enough scratch space in that partition, it can corrupt it badly. I reported this, and they designated the bug as #236 in their database. With their new bug-tracking software, I don't have a password to check the current status of this bug. Is it fixed in RPM3.0 yet ?? (There's no way I'm going to upgrade RH until it is fixed. I don't want to go through that again!
-- "My opinions are my own, and I've got *lots* of them!"
In experiementing with problems with the Appletalk module in kernel 2.0.x, I tried to use RawHide 5.9 to get up to kernel 2.2 with the appropriate package modifications; however, the kerner RPM as shipped was larger than 640k, and nearly blew my 486 to chunks. Does anyone know if 6.0 kernel RPM is made safe for 486 or lower users?
--
"Pinky, you've left the lens cap of your mind on again." - P&TB
"I can see my house from here!" - ST:
Um, for some strange reason Red Hat blocks ICMP traffic at their firewall. Go to http://www.redhat.com, then ping www.redhat.com. If I remember correctly, they got tired of people contantly pinging their servers.
I hope this is a 64 bit machine because the 32bit ULONG max only represents 497 days... I should know I have a linux box here that's got 835 days but it only says 338 because it wraped back to 0 days!
-- Who is Seg Fault, and what is he doing with Kernel Space?
It's not all GPLed. Qt, for a start. Even if they use the new license. And Netscape for another. And anything using a BSD license. Free Software is not equivalent to the (L)GPL. I'm not saying that's good or bad, just pointing it out.
So, it looks like there is now at least a smp kernel that will ship and be an option. But, Red Hat enables a heck-of-a-lot in thier default kernels. The best bet is to get the kernel__src.rpm and compile it yourself, because only inabling what _you_ need will always increase your system preformance a bit. (sometimes only a little, but it's a lot on older systems, so, it's a catch 22... if you have a slow system, you need to compile it, and it will compile slow, if you have a fast system, you could compile it more quickly, but don't need to as much).
the ones that i can remember off the top of my head:
better SMP better scsi better sound support frame buffer console more filesystems drivers more drivers in general
a few other things too. the first two likely on't affect you much. the third might, but only if you previously had a marginally dupported or unsupported souncard. the fourth i have so far only seen useful for laptops and other odd video chipsets. the fifth includes true fat32 support, useful if you dual boot to '98 or a more recent win95. the sixth is the big difference, it covers not only the already mentioned sound, but also video capture cards and other not quite mainstream stuff.
plus if you have decent (and relatively sane) hardware, you will probably notice a performance increase as well
-- If I don't put anything here, will anyone recognize me anymore?
this is exactly why you should install beta software on machines you can safely reboot.
It isn't on the distribution CD
by
planet_hoth
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· Score: 1
ViaVoice isn't on the distribution CD. The press release says its going to be on the separate Applications CD. This is usually included in the boxed sets you see.
--
Online chat with Bob Young on Monday afternoon
by
planet_hoth
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· Score: 3
Bob Young will be attending an online chat on Abc News's website (abcnews.com) today at 2:00PM EST(?). The URL they give is: http://chat.abcnews.go.com/chat/chat.dll?room =abc_bobyoung Just thought you might be interested, you can go ask him a bunch of questions about 6.0.
Choice of $40 2xCD for experts or $80 3xCD for new users
"Kickstart" installation scripts
Comes with a set of precompiled kernels, installer chooses the best one for your processor (perhaps it'll detect if you're installing off a SCSI CDROM this time?)
I would say you lucked out!
by
jtseng
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· Score: 1
I don't think I've ever had much luck with NT. My web servers crap out after three days. IIS dies after a single day. (I've got my boxes rebooting themselves once a morning.) But the suits wanted NT... They get a web site run with NT and I get to clean up the mess.
--
Sanity.html - Error 404 not found
Re: Copying RedHat 6.0 to a CD
by
Jenz
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· Score: 1
I think this is what you're looking for my friend:
AFAIK RPMFind _is_ incorporated into GnoRPM. I haven't fiddled with it much but it looks very slick. The only problem is that it often takes packages a few days to appear on the RPMFind website. I tend to find RPMs a lot faster searching for them on Lycos (FTP search).
As far as Glint goes...when you install GnoRPM it automatically removes Glint. Wave bye-bye to Glint...say hello to GnoRPM.
I'll have several more machines at UNC Chapel Hill mirroring the i386 structure by tomorrow afternoon.
Red Hat 6.0 i386 mirror (US east coast)
by
crimsun
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· Score: 1
Yeah, I just noticed that my "mirror" isn't 100% complete. I'm counting on MetaLab to get their act together and retrieve the entire Red Hat 6.0 distribution, tho', and then I'll be able to use my PC again. Thanks, Slashdotters, everyone!;-)
Cost of 6.0 (or, supporting GNOME)
by
luge
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· Score: 1
I bought 5.1 from RedHat because I think they do great things for the community, and because 39.95 really isn't a huge hit in the wallet for what is essentially a contribution to GNOME, Enlightenment, and some of the other cool stuff that comes out of RHAD Labs. I was planning on making a similar "contribution" for 6.0 and the assembled documentation.
Going to RedHat's pages, though, shows that the only packages currently available are $299 or more. No way can I afford that. So: (since I know some of you Redhat folks must be reading this): are there any plans for a cheaper copy of 6.0? Or are we all going to migrate to Cheapbytes, Debian, or FTP? I'd love to keep helping out, but this is ridiculous. ~luge (P.S. Since metalab actually gives me a faster data transfer rate than my CD-ROM, this is not just an idle threat...)
--
IAAL,BIANLY
On mirrors? I don't see it.
by
Casshan
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· Score: 1
I've tried nearly all the.com,.edu,.net, and.ca servers listed on redhat's mirror page, and all I see is redhat-5.2.
Download new redhat, make boot disks. Boot with disks, and it'll ask if you want to install new or upgrade an existing. (At least, that was the procedure for RH5.x and RH4.x.)
what on the CD the non GPL'd stuff ?? anyone
by
Alan+Shutko
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· Score: 1
If it's like RH5.2, there won't be any commercial software on it. A bunch of non-GPLed software, but all under various free licenses.
I find it quite amusing that......
by
R3D
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· Score: 1
i scrubbed Win98 the day it was officially released, i'd been using the final for a month too.
I got as far as 57 days before I wanted to upgrade kernels. I hated rebooting, it made me feel sick... I really have sympathy for you. Now I try to reboot my machine every 10-15 days so I don't get addicted to uptimes. I can bear rebooting a machine with 10 days, but 317?
On a lighter note, it really is time to upgrade if this is he machine you work on... I mean, a lot has happened in the last 317 days, kernel-wise.
--
support gun control: take guns from cops
None of the mirrors seem to have it yet.
by
cthonious
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· Score: 1
I haven't tried but about five or six of them, though.
Is there a place where I can get an ISO image of the CD, like for Debian?
I don't know if it's in RH6.0, and I don't know what the diff is. I saw it posted on Linux Today and it seemed relevant, so I made the cross-post. Christopher A. Bohn
OK, I admit Slashdot is full of people who base their decisions on nothing. But I _still_ think RH is crappy. One: I've tried it, on numerous users' machines. It took a year and a half to reboot (since about everything was loaded, for some reason). Second: Users don't learn to do it right. Enter a Linux channel, and count how many of the clueless users are running RH. OK, that is because there are more Red Hat users, but that is only part of the figure. To me, it looks like it _is_ configurable, but users don't even know that they can do it (most don't even recompile their kernel).
/* Steinar */
-- (This comment is of course GPLed.)
Re: Big Linux x86 uptimes and jiffies overflows
by
Mark+Evans
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· Score: 1
There were concerns about that there may be code in the kernel or in device drivers that wouldn't survive the jiffy counter wrapping. My understanding is that several machines have survived the wrap with the only side effect being that uptime starts back at zero.
Of course, there may be subtle timing bugs, but I haven't heard of any...
Sounds like the netware 3.0 server here. 366 days uptime. It's been up longer than I've worked here. And in a sickly ironic turn of events, it's being taken down and replaced with nt in about a week.
Ugh. "Upgrade path" sounds so suitey and phbey, it makes me wince.
Sorry, bit it is an upgrade path... If you want, we could all call it "update way" or "The Road to Further Enlightenment" (which is oddly fitting, considering enlightenment is a package...)
Not to be taken seriously, BTW:)
-- Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
That is a server that, currently, is just running rc5des. But it has been running a variety of databases, from Sybase to DB2 to Oracle to MySQL to PostgreSQL...
It is just a poor Pentium 90 with 64 megs of RAM. It swaps pretty hard some times but keeps going. I've even had to move/usr and/home around a few times because of disk space problems. No rebooting, though...
I have to use NT on my computer at work, and I think it is pretty stable, but the last straw for MS was when I installed IE5.0 beta and it rebooted my machine without asking. Not even a 'rebooting now... ok' dialog. How can they expect people to do serious server tasks with so much rebooting?
The best I've seen for an NT box is approx 11 weeks (78 days or so). This is a machine that gets almost no significant use by its owner. We finally were forced to down it because of some memory leaks (imagine that in a M$ product!).
Of course, without the recent patch Win95 could not stay up longer than ~42 days due to a rollover in the counter, but I never managed better than about two weeks with it (and boy, that machine was dragging by then...).
In contrast, I've managed 7-week uptimes with Linux on a box with a screwy IDE controller -- while NT could barely last a day on it. Linux works better even on broken hardware!
Using precompiled kernels from RPMs is usually risky at best. You end up with a kernel that has alot of stuff you don't need and lacks a few things that may be useful to you. I'd recommend downloading the kernel source and reading the documentation to find out what dependicies are needed if you don't already know. Those can be installed as RPMs just fine, and I'm pretty sure 5.9 has them all. Once you do that, compile the kernel yourself. It isn't difficult at all, just do the following from the directory you untarred it to: make menuconfig make dep ; make clean ; make bzImage You will then have a nice new kernel that you can move to your/boot directory and add into/etc/lilo.conf. As long as you only select what you need in menuconfig it should be just fine on your 486.
I am a long-time RedHat user who, while waiting for 6.0, ended up trying out Debian. Though it required a _tad_ more work to get up and running properly, I must say that I now have an incredible system. dselect and apt are wonderful, and allow me to add and remove software extremely easily. The days of searching the net for lone RPMs are gone; now, I simply add one line to/etc/apt/sources.list, fire up dselect or apt, and then use my new software (which, btw, has just been installed into my menu for KDE in X, automatically.)
If the mirrors are too busy, you might want to give Debian a try. I didn't think I'd be that impressed, but I was wrong; I dig it.
RedHat is still good. I am not saying it sucks; all flames to/dev/null. I just dig Debian, and felt the Debian team deserved a pat on the back.:) Good job, guys (and gals!)
Exactly the same thing happened to me. At first Debian seemed a handful, but once it's up and running, you've learned a bunch of new stuff and the administration is a whole lot easier. And, encouraged by my good experiences, I even let apt to upgrade my system to potato. All in all, Debian is much more elegant and clear in thing like naming conventions and file locations than RedHat. Debian packages are thoroughly tested (the downside is that they are not the most recent) before they make it to the distribution and it's well known for its security vs. RH's default open-doors-policies. And, of course, I can spare the money and download OFFICIAL CD images to burn them...
So Nice job, Debian!
PS. I do think the RH guys deserve some applause too.
Actually I've seen NT crash while sitting there, running nothing (many times). And the longest I've had my NT box was 20 days, and my Linux box has now been up well over 70 with no trouble.
Now when is Slackware 2.2.x due to ship?
by
The+Fleck
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· Score: 1
Slackware v4.0 which is in Beta 2 stage right now already has 2.2.6 built in. As well as a few more packages, a hella loada new stuff and many fixes. It will ship when it is ready. They are currently working on a GLIBC 2.1 release but who knows when that will happen.
If you want RedHat 6.0, I put it on my website, I have plenty of bandwith, (campuus network.) There is an iso image on there as well, so feel free to download.
ftp.vinnie.net/redhat-6.0
P.S. I'm located in Boston, for anyone in the northeast
where can I get RH 6.0 on CD?
by
Skeezix
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· Score: 1
I checked cheapbytes, linuxcentral, and linuxmall. Didn't see it available yet. Anyone know of a place where I can buy it on CD now? -------------------------------------------- -------- Jamin Philip Gray jgray@writeme.com http://students.cec.wustl.edu/~jpg2/
I found a page on redhat.com that claimed they were giving away red hats to the first 1000 people who ordered. The order links weren't working, though, and now I can't get at any of the interesting stuff as it seems to have gone away:(
No mention on redhat.com, except....
by
Clockwork
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· Score: 1
I find it extremely amusing how the RedHat website has no mention of 6.0, except in the list of/. headlines. Then again, they've never been very good about letting people know what's going on...
I had much the same problem (at least the Java one) with the Netscape that came with RH5.2. Erasing the installation by de-installing the RPM and then installing a fresh copy of the browser solved it.
Hope that helps ya!
Scott
Via Voice is on there?!?!?!?!?!
by
Fizgig
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· Score: 1
I suppose this means that I'll have to buy the $80 version or something, but still. Now, we can say, sort-of, that our OS comes with Voice Recognition and Windows doesn't! I thought you were lying at first. I checked the article.
[andrew@fizgig andrew]$ rpmfind --help rpmfind 1.0 : RPM packages search engine usage : rpmfind [flags] packagename [packagename...] Homepage: http://rufus.w3.org/linux/rpm2html/rpmfind.html Maintainer: Daniel Veillard Mailing-list: rpm2html@rufus.w3.org flags meaning -q or -v decrease or increase verbosity -p prefix prefix for the local RPM database -s server URL of the server to contact --lookup simple lookup (standard mode) --latest suggest upgrades for the package[s] --upgrade suggest upgrades for all dependencies --sources fetch the source RPM for the package --apropos do a lookup in the database for the keyword --[no]auto do [not] run in automatic mode
So, not quite like apt, but at least it's an option.
How to make bad taste go away?
by
CAB
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· Score: 1
I'd like to like KDE; it's nice and usually recommend it to newbees.
But somehow I have this bad taste in my mouth and strange, uncomfortable feeling in the back of my head thinking fo the license issues with Qt.
Can someone please explain to me how I can make this go away?
Best regards, Steen Suder
-- Best regards,
Steen Suder
-- for email: send to.net
Via Voice is on there?!?!?!?!?!
by
RyanGWU82
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· Score: 1
When Red Hat released version 5.2, they were committed to removing all proprietary software from their distribution; hence the reason they wouldn't include KDE until the Qt license was changed. If they've included IBM Via Voice, does this go against their previous committment? Was Via Voice for Linux released Open Source? (I doubt it.) Or was it on the supplemental "proprietary applications" CD (like WordPerfect 7 and others in previous years)? If that's the case, I have no problem whatsoever.
I don't hate Red Hat! I'm a huge fan; I use it myself! And I'm NOT trying to start a distro war...:)
Ryan
None of the mirrors seem to have it yet.
by
Traxxas
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· Score: 1
The mirrors says it will have the iso tues night
I bought 5.0 and LSL/CheapBytes thereafter
by
Larry_Dillon
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· Score: 1
I bought the boxed set from RedHat the first time and have been getting the cheap CD's after that. I figure that RedHat is providing a service that I feel is valuable and they would like to be paid for their efforts -- no problem. But paying the full price every six months? I feel like I've paid my dues (the RedHat tax?). Especially considering RH's place in the OpenSource for-profit food chain. If everyone who used RH bought once, they'd be rolling in dough. Some famous Dead White Male once said that if you can will it as a universal it passes muster, so I think this is ethically OK
The longest we ever had an NT box stay up was just over 1.5 months, then it locked up for no reason at all. It wasn't doing anything either, just sitting there. Most of our NT machines have to be rebooted at least once a week, mostly every couple of days though.
-- Need Free Juniper/NetScreen Support? JuniperForum
Insert new kernel while running???
by
austad
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· Score: 1
I heard something awhile back about a program you could run that would insert your new kernel while your machine was running so you wouldn't have to reboot. Anyone heard anything about this??
-- Need Free Juniper/NetScreen Support? JuniperForum
what on the CD the non GPL'd stuff ?? anyone
by
MindStalker
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· Score: 1
Accually 5.2 came in many different versions. Some like the SSL version for example came with... well SSL (which comes with the RSA encryption software which ISN'T free)
I use RPMFIND all the time gnoRPM...it works awesome. I do, however, keep getting "free list corrupt" messages--anybody know what that is?
what on the CD the non GPL'd stuff ?? anyone
by
mike_g
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· Score: 1
I think that he may have been refering to the app cd that comes with the official boxed set. It has some demo software and such. I think that it included wp 7 personal edition also.
Your're very lucky to have bought it 2 weeks ago, you've been up to date for 2 weeks... One of my friends just bought it today (since it is only available on ftp sites if i have correctly understood you will be up to date a few more days).
-- "The obvious mathematical breakthrough would be development of an easy
way to factor large prime numbers."
Bill Gates,
Why don't you create a page with mirrors?
by
JhAgA
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· Score: 1
I think the most obvious thing to do is to create a single page with all the sites that are currently mirroring RH 6.0
Someone that have more time than me could receive the mirrors by email and make everybody happy:)
Ugh. "Upgrade path" sounds so suitey and phbey, it makes me wince.
Of course, all mission critical synergistically enhanced corporate package data mining and report generating suites need upgrade paths to facilitate corporate executive migrations.
I am currently downloading Redhat 6.0 from ftp.redhat.com. I am starting with the rpms. Everyone can get it my copy from ftp://ftp.okcforum.org/pub/linux/redhat-6.0/
Not sure what your information source is, but Red Hat Linux 6.0 is definitely not based on Starbuck 5.9.7. There were several more betas released prior to cutting 6.0. Obviously there were problems in the early betas . . . that is the whole point of a beta. Take a look at 6.0 for yourself before making statements about the quality of the release.
i found one directory on all the mirrors labelled "Redhat-6.0" but it was empty. methinks one has pulled the proverbial wool over cmdrtaco's all-seeing eyes.
--
strange things are afoot at the Circle K...
apt-get update; apt-get dist-upgrade
by
evin
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· Score: 1
You mean you have to reboot to upgrade Redhat? Bah, I think I'll stick to Debian.
Wo! Do not get the Cheapbytes Starbuck 5.9 cd!! I got it, formatted my poor Slackware 4.0 beta drive, installed Starbuck, and well it was a mess, and I promptly went back to Slack. Let me just stay that evertime I clicked on anything (gnome) as root, the xserver would die-- and it would show an error stating that I (root) 'did not have access permisions'. It is so totally unstable beta, I would not recommend the Cheapbytes Starbuck cd for anyone! I assume they will have fixed it up on the mirrors, but the way it is on that cd...
Just choose upgrade when booting off the installation disks.
I've actually tried this, and imagine my surprise; It Worked:). (At least 5.0-5.2)
If you have a slow connection I'd suggest you get a CD from cheapbytes or something. While I do like to pay every now and then for a dist, I do tend to space it to once a year, not every few weeks:).
It ain't down, the maximum users at rawhide.redhat.com is 50.
ftp.redhat.com is for private redhat use only now.
Just wait a while, whould be a good thing in a bit. Order the CD from cheapbytes.com in a couple of days.
-- greg, REMEMBER ED CURRY!!!
No mention on redhat.com, except....
by
Queuetwo
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· Score: 1
Take a look at the very bottom of the page (just above the copyright) - where you would expect to fing *old* news, they have a link to the press release. You'd think they'd have put it at the *top*...
The following is an email reply from someone at RedHat concerning the new release:
Chris Esler wrote: > > I have redhat 5.2 already. But, I have seen on several ftp > sites of a new version called starbuck (5.9 I believe). I was wondering > if you are offering it on cd, as my 56k modem will not do justice for > the ftp install. > > Thanks
We expect to release our new version of Red Hat Linux sometime within the next 2 to 3 weeks. I suggest that you check our website every Monday morning for an official release announcement.
Best Regards Alice
Now when is Slackware 2.2.x due to ship?
by
slashed
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· Score: 1
Anyone have any lead times on when Slackware based on the 2.2.x kernel and if they are going to incorporate the latest glibc now and other features? I know their web site has a "Change Log" but is there something with a "summary"?
Correct me if I'm wrong, but wasn't Red Hat 6.0 supposed to be out on May the 10th? Is this the result of pressure from Caldera?
dselect is not the only tool which has evolved. rpmfind is really pretty cool and seems to work well for me. It probably should be incorporated into glint or gnoRPM.
rpmfind --latest `rpm -qa`
rpm --freshen *.rpm
will basically do the same thing on a Redhat box, look for the latest upgrades and upgrade them on-the-fly with dependancy checking.
There are of course other methods but I digress...
ftp://ftp.inconnect.com/pub/unix/linux/redhat-6.0/
At least some significant *BSD stuff does get reported. Do you have anything particular in mind that wasn't mentioned here?
I haven't even gotten around to building up an OpenLinux 2.2 box yet, and now this. Maybe I'll just wait two or three weeks for venders to make CDs before getting i. Or if I'm bored at work, I could download...
Yikes! 'tis barely creeping along now.. Oh well, I can leave it run overnight ;-)
/mnt/isoimage -o loop
BTW, anyone know if you can you mount an iso image as a loopback device (just for peeking around?)
mount -t iso9660 image.iso
??
Does it matter whether to run 2.0.36 or 2.2.x? Don't think so, as long as 2.2 kernels keep getting released about every other day I'd stick with 2.0.. but hey, some may argue different ;)
.....the day RedHat Linux 6.0 comes out is the same day I, a longtime RedHat user, switches to Debian 2.1.
Yes it will be in the Oct/Nov timeframe based on their release dates for the last 4-5 versions!
Ok, i'm game. Starting it right now. I'll troll the slashdot page for any mirrors there, verify them, and post a link shortly
probably http://donut.tho.org/mirrors.html
http://donut.tho.org/mirrors.html is up
http://donut.tho.org/redhat-6.0 or A HREF="ftp://donut.tho.org/pub/redhat-6.0/
You *could* post the URL to your reply.
Why update if your system is running good? Let us other guinea pigs try it out first and if it fills the bill and will give you significantly more than you have now then yeah... you might *consider* breaking your uptime consistancy.
:))
i.e.: Don't upgrade yet!
Codifex Maximus ~ In search of... a shorter sig.
Did RPM 3.0 make it into this new release of Red Hat? I could look for myself if some of the mirrors actually worked...
Sig (appended to the end of comments you post, 120 chars)
Currently updating my mirror at: ftp://ftp.snoopy.net/pub/mirrors/redhat/redhat-6.0 Give it a bit to complete. 60 user limit.
Posted by Akira410:
:o)
:o)
Rofl, that was slightly harsh
Quote from the guy that tries to administrate the NT box here:
"Wow, it had 200 file request this weekend... man! Its been up for a week and a half.. better reboot"
heh.. as you can see we havent put the NT box into play... I doubt we will... Linux is doing just great. That box is a toy
Posted by pierre kwyjibo:
6 0.html shows a brief overview of whats new.
http://www.redhat.com/corp/press/current_redhat
Posted by MazMart:
It's nice to see that they finally included KDE. It's way better than Gnome, so thanx Red Hat!
Posted by gbritton:
iso image and i386 subtree are here:
ftp://light-brigade.mit.edu/pub/redhat- 6.0/
http://light-brigade.mit.edu/redhat-6.0/
Posted by cicijay:
I have found a site that lists mirrors for red hat. I don't know about you but the list of sites at redhat's mirrors seem very busy. This list has many different mirror sites listed and I found one that flew through the download (ftp.real-time.com). The site listing those mirrors is http://www.multithread.co.uk/mirrors.html. Hope that helps for those of us that don't want to wait until the volume of downloads decreases
Posted by Birdie37:
I wrote a perl script to do this for me the last time I downloaded RedHat:
http://www.hepl.harvard.edu/~daniel s/compare.pl
Posted by Lord Kano-The Gangster Of Love:
http://www.redhat.com/mirrors.html
Has all the mirrors that are officially known to redhat.
LK
Mirror anyone?
Upgrade of course. Looks like you haven't switched to 2.2 yet... besides, who cares how long a box can stay up with a load average of 0.00?
Hell, NT could do that.
Remember that what's inside of you doesn't matter because nobody can see it.
Upgrade to 6.0, or keep the uptime?:
12:31pm up 319 days, 0:40, 1 user, load average: 0.00, 0.00, 0.00
"My opinions are my own, and I've got *lots* of them!"
If the 6.0 release follows the rawhide beta stuff then the following applies
glibc2.1
kernel-2.2.5 or if we are lucky 2.2.6
egcs-1.1.2
GNOME libs 1.0.8
GNOME core 1.0.5
it'll probably have RPM 3.0 as well, even though it was only released today...
Don't quote me but that's a pretty good guess
In experiementing with problems
with the Appletalk module in kernel 2.0.x,
I tried to use RawHide 5.9 to get up to kernel
2.2 with the appropriate package modifications;
however, the kerner RPM as shipped was larger
than 640k, and nearly blew my 486 to chunks.
Does anyone know if 6.0 kernel RPM is made
safe for 486 or lower users?
"Pinky, you've left the lens cap of your mind on again." - P&TB
"I can see my house from here!" - ST:
Um, for some strange reason Red Hat blocks ICMP traffic at their firewall. Go to http://www.redhat.com, then ping www.redhat.com. If I remember correctly, they got tired of people contantly pinging their servers.
I hope this is a 64 bit machine because the 32bit ULONG max only represents 497 days... I should know I have a linux box here that's got 835 days but it only says 338 because it wraped back to 0 days!
Who is Seg Fault, and what is he doing with Kernel Space?
No. I f you can't be bothered to re-write it (or even copy & paste it), then I can't be bothered to go look for it.
axolotl
No. If you can't be bothered to re-write it (or even copy & paste it), then I can't be bothered to go look for it.
axolotl
It's not all GPLed. Qt, for a start. Even if they use the new license. And Netscape for another. And anything using a BSD license. Free Software is not equivalent to the (L)GPL. I'm not saying that's good or bad, just pointing it out.
axolotl
Not to repeat myself, see my comments on the RedHat/ZDNet artical about Red Hat 6.0 prices? :-/
kernel-2.2.3-5.i386.rpm 3266 Kb Mon Mar 15 20:14:00 1999 kernel-2.2.5-4.i386.rpm 4439 Kb Tue Apr 6 18:50:00 1999 kernel-2.2.5-4.i586.rpm 4356 Kb Tue Apr 6 19:27:00 1999 kernel-2.2.5-4.i686.rpm 4355 Kb Tue Apr 6 20:04:00 1999 kernel-BOOT-2.2.3-5.i386.rpm 2546 Kb Mon Mar 15 20:14:00 1999 kernel-BOOT-2.2.5-4.i386.rpm 2757 Kb Tue Apr 6 18:51:00 1999 kernel-doc-2.2.3-5.i386.rpm 762 Kb Mon Mar 15 20:14:00 1999 kernel-doc-2.2.5-4.i386.rpm 766 Kb Tue Apr 6 18:50:00 1999 kernel-headers-2.2.3-5.i386.rpm 811 Kb Mon Mar 15 20:14:00 1999 kernel-headers-2.2.5-4.i386.rpm 829 Kb Tue Apr 6 18:50:00 1999 kernel-ibcs-2.2.3-5.i386.rpm 27 Kb Mon Mar 15 20:14:00 1999 kernel-pcmcia-cs-2.2.3-5.i386.rpm 184 Kb Mon Mar 15 20:14:00 1999 kernel-pcmcia-cs-2.2.5-4.i386.rpm 185 Kb Tue Apr 6 18:51:00 1999 kernel-smp-2.2.3-5.i386.rpm 3070 Kb Mon Mar 15 20:14:00 1999 kernel-smp-2.2.5-4.i386.rpm 4229 Kb Tue Apr 6 18:51:00 1999 kernel-smp-2.2.5-4.i586.rpm 4212 Kb Tue Apr 6 19:27:00 1999 kernel-smp-2.2.5-4.i686.rpm 4212 Kb Tue Apr 6 20:04:00 1999 kernel-source-2.2.3-5.i386.rpm 11065 Kb Mon Mar 15 20:14:00 1999 kernel-source-2.2.5-4.i386.rpm 11608 Kb Tue Apr 6 18:50:00 1999 kernelcfg-0.5-4.i386.rpm 17 Kb Thu Feb 25 16:47:00 1999 kernelcfg-0.5-5.i386.rpm 16 Kb Sun Mar 21 20:20:00 1999
So, it looks like there is now at least a smp kernel that will ship and be an option. But, Red Hat enables a heck-of-a-lot in thier default kernels. The best bet is to get the kernel__src.rpm and compile it yourself, because only inabling what _you_ need will always increase your system preformance a bit. (sometimes only a little, but it's a lot on older systems, so, it's a catch 22... if you have a slow system, you need to compile it, and it will compile slow, if you have a fast system, you could compile it more quickly, but don't need to as much).
RH 6.0 has Linux 2.2.x kernel, the released KDE, and a newer Gnome, better install/setup/config (they say), among the usual updates.
BTW, ping/ICMP is blocked to RedHat because of possible Denial of Service (DoS) problems in the past.
GRIN
A month and a half, eh?
You mean something like 47.5 days???
That's the Standard "NT Resource Flush Feature" at play.
;-)
Michael J. Ball
Open Source Who's Who
Michael J. Ball
Open Source Who's Who
http://support.lcg.org/Whoswho/ unix_guru@hotmail.com
the ones that i can remember off the top of my head:
better SMP
better scsi
better sound support
frame buffer console
more filesystems drivers
more drivers in general
a few other things too. the first two likely on't affect you much. the third might, but only if you previously had a marginally dupported or unsupported souncard. the fourth i have so far only seen useful for laptops and other odd video chipsets. the fifth includes true fat32 support, useful if you dual boot to '98 or a more recent win95. the sixth is the big difference, it covers not only the already mentioned sound, but also video capture cards and other not quite mainstream stuff.
plus if you have decent (and relatively sane) hardware, you will probably notice a performance increase as well
If I don't put anything here, will anyone recognize me anymore?
Redhat 6.0 contains the new 2.2.x kernel and also glibc2.1 both of these additions over the 5.x are extremely valuable to the desktop user.
:)
On another note 6.0 comes with GNOME and kde, and also x11amp.
Joseph.
If you want to get 5.9, you can get it from Cheapbytes for $1.99 (or wait a few weeks for the final release of 6.0)
For 5.2, there was the standard edition for $39.99, and the secure edition for $79.99.
The Secure edition included Apache SSL 128 bit encrypted version, and most likely Netscape 128bit encrypted.
this is exactly why you should install beta software on machines you can safely reboot.
ViaVoice isn't on the distribution CD. The press release says its going to be on the separate Applications CD. This is usually included in the boxed sets you see.
Bob Young will be attending an online chat onm =abc_bobyoung
Abc News's website (abcnews.com) today at 2:00PM
EST(?).
The URL they give is:
http://chat.abcnews.go.com/chat/chat.dll?roo
Just thought you might be interested, you can go ask
him a bunch of questions about 6.0.
frame buffer console is also nice for having better console options than boring 80x25.
-l
Help cure AIDS, cancer, and more. Donate your unused computer time to worldcommunitygrid.org. Join Team Slashdot!
http://www.news.com/ News/Item/0,4,0-35646,00.html?st.ne.lh..ni
Main new features:
When are they going to be available.
CP
Can someone post a list of working mirrors?
CP
I don't think I've ever had much luck with NT. My web servers crap out after three days. IIS dies after a single day. (I've got my boxes rebooting themselves once a morning.) But the suits wanted NT... They get a web site run with NT and I get to clean up the mess.
Sanity.html - Error 404 not found
I think this is what you're looking for my friend:
/mini/RedHat-CD.html
Burning a RedHat CD mini-HOWTO:
http://linuxclubs.com/LDP/HOWTO
--
Fredrik Borg - http://jenz.cjb.net
--
Fredrik Borg
Student at the Department of Informatics, University of Oslo
There will probably be one att ftp://linux.engr.uark.edu/pub/linux/ in a while, they have 5.2 ISO images.
. iso/ for us Swedes.
Also mirrored at ftp://ftp.sunet.se/pub/Linux/distributions/redhat
/El Niño
AFAIK RPMFind _is_ incorporated into GnoRPM. I haven't fiddled with it much but it looks very slick. The only problem is that it often takes packages a few days to appear on the RPMFind website. I tend to find RPMs a lot faster searching for them on Lycos (FTP search).
As far as Glint goes...when you install GnoRPM it automatically removes Glint. Wave bye-bye to Glint...say hello to GnoRPM.
What's the actual procedure? I'm assuming you simply download the new distribution and then install it over your old?
Or is there an actual upgrade method?
Lucky me, I just purchased 5.2 about 2 weeks ago. Haven't even installed it yet, but just in time to get out-dated.
*sigh*
my smug mug is on smugmug
Thanks!
"Eye halve a spelling chequer, It came with my pea sea, It plainly marques four my revue, Miss steaks eye kin knot sea"
RPM 3.0 *does* do disk space checking now.
--Donnie
Come grab it.
ftp://152.2.95.222/pub/redhat-6.0/
I'll have several more machines at UNC Chapel Hill mirroring the i386 structure by tomorrow afternoon.
Yeah, I just noticed that my "mirror" isn't 100% complete. I'm counting on MetaLab to get their act together and retrieve the entire Red Hat 6.0 distribution, tho', and then I'll be able to use my PC again. Thanks, Slashdotters, everyone! ;-)
I bought 5.1 from RedHat because I think they do great things for the community, and because 39.95 really isn't a huge hit in the wallet for what is essentially a contribution to GNOME, Enlightenment, and some of the other cool stuff that comes out of RHAD Labs. I was planning on making a similar "contribution" for 6.0 and the assembled documentation.
Going to RedHat's pages, though, shows that the only packages currently available are $299 or more. No way can I afford that. So: (since I know some of you Redhat folks must be reading this): are there any plans for a cheaper copy of 6.0? Or are we all going to migrate to Cheapbytes, Debian, or FTP? I'd love to keep helping out, but this is ridiculous.
~luge
(P.S. Since metalab actually gives me a faster data transfer rate than my CD-ROM, this is not just an idle threat...)
IAAL,BIANLY
I've tried nearly all the .com, .edu, .net, and .ca servers listed on redhat's mirror page, and all I see is redhat-5.2.
Download new redhat, make boot disks. Boot with disks, and it'll ask if you want to install new or upgrade an existing. (At least, that was the procedure for RH5.x and RH4.x.)
If it's like RH5.2, there won't be any commercial software on it. A bunch of non-GPLed software, but all under various free licenses.
i scrubbed Win98 the day it was officially released, i'd been using the final for a month too.
I got as far as 57 days before I wanted to upgrade kernels. I hated rebooting, it made me feel sick ... I really have sympathy for you. Now I try to reboot my machine every 10-15 days so I don't get addicted to uptimes. I can bear rebooting a machine with 10 days, but 317?
On a lighter note, it really is time to upgrade if this is he machine you work on ... I mean, a lot has happened in the last 317 days, kernel-wise.
support gun control: take guns from cops
I haven't tried but about five or six of them, though.
Is there a place where I can get an ISO image of the CD, like for Debian?
support gun control: take guns from cops
I don't know if it's in RH6.0, and I don't know what the diff is. I saw it posted on Linux Today and it seemed relevant, so I made the cross-post.
Christopher A. Bohn
cb
Oooh! What does this button do!?
RPM has been updated to verion 3.0, available here.
Christopher A. Bohn
cb
Oooh! What does this button do!?
OK, I admit Slashdot is full of people who base
their decisions on nothing. But I _still_ think
RH is crappy. One: I've tried it, on numerous
users' machines. It took a year and a half to
reboot (since about everything was loaded, for
some reason). Second: Users don't learn to do it
right. Enter a Linux channel, and count how many
of the clueless users are running RH. OK, that is because there are more Red Hat users, but that is only part of the figure. To me, it looks like it _is_ configurable, but users don't even know that they can do it (most don't even recompile their kernel).
/* Steinar */
(This comment is of course GPLed.)
Of course, there may be subtle timing bugs, but I haven't heard of any...
--
--
This signature left intentionally blank.
not sure if thats the correct syntax, but mounting an iso is completely possible
---------------------------- DevNull - a discernible void in the province of Saskatchewan
looking for the cd image of the i386 arch. found it on mit, but its so slow as to be worthless
---------------------------- DevNull - a discernible void in the province of Saskatchewan
Sounds like the netware 3.0 server here. 366 days uptime. It's been up longer than I've worked here. And in a sickly ironic turn of events, it's being taken down and replaced with nt in about a week.
Ugh. "Upgrade path" sounds so suitey and phbey, it makes me wince.
:)
Sorry, bit it is an upgrade path... If you want, we could all call it "update way" or "The Road to Further Enlightenment" (which is oddly fitting, considering enlightenment is a package...)
Not to be taken seriously, BTW
Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
That is a server that, currently, is just running rc5des. But it has been running a variety of databases, from Sybase to DB2 to Oracle to MySQL to PostgreSQL...
It is just a poor Pentium 90 with 64 megs of RAM. It swaps pretty hard some times but keeps going. I've even had to move /usr and /home around a few times because of disk space problems. No rebooting, though...
I have to use NT on my computer at work, and I think it is pretty stable, but the last straw for MS was when I installed IE5.0 beta and it rebooted my machine without asking. Not even a 'rebooting now... ok' dialog. How can they expect people to do serious server tasks with so much rebooting?
The final release of IE5 did the same thing, it just provided a 'reboot? ok' dialog first. It still "makes" you reboot, it still sucks...
There was a press release yesterday that stated that ViaVoice from IBM had a beta on the 6.0 app CD
Of course, without the recent patch Win95 could not stay up longer than ~42 days due to a rollover in the counter, but I never managed better than about two weeks with it (and boy, that machine was dragging by then...).
In contrast, I've managed 7-week uptimes with Linux on a box with a screwy IDE controller -- while NT could barely last a day on it. Linux works better even on broken hardware!
DFL
Never send a human to do a machine's job.
here's a link to the whole thing...a t-6.0/
ftp://ftp.tux.org/pub/distributions/redhat/redh
Om Mani Padme Hum
doh!
ftp://unix.hensa.ac.uk/mirrors/ftp.redhat.com
thats a werking mirror
:)
Om Mani Padme Hum
Hi there, I have a few questions for those of you who have already installed RH 6.0:
I'm running the following:
Linux Mandrake 5.3 (RH 5.2)
- KDE 1.1 (1.1.1 realeased today, so I'll upgrade)
- GNOME 1.0.x (newest RPM's)
- Kernel 2.2.5
- Samba 2.0.3 (so smbmount works again...)
- LinuxConf 15r1
- Netscape 4.5
- Wine 990426
What components of RH 6.0 are newer than the above? And have all of the problems with glibc 2.1 been worked out?
Basically, would it be worth my time to upgrade, or should I wait for 6.1?
Thanks,
Ben
Using precompiled kernels from RPMs is usually risky at best. You end up with a kernel that has alot of stuff you don't need and lacks a few things that may be useful to you. I'd recommend downloading the kernel source and reading the documentation to find out what dependicies are needed if you don't already know. Those can be installed as RPMs just fine, and I'm pretty sure 5.9 has them all. Once you do that, compile the kernel yourself. It isn't difficult at all, just do the following from the directory you untarred it to: /boot directory and add into /etc/lilo.conf. As long as you only select what you need in menuconfig it should be just fine on your 486.
make menuconfig
make dep ; make clean ; make bzImage
You will then have a nice new kernel that you can move to your
This is NOT meant as a troll.
/etc/apt/sources.list, fire up dselect or apt, and then use my new software (which, btw, has just been installed into my menu for KDE in X, automatically.)
/dev/null. I just dig Debian, and felt the Debian team deserved a pat on the back. :) Good job, guys (and gals!)
I am a long-time RedHat user who, while waiting for 6.0, ended up trying out Debian. Though it required a _tad_ more work to get up and running properly, I must say that I now have an incredible system. dselect and apt are wonderful, and allow me to add and remove software extremely easily. The days of searching the net for lone RPMs are gone; now, I simply add one line to
If the mirrors are too busy, you might want to give Debian a try. I didn't think I'd be that impressed, but I was wrong; I dig it.
RedHat is still good. I am not saying it sucks; all flames to
I've always installed Linux(Slack, RH and Debian) over FTP, but now I have others that want to try linux. What exactly is on a Red Hat 6.0 CD?
What directories from the FTP do I need to copy to a CD to have a fully working CD?
Exactly the same thing happened to me. At first Debian seemed a handful, but once it's up and running, you've learned a bunch of new stuff and the administration is a whole lot easier. And, encouraged by my good experiences, I even let apt to upgrade my system to potato. All in all, Debian is much more elegant and clear in thing like naming conventions and file locations than RedHat. Debian packages are thoroughly tested (the downside is that they are not the most recent) before they make it to the distribution and it's well known for its security vs. RH's default open-doors-policies. And, of course, I can spare the money and download OFFICIAL CD images to burn them...
So Nice job, Debian!
PS. I do think the RH guys deserve some applause too.
-pepper
Now it's been announced on /. - should add a few days extra onto the mirroring.
:-(
It only started syncing two hours ago on the local mirror.
Well said. Life on the bleeding edge is fun for some, but I've pretty recently discovered the beauty of slightly older but stabler software.
The $299 was the support program as I recall.
- |Daryll
You are AWESOME! Thanks.
Actually I've seen NT crash while sitting there, running nothing (many times). And the longest I've had my NT box was 20 days, and my Linux box has now been up well over 70 with no trouble.
Slackware v4.0 which is in Beta 2 stage right
now already has 2.2.6 built in. As well as
a few more packages, a hella loada new stuff
and many fixes. It will ship when it is ready.
They are currently working on a GLIBC 2.1
release but who knows when that will happen.
linuxnewbie.com
Your mirror is missing some directories. They're in the ls-lR file, though. That's reliable
Try the local Danish mirror - I'm downloading as we speak (write?)
My girlfriend told me I had a body like a God. Unfortunately I found out she's a buddhist.
Q: How does a Unix guru have sex? A: unzip;strip;touch;finger;mount;fsck;more;yes;umount;sleep
Since 5.9.7 won't even install or upgrade on an Alpha I guess 6.1 will be on its way soon.
If you want RedHat 6.0, I put it on my website, I have plenty of bandwith, (campuus network.) There is an iso image on there as well, so feel free to download.
ftp.vinnie.net/redhat-6.0
P.S. I'm located in Boston, for anyone in the northeast
I checked cheapbytes, linuxcentral, and linuxmall.- --------
Didn't see it available yet. Anyone know of a
place where I can buy it on CD now?
-------------------------------------------
Jamin Philip Gray
jgray@writeme.com
http://students.cec.wustl.edu/~jpg2/
Celebrate the finer things in life
I found a page on redhat.com that claimed they were giving away red hats to the first 1000 people who ordered. The order links weren't working, though, and now I can't get at any of the interesting stuff as it seems to have gone away :(
I find it extremely amusing how the RedHat website has no mention of 6.0, except in the list of /. headlines. Then again, they've never been very good about letting people know what's going on...
I had much the same problem (at least the Java one) with the Netscape that came with RH5.2. Erasing the installation by de-installing the RPM and then installing a fresh copy of the browser solved it.
Hope that helps ya!
Scott
I suppose this means that I'll have to buy the $80 version or something, but still. Now, we can say, sort-of, that our OS comes with Voice Recognition and Windows doesn't! I thought you were lying at first. I checked the article.
[andrew@fizgig andrew]$ rpmfind --help ...]
rpmfind 1.0 : RPM packages search engine
usage : rpmfind [flags] packagename [packagename
Homepage: http://rufus.w3.org/linux/rpm2html/rpmfind.html
Maintainer: Daniel Veillard
Mailing-list: rpm2html@rufus.w3.org
flags meaning
-q or -v decrease or increase verbosity
-p prefix prefix for the local RPM database
-s server URL of the server to contact
--lookup simple lookup (standard mode)
--latest suggest upgrades for the package[s]
--upgrade suggest upgrades for all dependencies
--sources fetch the source RPM for the package
--apropos do a lookup in the database for the keyword
--[no]auto do [not] run in automatic mode
So, not quite like apt, but at least it's an option.
http://www.redhat.com/mirrors.html
If you grab it could you then mirror it again? I will as soon as I can get it, but MIT is across the country and slow...
rufus.w3.org has some of the SRPMS...
Ouch, I suggest you upgrade the kernel at least.
You could wait until 6.1 however...
My machines are never really nearly in sync with RedHat. They're way too behind the times. I'm rolling my own RPMS all the damned time..
I'm starting to miss slackware.
--
-- Spankmeister General
Usually, the RH install program says
So, yes, there is an upgrade procedure.
Mike
--
Mike
--
"Wi nøt trei a høliday in Sweden this yër?"
Wow... now THAT made for a quick download.. *giggle*
Friends don't let friends buy Compaq's. (Dell/Gateway... same same) You want a good computer? Build it yourself.
Anyone has a comparision on apt vs rpmfind
Can rpmfind have multiple sources as apt?
With apt you can multiple local directores, cdroms, ftp, http... as sources.
(This is because cryptography stuffs are on different servers. But it's really conviennient because I have large collection of locally built packages)
Is rpmfind limited to rufus as its source?
--
bg.
Bogus
Thanks! Leeching even as I write this ;)
"Klaatu, verada, necktie!" -Ash
I'd like to like KDE; it's nice and usually recommend it to newbees.
But somehow I have this bad taste in my mouth and strange, uncomfortable feeling in the back of my head thinking fo the license issues with Qt.
Can someone please explain to me how I can make this go away?
Best regards,
Steen Suder
Best regards,
Steen Suder
-- for email: send to
When Red Hat released version 5.2, they were committed to removing all proprietary software from their distribution; hence the reason they wouldn't include KDE until the Qt license was changed. If they've included IBM Via Voice, does this go against their previous committment? Was Via Voice for Linux released Open Source? (I doubt it.) Or was it on the supplemental "proprietary applications" CD (like WordPerfect 7 and others in previous years)? If that's the case, I have no problem whatsoever.
:)
I don't hate Red Hat! I'm a huge fan; I use it myself! And I'm NOT trying to start a distro war...
Ryan
The mirrors says it will have the iso tues night
I bought the boxed set from RedHat the first time and have been getting the cheap CD's after that.
I figure that RedHat is providing a service that I feel is valuable and they would like to be paid for their efforts -- no problem. But paying the full price every six months? I feel like I've paid my dues (the RedHat tax?). Especially considering RH's place in the OpenSource for-profit food chain.
If everyone who used RH bought once, they'd be rolling in dough.
Some famous Dead White Male once said that if you can will it as a universal it passes muster, so I think this is ethically OK
Competition Good, Monopoly Bad.
The longest we ever had an NT box stay up was just over 1.5 months, then it locked up for no reason at all. It wasn't doing anything either, just sitting there. Most of our NT machines have to be rebooted at least once a week, mostly every couple of days though.
Need Free Juniper/NetScreen Support? JuniperForum
I heard something awhile back about a program you could run that would insert your new kernel while your machine was running so you wouldn't have to reboot. Anyone heard anything about this??
Need Free Juniper/NetScreen Support? JuniperForum
Accually 5.2 came in many different versions. Some like the SSL version for example came with... well SSL (which comes with the RSA encryption software which ISN'T free)
I use RPMFIND all the time gnoRPM...it works awesome. I do, however, keep getting "free list corrupt" messages--anybody know what that is?
I think that he may have been refering to the app cd that comes with the official boxed set. It has some demo software and such. I think that it included wp 7 personal edition also.
Your're very lucky to have bought it 2 weeks ago, you've been up to date for 2 weeks... One of my friends just bought it today (since it is only available on ftp sites if i have correctly understood you will be up to date a few more days).
"The obvious mathematical breakthrough would be development of an easy way to factor large prime numbers." Bill Gates,
I think the most obvious thing to do is to create a single page with all the sites that are currently mirroring RH 6.0
:)
Someone that have more time than me could receive the mirrors by email and make everybody happy
Ok, submit your new mirrors to zarlata@yahoo.com
the page is located at:
http://members.tripod.com/rhmirrors
http://members.tripod.com/rhmirrors
Redhat 6.0 is based on kernel 2.2.x, RedHat 5.x are (were?) based on 2.0.x.
I smothfully upgraded Redhat 5.1 to 5.2 "on-the-fly", and my machine still isn't rebooted. It has a constant load of 1.00 and an uptime of 145 days.
However, when it comes to RH 6.0, there is a problem. Perhaps YOU can do a switch from 2.0.x to 2.2.x without rebooting; I sure can't... =P
GNU/Linux. The Freshmaker.
Ugh. "Upgrade path" sounds so suitey and phbey, it makes me wince.
Of course, all mission critical synergistically enhanced corporate package data mining and report generating suites need upgrade paths to facilitate corporate executive migrations.
You're a suburbanite.
Thanks man, kick ass. Especially the ISO part, saves me a lot of time. ;)
Try ftp.cse.buffalo.edu
I just pulled it down off there very quickly, over 200k/s on my crappy @home cable.
ftp://ftp.okcforum.org/pub/linux/redhat-6.0/ has most of the binary rpms, so too be all. I believe it is faster than MIT.
Havoc Penington, the bane of my Linux desktop.
I am currently downloading Redhat 6.0 from
ftp.redhat.com. I am starting with the rpms. Everyone can get it my copy
from ftp://ftp.okcforum.org/pub/linux/redhat-6.0/
Havoc Penington, the bane of my Linux desktop.
damnit.. what about freebsd reporting. people actually do use it.
just curious...
-
ping -f 255.255.255.255 # if only
--
Not sure what your information source is, but Red Hat Linux 6.0 is definitely not based on Starbuck 5.9.7. There were several more betas released prior to cutting 6.0. Obviously there were problems in the early betas . . . that is the whole point of a beta. Take a look at 6.0 for yourself before making statements about the quality of the release.
i found one directory on all the mirrors labelled "Redhat-6.0" but it was empty.
methinks one has pulled the proverbial wool over cmdrtaco's all-seeing eyes.
strange things are afoot at the Circle K...
You mean you have to reboot to upgrade Redhat? Bah, I think I'll stick to Debian.
Wo! Do not get the Cheapbytes Starbuck 5.9 cd!! I got it, formatted my poor Slackware 4.0 beta drive, installed Starbuck, and well it was a mess, and I promptly went back to Slack. Let me just stay that evertime I clicked on anything (gnome) as root, the xserver would die-- and it would show an error stating that I (root) 'did not have access permisions'. It is so totally unstable beta, I would not recommend the Cheapbytes Starbuck cd for anyone! I assume they will have fixed it up on the mirrors, but the way it is on that cd...
Just choose upgrade when booting off the installation disks.
:). (At least 5.0-5.2)
:).
I've actually tried this, and imagine my surprise; It Worked
If you have a slow connection I'd suggest you get a CD from cheapbytes or something. While I do like to pay every now and then for a dist, I do tend to space it to once a year, not every few weeks
Any takers on how long it takes Redhat to release 6.1?
Say, is there an RPM for that? Heehee
By the way, "Linus Torvalds, the founder of Linux, will be chatting with ABCNEWS.com readers on Wednesday, May 5!"
It ain't down, the maximum users at rawhide.redhat.com is 50.
ftp.redhat.com is for private redhat use only now.
Just wait a while, whould be a good thing in a bit. Order the CD from cheapbytes.com in a couple of days.
greg, REMEMBER ED CURRY!!!
Take a look at the very bottom of the page (just above the copyright) - where you would expect to fing *old* news, they have a link to the press release. You'd think they'd have put it at the *top*...
Little, Yellow, Different.
It seems that the RH6.0 netscape has some problems: /usr/bin/netscape set the HOMEPAGE to some non-existing path.
1) the
2) Java just crash the browser.
I think you just volunteered yourself. C'mon... it's for the good of all.. work and personal hygeine come later..
Mind formatting it a little prettier?
www.lsl.com is taking pre-orders for "free" CDs
(read "free" as slightly inflated shipping and handling USPS priority = $7.79)
I have tried several mirrors and haven't found Rad Hat 6.0. I guess someone fooled us...
Red Hat 6.0 should upgrade very cleanly over 5.2, if it works anything like most previous versions of Red Hat.
The following is an email reply from someone at RedHat concerning the new release:
Chris Esler wrote:
>
> I have redhat 5.2 already. But, I have seen on several ftp
> sites of a new version called starbuck (5.9 I believe). I was wondering
> if you are offering it on cd, as my 56k modem will not do justice for
> the ftp install.
>
> Thanks
We expect to release our new version of Red Hat Linux sometime within
the next 2 to 3 weeks. I suggest that you check our website every
Monday morning for an official release announcement.
Best Regards
Alice
Anyone have any lead times on when Slackware based on the 2.2.x kernel and if they are going to incorporate the latest glibc now and other features? I know their web site has a "Change Log" but is there something with a "summary"?