[CentOS] lost RHEL entitlements

2009-06-16 Thread Eugene Vilensky
Hello,

I have some servers that have lost their RHEL update entitlements.
Thinking through it, I realized we may not really need those
entitlements.  However, I would still like to automate keeping them up
to date for security fixes.  So, is there any way to swap out the
Yum/up2date RHEL repositories for CentOS without breaking things?

Thanks!
-Eugene
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Re: [CentOS] lost RHEL entitlements

2009-06-16 Thread John R Pierce
Eugene Vilensky wrote:
 Hello,

 I have some servers that have lost their RHEL update entitlements.
 Thinking through it, I realized we may not really need those
 entitlements.  However, I would still like to automate keeping them up
 to date for security fixes.  So, is there any way to swap out the
 Yum/up2date RHEL repositories for CentOS without breaking things?
   


see Migration from RHEL5 to CentOS5   near the bottom of 
http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/MigrationGuide

if you have 4, its similar but different.  if you have 3, time to wipe 
and upgrade IMHO.


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Re: [CentOS] lost RHEL entitlements

2009-06-16 Thread John R Pierce
John R Pierce wrote:
 see Migration from RHEL5 to CentOS5   near the bottom of 
 http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/MigrationGuide

 if you have 4, its similar but different.  if you have 3, time to wipe 
 and upgrade IMHO.
   

oops, eat my words, here's RHEL3

http://wiki.centos.org/FAQ/CentOS3#head-10bce23c2383ab4be8a9f0926578e96f5e0a8f5d

IIRC, the procedure for RHEL4-CentOS4 is somewhere between the 3 and 5 
process.   you need to install yum and the repo files as well as the 
centos keys, then do the rest ...

note all these procedures will result in a hybrid system where some of 
your packages are from the upstream vendor, and others from the centos 
project.   while this SHOULD work together OK, and many of us have done 
exactly that, it is officially UNTESTED and you're on your own.




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Re: [CentOS] lost RHEL entitlements

2009-06-16 Thread Scott Silva
on 6-16-2009 3:13 PM John R Pierce spake the following:
 John R Pierce wrote:
 see Migration from RHEL5 to CentOS5   near the bottom of 
 http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/MigrationGuide

 if you have 4, its similar but different.  if you have 3, time to wipe 
 and upgrade IMHO.
   
 
 oops, eat my words, here's RHEL3
 
 http://wiki.centos.org/FAQ/CentOS3#head-10bce23c2383ab4be8a9f0926578e96f5e0a8f5d
 
 IIRC, the procedure for RHEL4-CentOS4 is somewhere between the 3 and 5 
 process.   you need to install yum and the repo files as well as the 
 centos keys, then do the rest ...
 
 note all these procedures will result in a hybrid system where some of 
 your packages are from the upstream vendor, and others from the centos 
 project.   while this SHOULD work together OK, and many of us have done 
 exactly that, it is officially UNTESTED and you're on your own.
It's CentOS... Except for the forums and the mailing lists, you are on your
own anyway!





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Re: [CentOS] lost RHEL entitlements

2009-06-16 Thread Ray Van Dolson
On Tue, Jun 16, 2009 at 03:21:16PM -0700, Scott Silva wrote:
 on 6-16-2009 3:13 PM John R Pierce spake the following:
  John R Pierce wrote:
  see Migration from RHEL5 to CentOS5   near the bottom of 
  http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/MigrationGuide
 
  if you have 4, its similar but different.  if you have 3, time to wipe 
  and upgrade IMHO.

  
  oops, eat my words, here's RHEL3
  
  http://wiki.centos.org/FAQ/CentOS3#head-10bce23c2383ab4be8a9f0926578e96f5e0a8f5d
  
  IIRC, the procedure for RHEL4-CentOS4 is somewhere between the 3 and 5 
  process.   you need to install yum and the repo files as well as the 
  centos keys, then do the rest ...
  
  note all these procedures will result in a hybrid system where some of 
  your packages are from the upstream vendor, and others from the centos 
  project.   while this SHOULD work together OK, and many of us have done 
  exactly that, it is officially UNTESTED and you're on your own.

 It's CentOS... Except for the forums and the mailing lists, you are on your
 own anyway!

Alternately, if for whatever reason you'd prefer to stick with RHEL and
have a small amount of $$ to spend:

  https://www.redhat.com/apps/store/developers/jboss_developer_studio.html

Is a good option.  No support, but full access to updates.

You could also easily switch over to a full support entitlement if you
needed support on the system later.

Nothing wrong with the CentOS route of course. :)

Ray
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