On dv, 2020-03-13 at 12:04 +, francisco.card...@gmail.com wrote:
> I think the main issue with all this is going to be the brutal
> fragmentation that’s going to be going forward.
> Oracle has his own twisted fork of spacewalk that isn’t even a fork
> by itself.
> SUSE has SUSE Manager and Uyu
Hi,
> On 13 Mar 2020, at 11:04 pm, francisco.card...@gmail.com wrote:
>
> Oracle has his own twisted fork of spacewalk that isn’t even a fork by itself.
I'm not sure why you believe our build of Spacewalk is twisted, but with the
exception of a few logo changes, it's pretty much the upstream co
Stefan Bluhm:
> Hello,
>
> can you please update the following settings in the nightly COPR epel8-x64-86
> chroot:
>
> Repos (add): http://mirror.centos.org/centos/8/PowerTools/x86_64/os/
> modules: javapackages-tools:201801, ant:1.10, python27:2.7, perl:5.26
>
> This will allow more modules to
On Fri, Mar 13, 2020 at 7:58 AM Stefan Bluhm wrote:
>
> Hello Tomas,
>
> > Hey Stefan, Neal, Avi,
> > please keep in mind Spacewalk 2.10 is the last Spacewalk release planned by
> > Red Hat with a release date within a month. No further contributions to
> > Spacewalk are to be expected from Red
I think the main issue with all this is going to be the brutal fragmentation
that’s going to be going forward.
Oracle has his own twisted fork of spacewalk that isn’t even a fork by itself.
SUSE has SUSE Manager and Uyuni which are both based on the vanilla Spacewalk
project but at least they are
Hello Tomas,
> Hey Stefan, Neal, Avi,
> please keep in mind Spacewalk 2.10 is the last Spacewalk release planned by
> Red Hat with a release date within a month. No further contributions to
> Spacewalk are to be expected from Red Hat after May 2020.
This is what I was already assuming (not even