how can I install Percona Server on Red Hat Community version i.e. on Fedora? - percona

Currently I am working on Fedora 21. I want to install Percona server but it seems it does not support for community version. Is there any workaround for this??

You'll be fine to download the RPMs from Percona.com
https://www.percona.com/downloads/Percona-Server-5.7/Percona-Server-5.7.11-4/binary/redhat/6/x86_64/Percona-Server-5.7.11-4-r5c940e1-el6-x86_64-bundle.tar
Untar the archive and perform the install using YUM so that Fedora can satisfy any dependencies;
bash-4.3# cat /etc/issue
Fedora release 21 (Twenty One)
Kernel \r on an \m (\l)
bash-4.3# yum install -y Percona-Server-server-57-5.7.11-4.1.el6.x86_64.rpm Percona-Server-client-57-5.7.11-4.1.el6.x86_64.rpm Percona-Server-shared-57-5.7.11-4.1.el6.x86_64.rpm
bash-4.3# rpm -qa | grep -i percona
Percona-Server-shared-57-5.7.11-4.1.el6.x86_64
Percona-Server-client-57-5.7.11-4.1.el6.x86_64
Percona-Server-server-57-5.7.11-4.1.el6.x86_64

Related

How to install JavaPackage on ubuntu

I came across a debian application by the name JavaPackage which can create a debian installation file (.deb) form a java binary (.tar.gz) which you can then install using dpkg -i application_name.deb. With Ubuntu being a debian-based linux distribution, it is possible that it can be installed on ubuntu as well.
How do I go about installing it on Ubuntu/Kubuntu 16.04.2 LTS?
java-package is available in the official ubuntu repositories. All you need to do is update the repository with the latest version then install it as shown below:
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install java-package

How to install PHP 7 on EC2 t2.micro Instance running Amazon Linux Distro

I want to install the latest PHP 7.0 on an AWS EC2 T2.Micro Instance. So far I have read that currently AWS do not support PHP 7. But hey.. This is just a virtual server in the cloud with me having the full control over its configuration, so there must be some way to get PHP 7 running on this one.
Any help much appreciated.
My box is as below
$ cat /etc/*-release
---------------------------------------
NAME="Amazon Linux AMI"
VERSION="2015.09"
ID="amzn"
ID_LIKE="rhel fedora"
VERSION_ID="2015.09"
PRETTY_NAME="Amazon Linux AMI 2015.09"
ANSI_COLOR="0;33"
CPE_NAME="[*not significant*]"
HOME_URL="http://aws.amazon.com/amazon-linux-ami/"
Amazon Linux AMI release 2015.09
$ uname -a
---------------------------------------
Linux ip-xxx-xxx-xxx-xxx 4.1.13-18.26.amzn1.x86_64 #1 [date] x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
$ uname -mrs
---------------------------------------
Linux 4.1.13-18.26.amzn1.x86_64 x86_64
$ cat /proc/version
---------------------------------------
Linux version 4.1.13-18.26.amzn1.x86_64 (mockbuild#gobi-build-64010) (gcc version 4.8.3 20140911 (Red Hat 4.8.3-9) (GCC) )
You can now use the official php7 packages. Here an easy to follow guide.
1. Install Apache 2.4 and PHP 7.0 on Amazon Linux AMI
# Remove current apache & php
sudo yum remove httpd* php*
# Install Apache 2.4
sudo yum install httpd24
# Install PHP 7.0
# automatically includes php70-cli php70-common php70-json php70-process php70-xml
sudo yum install php70
# Install additional commonly used php packages
sudo yum install php70-gd
sudo yum install php70-imap
sudo yum install php70-mbstring
sudo yum install php70-mysqlnd
sudo yum install php70-opcache
sudo yum install php70-pdo
sudo yum install php70-pecl-apcu
2. Modify DirectoryIndex to include index.php
sudo nano /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
find this:
<IfModule dir_module>
DirectoryIndex index.html
</IfModule>
and modify it to look like this:
<IfModule dir_module>
DirectoryIndex index.html index.php
</IfModule>
If a directory contains an index.html and an index.php, the server will serve the index.html with this setup. If you do not want that to happen, you have the following options:
Reverse the order, so index.php is served when both files exist:
<IfModule dir_module>
DirectoryIndex index.php index.html
</IfModule>
Only use index.php as the DirectoryIndex:
<IfModule dir_module>
DirectoryIndex index.php
</IfModule>
3. Start the Apache web server
sudo service httpd start
4. Configure the Apache web server to start at each system boot
sudo chkconfig httpd on
5. Test your installation
Create phpinfo.php:
echo '<?php print phpinfo();' | sudo tee --append /var/www/html/phpinfo.php
Open your browser and enter your instance's public IP in the address bar followed by /phpinfo.php
Example: http://xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx/phpinfo.php
Note: Don't forget to allow incoming connections for HTTP (port 80) in the Security Groups of your instance, else your request will time out.
I got this running on my instance. You need http2.2 for it to work with the webtatic repo. I had so many repos there were a bunch of different version incompatibilities. I didn't keep great notes but looking at my history I basically did this:
# Remove current php & apache
sudo service httpd stop
sudo yum remove httpd* php*
# Remove any third party repos that aren't relevant
sudo yum repolist
sudo yum remove remi-safe
# Install Standard Apache for Amazon AMI
sudo yum install httpd #specify http22 if you get a different version
# Download webtatic
mkdir -p /tmp/php7
cd /tmp/php7
wget https://mirror.webtatic.com/yum/el6/latest.rpm
# Install webtatic repo
sudo yum install latest.rpm
sudo vi /etc/yum.repos.d/webtatic.repo 'set repo enables
sudo yum clean all
# Install base php7
sudo yum install --enablerepo=webtatic php70w
php -v #Should say something like PHP 7.0.2 (cli) (built: Jan 9 2016 16:09:32) ( NTS )
sudo yum install php70w-opcache
sudo yum install php70w-xml
sudo yum install php70w-pdo
sudo yum install php70w-mysqlnd
sudo yum install php70w-gd
sudo yum install php70w-apcu
sudo yum install php70w-pecl-apcu
sudo yum install php70w-mbstring
sudo yum install php70w-imap
# Restart apache
sudo service httpd restart
Current answer to problem (not original version in question) - worth knowing since this is a bit simpler and php7 isn't available in the standard repos for Amazon Linux 2, and this didn't come up until I searched a bit harder:
amazon-linux-extras install php7.2
The version of extras can be checked with a list command if v7.2 is no longer current:
amazon-linux-extras list
There are now official php7 packages for aws linux as of July 14, 2016. See the announcement at https://forums.aws.amazon.com/ann.jspa?annID=3902
To list available packages, run yum list php70*
The other answers seem to only work with Apache 2.2 but not 2.4.
Here's how I installed php7 on Amazon Linux running Apache 2.4:
First, if php is already installed, then remove it:
sudo yum remove php5*
Take note of the php5 packages that are being removed as you'll need to install the php7 versions of them. The php7 package names have a fairly direct and unambiguous mapping from their php5 counterparts as you'll see below. The rest of the instructions cover a classic LAMP stack and may be sufficient for your use-case.
Using instructions from http://www.spidersoft.com.au/2015/php-7-on-ami-linux-ec2/
wget http://mirrors.mediatemple.net/remi/enterprise/remi-release-6.rpm
sudo yum install remi-release-6.rpm
edit /etc/yum.repos.d/epel.repo and set enabled=1
sudo yum upgrade -y
sudo yum install php70 php70-php-fpm php70-php-xml php70-php-pdo php70-php-mysqlnd php70-php-gd php70-php-pecl-apcu php70-php-mbstring php70-php-mcrypt php70-php-opcache
Now you should have php70-php-fpm installed, which you can use in conjunction with apache:
Start the fpm daemon:
sudo service php70-php-fpm start
Switch Apache from prefork to mpm event worker (this is required because mod_php isn't thread safe) in /etc/httpd/conf.modules.d/00-mpm.conf:
LoadModule mpm_event_module modules/mod_mpm_event.so
Instruct apache to pass all php requests to php-fpm by adding the following lines in /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
<FilesMatch \.php$>
SetHandler "proxy:fcgi://127.0.0.1:9000"
</FilesMatch>
DirectoryIndex /index.php index.php
Restart apache using sudo service httpd restart. If everything went ok you should be able to verify the installation by requesting a php file containing phpinfo().
If you have existing shell scripts that use php's cli interpreter and thus start with #!/usr/bin/php, you have to set up a symlink to /usr/bin/php since the binary is now named /usr/bin/php70. You can do this as follows:
sudo ln -s /usr/bin/php70 /usr/bin/php
For more info on how to configure php-fpm see https://wiki.apache.org/httpd/PHP-FPM
I was installing PHP 7.0 on a production box that already has apache 2.4 and PHP 5.5. I wanted to install PHP 7.0 alongside it in a way that would have no Server outage. This is what I did.
# Install PHP 7.0
# automatically includes php70-cli php70-common php70-json php70-process php70-xml
sudo yum install php70
# Install additional commonly used php packages
sudo yum install php70-gd
sudo yum install php70-imap
sudo yum install php70-mbstring
sudo yum install php70-mysqlnd
sudo yum install php70-opcache
sudo yum install php70-pecl-apcu
This happily installed PHP 7 alongside PHP 5.5. The trick was to tell apache to use 7.0. I'm not sure if this was the best way, but I achieved this by changing these 2 permalinks:
ln -sf /etc/httpd/conf.d/php-conf.7.0 /etc/alternatives/php.conf
ln -sf /etc/httpd/conf.modules.d/15-php-conf.7.0 /etc/alternatives/10-php.conf
At this point apache is still happily running 5.5. Then when you restart apache it should be working with 7.0 (maybe 7.0.1). This is the no downtime way. I'd still recommend doing what I did, which is to rebuild PROD on another instance (create a TEST server) and test it all once before actually doing it on PROD. Good luck!
Oh, and right now the php command will still run 5.5. You can either change any scripts or CRON jobs to point to php7 or change the default version by running
alternatives --config php
It's simple. Just:
sudo amazon-linux-extras install -y php7.2
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/install-LAMP.html
can follow this step-by-step guide for LAMP installation
sudo yum update -y
sudo yum install -y httpd24 php70 mysql56-server php70-mysqlnd
sudo service httpd start
If you want a quick copy-paste install:
wget http://mirrors.mediatemple.net/remi/enterprise/remi-release-6.rpm
sudo yum install -y remi-release-6.rpm
sudo yum update -y
sudo yum install -y --enablerepo=epel php70
Test with:
php70 -v
And if you want the executable to be php:
ln -s /usr/bin/php70 /usr/local/bin/php
php -v
This thread helped me get close enough to finish it off, I'm sharing the commands and output that worked for me.
On Amazon Lightsail with Amazon Linux (amzn1.x86_64), the following command list helped me rid the system of Apache 2.2 and PHP 5.3 to get to Apache 2.4 and PHP:
Remove the current version of php and related tools:
sudo yum remove php*
==============================================================================================================================================
Package Arch Version Repository Size
==============================================================================================================================================
Removing:
php x86_64 5.3.29-1.8.amzn1 #amzn-main 7.4 M
php-cli x86_64 5.3.29-1.8.amzn1 #amzn-main 6.4 M
php-common x86_64 5.3.29-1.8.amzn1 #amzn-main 6.3 M
php-devel x86_64 5.3.29-1.8.amzn1 #amzn-main 9.9 M
php-gd x86_64 5.3.29-1.8.amzn1 #amzn-main 669 k
php-mbstring x86_64 5.3.29-1.8.amzn1 #amzn-main 4.1 M
php-mcrypt x86_64 5.3.29-1.8.amzn1 #amzn-main 92 k
php-mysql x86_64 5.3.29-1.8.amzn1 #amzn-main 445 k
php-pdo x86_64 5.3.29-1.8.amzn1 #amzn-main 381 k
php-xml x86_64 5.3.29-1.8.amzn1 #amzn-main 625 k
Transaction Summary
==============================================================================================================================================
Remove 10 Packages
Remove the current version of Apache (note you should backup your conf and conf.d folder before doing this, imho; in my case, it was a new system setup so there was nothing of interest there):
sudo yum remove http*
==============================================================================================================================================
Package Arch Version Repository Size
==============================================================================================================================================
Removing:
httpd x86_64 2.2.31-1.8.amzn1 #amzn-main 3.0 M
httpd-devel x86_64 2.2.31-1.8.amzn1 #amzn-main 534 k
httpd-tools x86_64 2.2.31-1.8.amzn1 #amzn-main 135 k
Transaction Summary
==============================================================================================================================================
Remove 3 Packages
Install Apache 2.4 (and start Apache)
sudo yum install httpd24.x86_64
sudo service httpd start
Install PHP 7
sudo yum install php70
==============================================================================================================================================
Package Arch Version Repository Size
==============================================================================================================================================
Installing:
php70 x86_64 7.0.13-1.19.amzn1 amzn-updates 3.3 M
Installing for dependencies:
php70-cli x86_64 7.0.13-1.19.amzn1 amzn-updates 4.7 M
php70-common x86_64 7.0.13-1.19.amzn1 amzn-updates 1.2 M
php70-json x86_64 7.0.13-1.19.amzn1 amzn-updates 65 k
php70-process x86_64 7.0.13-1.19.amzn1 amzn-updates 79 k
php70-xml x86_64 7.0.13-1.19.amzn1 amzn-updates 309 k
Transaction Summary
==============================================================================================================================================
Install 1 Package (+5 Dependent packages)
Total download size: 9.6 M
Installed size: 31 M
Is this ok [y/d/N]: y
Downloading packages:
(1/6): php70-7.0.13-1.19.amzn1.x86_64.rpm | 3.3 MB 00:00
(2/6): php70-cli-7.0.13-1.19.amzn1.x86_64.rpm | 4.7 MB 00:00
(3/6): php70-common-7.0.13-1.19.amzn1.x86_64.rpm | 1.2 MB 00:00
(4/6): php70-json-7.0.13-1.19.amzn1.x86_64.rpm | 65 kB 00:00
(5/6): php70-process-7.0.13-1.19.amzn1.x86_64.rpm | 79 kB 00:00
(6/6): php70-xml-7.0.13-1.19.amzn1.x86_64.rpm | 309 kB 00:00
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total 14 MB/s | 9.6 MB 00:00:00
Running transaction check
Running transaction test
Transaction test succeeded
Running transaction
Installing : php70-json-7.0.13-1.19.amzn1.x86_64 1/6
Installing : php70-process-7.0.13-1.19.amzn1.x86_64 2/6
Installing : php70-xml-7.0.13-1.19.amzn1.x86_64 3/6
Installing : php70-cli-7.0.13-1.19.amzn1.x86_64 4/6
Installing : php70-common-7.0.13-1.19.amzn1.x86_64 5/6
Installing : php70-7.0.13-1.19.amzn1.x86_64 6/6
Verifying : php70-7.0.13-1.19.amzn1.x86_64 1/6
Verifying : php70-common-7.0.13-1.19.amzn1.x86_64 2/6
Verifying : php70-json-7.0.13-1.19.amzn1.x86_64 3/6
Verifying : php70-process-7.0.13-1.19.amzn1.x86_64 4/6
Verifying : php70-xml-7.0.13-1.19.amzn1.x86_64 5/6
Verifying : php70-cli-7.0.13-1.19.amzn1.x86_64 6/6
Installed:
php70.x86_64 0:7.0.13-1.19.amzn1
Dependency Installed:
php70-cli.x86_64 0:7.0.13-1.19.amzn1 php70-common.x86_64 0:7.0.13-1.19.amzn1 php70-json.x86_64 0:7.0.13-1.19.amzn1
php70-process.x86_64 0:7.0.13-1.19.amzn1 php70-xml.x86_64 0:7.0.13-1.19.amzn1
Complete!
The php 7 package name is php70w. So what you can do is, install a Webtatic repo on you linux machine and install it from there.
rpm -ivh https://mirror.webtatic.com/yum/el6/latest.rpm
yum clean all
yum install --enablerepo=webtatic php70w
By default, just few Yum Repo is enabled on RedHat EC2.
To enable all, just type
yum-config-manager --enable rhui-REGION-rhel-*
and do a yum list now, you should be able to see this:
yum list |grep php7
Several answers should work here; however, when I was installing mine, it would not render pages and would display text instead of rendered PHP.
To fix that, I ran
sudo yum install php70-php-fpm
After that, everything started working.
Here is how I installed PHP 7.1 on Amazon Linux:
wget http://rpms.remirepo.net/enterprise/remi-release-6.rpm
rpm -Uvh remi-release-6.rpm epel-release-latest-6.noarch.rpm
yum-config-manager --enable remi-php71
wget ftp://195.220.108.108/linux/epel/6/x86_64/Packages/s/scl-utils-20120229-1.el6.x86_64.rpm
rpm -Uvh scl-utils-20120229-1.el6.x86_64.rpm
yum install php71
https://gist.github.com/ihor/581d169886c29e7e17d01b0041167b01

Installing RedHawk on CentOS7

CentOS 7 has been out nearly a year now. Has anyone installed RedHawk on CentOS 7? I do not see binaries available on the RedHawk download page. Has anyone successfully built it from sources? Are there issues?
I also do not find RPMs for omniORB-servers or omniORB-devel. Has anyone succeeded in building these on CentOS7?
Terry, Ive built redhawk yum repositories for CentOS7 which you can find below however a few things to note:
As Ryan pointed out, currently redhawk only officially supports CentOS6 and Ubuntu, these rpms are not offically built and distributed by redhawksdr.org. However if you do have any issues with them or find any problems please feel free to feed this back to me.
These RPMs were originally built prior to Fedora packaing omniORB 4.2. To account for this, I built and packaged omniORB 4.1 for CentOS7 which is the same version redhawk uses on CentOS6. My omniORB41 package and EPEL's omniORB (v4.2) package conflict so you cannot have the epel package installed. I have not tested redhawk with omniORB 4.2 which is why I packaged the older 4.1 version.
You can find the 1.10.1 yum repository here:
http://yum.axiosengineering.com/redhawk/1.10.1/el7/x86_64/
I will hopefully soon update with 1.10.2
You will also need the dependency repository here:
http://yum.axiosengineering.com/redhawk-deps/1.10/el7/x86_64/
To install via yum, create the file /etc/yum.repos.d/redhawk_axios.repo
With the following text:
[redhawk]
name=UNOFFICIAL REDHAWK 1.10.1
baseurl=http://yum.axiosengineering.com/redhawk/1.10.1/el7/x86_64/
enabled=1
gpgcheck=0
[redhawk-deps]
name=UNOFFICIAL REDHAWK DEPS
baseurl=http://yum.axiosengineering.com/redhawk-deps/1.10/el7/x86_64/
enabled=1
gpgcheck=0
Then from a terminal:
sudo yum clean all
sudo yum install redhawk* frontendInterfaces* bulkioInterfaces* GPP-*
REDHAWK is only officially supported on CentOS 6 and Ubuntu 14.04. omniORB should now be in Fedora EPEL 7:
https://apps.fedoraproject.org/packages/omniORB
I recently installed Redhawk 2.3.0 on Centos 7.9 by following these instructions https://redhawksdr.org/2.3.0/manual/installation/
The exact commands I used:
mkdir ~/Documents/Redhawk
cd ~/Documents/Redhawk
sudo yum install https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/epel/epel-release-latest-7.noarch.rpm
wget https://github.com/RedhawkSDR/redhawk/releases/download/2.3.0/redhawk-yum-2.3.0-el7-x86_64.tar.gz
tar xzvf redhawk-yum-2.3.0-el7-x86_64.tar.gz
cd redhawk-2.3.0-el7-x86_64
sudo yum install -y redhawk-release*.rpm
sudo nano /etc/yum.repos.d/redhawk.repo
Content of /etc/yum.repos.d/redhawk.repo:
[redhawk]
name=REDHAWK Repository
baseurl=file:///home/causer/Documents/Redhawk/redhawk-2.3.0-el7-x86_64
enabled=1
gpgcheck=1
gpgkey=file:///etc/pki/rpm-gpg/RPM-GPG-KEY-redhawk
Once the file is saved (ctrl+x, y), in the same directory as before:
sudo yum groupinstall "REDHAWK Runtime"
. /etc/profile.d/redhawk.sh
. /etc/profile.d/redhawk-sdrroot.sh
sudo /usr/sbin/usermod -a -G redhawk causer
sudo nano /etc/omniORB.cfg
sudo $OSSIEHOME/bin/cleanomni
sudo systemctl enable omniNames.service
sudo systemctl enable omniEvents.service
Copy redhawk.desktop to the desktop and run it (rpm -qpl on the redhawk-ide-xyz.rpm its near the bottom of the list)
sudo yum install java-1.8.0-openjdk-javadoc

How do I install the optional channel for RHEL to install Puppet?

I'm trying to install Puppet on RedHat Linux Version 7.
The instructions say you need to install an "optional channel".
Can someone provide directions on how to do this? I want to install Puppet. I tried to install Puppet Master without the optional channel. The main thing that is wrong is that I cannot start puppetmaster.
When I try and run:
/etc/init.d/puppetmaster restart
But I get this:
-bash: /etc/init.d/puppetmaster: No such file or directory
From reading over the docs:
subscription-manager repos --enable=rhel-7-server-optional-rpms
(From the RedHat Docs)
Then, to install Puppetserver:
sudo rpm -ivh http://yum.puppetlabs.com/puppetlabs-release-el-7.noarch.rpm
sudo yum install puppet-server
From the Puppet Docs
That should work.
This is how I install the release package of the repository, the Puppet repository in this particular example:
BASEARCH=$(uname -i);
RELEASE=$(cat /etc/redhat-release | sed -rn '/(Final|release)/s/^[^0-9]*|[^0-9.]*$//gp' | sed -e 's/[.].*//');
rpm -Uhv http://yum.puppetlabs.com/el/$RELEASE/products/$BASEARCH/$(curl -s http://yum.puppetlabs.com/el/$RELEASE/products/$BASEARCH/ | grep puppetlabs-release | tail -n1 | sed 's%.*>\(.*.release-.*noarch.rpm\)<.*%\1%');
This code installs the latest version of the release package for the OS version you are running on. You do not need to know the precise release number...
Than install the Puppet server
yum install puppet-server

Puppet Master install

I am using below release of redhat
cat /etc/redhat-release
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 6.4 (Santiago)
I am trying to install puppet master on this server.
Here is what I did:
rpm --quiet -ivh http://yum.puppetlabs.com/el/6/products/x86_64//puppetlabs-release-6-10.noarch.rpm
yum install puppet-master
Setting up Install Process
No package puppet-master available.
Error: Nothing to do
I guess I need different package than what I have, Could someone point me to right direction here.
Thanks for your help.
Looks like you might have a typo in the URL you used.
rpm -ivh http://yum.puppetlabs.com/el/6/products/x86_64/puppetlabs-release-6-10.noarch.rpm
yum install -y puppet-server puppet facter
The package is puppet-server not puppet-master
sudo yum install puppet-server

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