To install Gitlab I am using the instructions in the following link,
https://packages.gitlab.com/gitlab/gitlab-ce/packages/el/6/gitlab-ce-8.6.6-ce.0.el6.x86_64.rpm
Executing the following command
curl -s https://packages.gitlab.com/install/repositories/gitlab/gitlab-ce/script.rpm.sh | sudo bash
results in following output.
The repository is setup! You can now install packages.
Later executing the following command
[x#localhost ~]$ sudo dnf install gitlab-ce-8.6.6-ce.0.el6.x86_64
results in the follwing output,
Last metadata expiration check: 0:59:58 ago on Mon Apr 18 23:11:56 2016.
No package gitlab-ce-8.6.6-ce.0.el6.x86_64 available.
Error: Unable to find a match.
Please provide a solutiion.
GitLab doesn't provide native installation packages for Fedora at this time, so you have to install from source.
GitLab does provide a detailed guide on how to install from source, but it's for Ubuntu. You'll have to translate it into Fedora yourself.
Related
I have been constantly running into this issue more and more lately, and finally need some assistance because I'm completely stuck.
I just got access to a RHEL EC2 Linux server and I am just simply trying to install Docker. This process has been extremely painful lately. Tons of 404 HTTP Not Found errors when trying to follow the processes mentioned online
According to https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/docker-basics.html, you can just simply run one of the following two commands:
sudo amazon-linux-extras install docker
sudo yum install docker
However, neither one of these comands work, as shown in the output below:
[root#d8de679d27f2454 myuser]# sudo amazon-linux-extras install docker
sudo: amazon-linux-extras: command not found
[root#d8de679d27f2454 myuser]# yum install docker
Loaded plugins: amazon-id, search-disabled-repos
No package docker available.
Error: Nothing to do
[root#d8de679d27f2454 myuser]#
Here is a list of things I've tried to do :
First Attempt (RE: How to install docker on Amazon Linux2)
The second answer proposed in that you can just run the following:
sudo yum update -y
sudo yum -y install docker
However, that doesn't work either, as shown in the output below:
[root#d8de679d27f2454 myuser]# yum update -y
Loaded plugins: amazon-id, search-disabled-repos
No packages marked for update
[root#d8de679d27f2454 myuser]# yum -y install docker
Loaded plugins: amazon-id, search-disabled-repos
No package docker available.
Error: Nothing to do
[root#d8de679d27f2454 myuser]#
Second Attempt: Installing via get.docker.com
When running curl https://get.docker.com | bash, that doesn't work either
Third Attempt: https://computingforgeeks.com/install-docker-ce-on-rhel-7-linux/
Part of this article suggests running the following two commands:
sudo yum install -y https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/epel/epel-release-latest-7.noarch.rpm
sudo yum install -y yum-utils device-mapper-persistent-data lvm2
However, that doesn't work either:
# yum install -y yum-utils device-mapper-persistent-data lvm2
Loaded plugins: amazon-id, product-id, search-disabled-repos, subscription-manager
This system is not registered with an entitlement server. You can use subscription-manager to register.
https://download.docker.com/linux/rhel/7/x86_64/stable/repodata/repomd.xml: [Errno 14] HTTPS Error 404 - Not Found
Trying other mirror.
To address this issue please refer to the below knowledge base article
https://access.redhat.com/articles/1320623
If above article doesn't help to resolve this issue please open a ticket with Red Hat Support.
One of the configured repositories failed (Docker CE Stable - x86_64),
and yum doesn't have enough cached data to continue. At this point the only
safe thing yum can do is fail. There are a few ways to work "fix" this:
1. Contact the upstream for the repository and get them to fix the problem.
2. Reconfigure the baseurl/etc. for the repository, to point to a working
upstream. This is most often useful if you are using a newer
distribution release than is supported by the repository (and the
packages for the previous distribution release still work).
3. Run the command with the repository temporarily disabled
yum --disablerepo=docker-ce-stable ...
4. Disable the repository permanently, so yum won't use it by default. Yum
will then just ignore the repository until you permanently enable it
again or use --enablerepo for temporary usage:
yum-config-manager --disable docker-ce-stable
or
subscription-manager repos --disable=docker-ce-stable
5. Configure the failing repository to be skipped, if it is unavailable.
Note that yum will try to contact the repo. when it runs most commands,
so will have to try and fail each time (and thus. yum will be be much
slower). If it is a very temporary problem though, this is often a nice
compromise:
yum-config-manager --save --setopt=docker-ce-stable.skip_if_unavailable=true
failure: repodata/repomd.xml from docker-ce-stable: [Errno 256] No more mirrors to try.
https://download.docker.com/linux/rhel/7/x86_64/stable/repodata/repomd.xml: [Errno 14] HTTPS Error 404 - Not Found
Here's the output of my cat /etc/os-release command
NAME="Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server"
VERSION="7.9 (Maipo)"
ID="rhel"
ID_LIKE="fedora"
VARIANT="Server"
VARIANT_ID="server"
VERSION_ID="7.9"
PRETTY_NAME="Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server 7.9 (Maipo)"
ANSI_COLOR="0;31"
CPE_NAME="cpe:/o:redhat:enterprise_linux:7.9:GA:server"
HOME_URL="https://www.redhat.com/"
BUG_REPORT_URL="https://bugzilla.redhat.com/"
Any help would be greatly appreciated. It seems nearly impossible to install docker at this point.
Ran the following commands and this worked:
yum install -y https://download.docker.com/linux/centos/7/x86_64/stable/Packages/docker-ce-selinux-17.03.0.ce-1.el7.centos.noarch.rpm
yum install -y https://download.docker.com/linux/centos/7/x86_64/stable/Packages/docker-ce-17.03.0.ce-1.el7.centos.x86_64.rpm
Download latest version of these 3 packages from internet and
[root#test_hostame docker19.03_rpm]# ll
total 93904
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 30381608 Jan 20 18:19 containerd.io-1.3.9-3.1.el7.x86_64.rpm
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 25519432 Jan 20 18:19 docker-ce-19.03.14-3.el7.x86_64.rpm
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 40247412 Jan 20 18:19 docker-ce-cli-19.03.14-3.el7.x86_64.rpm
run command in folder where only these 3 packages are present
yum localinstall *rpm
It is surely gonna work. If it doesnt, share your error.
On my CentOS 7 (x86_64) machine, I am trying to install PostgreSQL 9.5/PostGIS 2.3 via PostgreSQL's yum repository, using this tutorial.
According to the tutorial, when I proceed to the second step.
sudo rpm -ivh http://yum.postgresql.org/9.5/redhat/rhel-7-x86_64/pgdg-centos95-9.5-2.noarch.rpm
It says:
Retrieving http://yum.postgresql.org/9.5/redhat/rhel-7-x86_64/pgdg-centos95-9.5-2.noarch.rpm
Preparing... ################################# [100%]
package pgdg-centos95-9.5-3.noarch (which is newer than pgdg-centos95-9.5-2.noarch) is already installed
Then, I try to see which packages are available in this rpm:
sudo yum list | grep pgdg95
I get,
libevent.x86_64 2.0.22-1.rhel7 #pgdg95
python-babel.noarch 1.3-1.rhel7 #pgdg95
python-jinja2.noarch 2.8-7.rhel7 #pgdg95
python-markupsafe.x86_64 0.23-11.rhel7 #pgdg95
Which is not according to the step number 3 in the installation tutorial. Can someone please suggest me what's wrong with the installation or are there any alternative ways to install PostgreSQL 9.5/PostGIS 2.3?
Please make sure you have both pgdg and EPEL repositories installed by running sudo yum repolist. If EPEL is not in the list, just install it sudo yum install epel-release.
Please refer to this ANSWER.
Check yum list postgres*
If you see desired packages it is great.
If you still don't see desired packages then follow given steps in given answer,
# vi /etc/yum.repos.d/CentOS-Base.repo
# yum localinstall http://yum.postgresql.org/9.5/redhat/rhel-7-x86_64/pgdg-centos95-9.5-2.noarch.rpm
# yum list postgres*
If you check step two, we can see it does local install after this local installation, you should be ideally able to see desired list.
Hope it helps !
I'm trying to install the gitlab-ce package on a system running Ubuntu server 17.04. I followed the official installation instructions here.
First I ran:
sudo apt-get install curl openssh-server ca-certificates postfix
I already had all of those installed. Then I ran:
curl -sS https://packages.gitlab.com/install/repositories/gitlab/gitlab-ce/script.deb.sh | sudo bash
Which also worked fine. But when I try to run
sudo apt-get install gitlab-ce
I get the following error message:
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree
Reading state information... Done
E: Unable to locate package gitlab-ce
I know it's possible to install gitlab on Ubuntu server 17.04, since I had already done It on a previous installation. Unfortunately I installed the OS again from scratch and I can't remember how I had installed gitlab.
Thanks for any help in advance!
I gave up with the "full" automated script, as it doesn't appear to be working with 17.04... Anyway. I grabbed the latest package from https://packages.gitlab.com/gitlab/gitlab-ce/packages/ubuntu/xenial/gitlab-ce_9.3.0-ce.0_amd64.deb
curl -LJO https://packages.gitlab.com/gitlab/gitlab-ce/packages/ubuntu/xenial/gitlab-ce_9.3.0-ce.0_amd64.deb/download
Installed it with the package manager
sudo dpkg -i gitlab-ce_9.3.0-ce.0_amd64.deb
Then configured it with
sudo gitlab-ctl reconfigure
Then, point your web browser at your new gitlab install and you should be good to go...
Ubuntu 20.04.1
Incase anyone bumps back into this, while trying to gitlab on version 20.0.4 of ubuntu, life is much easier... and the instructions and automated script actually work. GitLab-CE installation instructions
on a fresh install of ubuntu: -
sudo apt install curl
curl -s https://packages.gitlab.com/install/repositories/gitlab/gitlab- ce/script.deb.sh | sudo bash
sudo apt install gitlab-ce
done!
I was facing the same problem (Lubuntu 17.10), after searching the gitlab forums for 2 Hours, I found this thread.
So from what I have read: Gitlab-ce is not supported for zesty yet. Also the simple
sudo apt-get install gitlab
is a wrong prompt cause it installs a Ubuntu package created by a user named as "praveen" and It is not officially supported by Gitlab.
here is what I did To solve my problem:
sudo nano /etc/apt/sources.list.d/gitlab_gitlab-ce.list.save
sudo nano /etc/apt/sources.list.d/gitlab_gitlab-ce.list
replace "zesty" with "xenial" (These files are root access only)
sudo apt update
sudo apt-get install gitlab-ce
This worked for me.
I have spent my whole afternoon for solving this problem, I hope this solution works for you too.
Prost !
EDIT: corrected spelling
I had the same problem getting the install to run on 17.10. According to an issue on their site ( https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-runner/issues/2851 ), the artful packages are not being built.
I did the same this as #DevX, but just changed the parameters on their setup script.
Howler#GitLab:/tmp$ curl -LO https://packages.gitlab.com/install/repositories/gitlab/gitlab-ce/script.deb.sh
Howler#GitLab:/tmp$ sudo os=ubuntu dist=xenial bash ./script.deb.sh
Howler#GitLab:/tmp$ sudo apt-get install gitlab-ce
I'm running Debian 7.2 on Google Compute Engine (Though I suspect Centos, Red Hat, and Amazon Linux AMI all have the same problem). After downloading the 64-bit Linux version of the Dart SDK from this page, any dart command I run, for example, dart --version, will output the following error:
./editor/dart/dart-sdk/bin/dart: /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6: version `GLIBC_2.15' not found (required by ./editor/dart/dart-sdk/bin/dart)
./editor/dart/dart-sdk/bin/dart: /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6: version `GLIBC_2.14' not found (required by ./editor/dart/dart-sdk/bin/dart)
Update: October 2014: Dart can now be installed on Debian with apt-get:
Instructions summarized from the dart website:
# Enable HTTPS for apt.
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install apt-transport-https
# Get the Google Linux package signing key.
sudo sh -c 'curl https://dl-ssl.google.com/linux/linux_signing_key.pub | apt-key add -'
# Set up the location of the stable repository.
sudo sh -c 'curl https://storage.googleapis.com/download.dartlang.org/linux/debian/dart_stable.list > /etc/apt/sources.list.d/dart_stable.list'
sudo apt-get update
# Finally, install the dart package!
sudo apt-get install dart
Instructions for building the binary yourself:
This problem appears to be caused by Google compiling against an edge version of GLIBC (>= 2.15) which is not generally supported on Linux outside of Ubuntu 12 (Precise Pangolin).
First of all, do not attempt to download an experimental version of GLIBC or EGLIBC. I was able to get dart to work using that method, but the rest of my machine fell apart. Updating GLIBC is a recipe for madness.
Instead, the best solution is building dart from source. Despite the GLIBC version requirements of the binary, the source itself has no such requirements. There are wiki pages for installing from source on debian, centos/fedora/red hat/amazon, ubuntu, and other linux versions.
Here is an overview of those steps, which I can confirm works on Debian 7.2. The centos/fedora/redhat steps appear to be the same except they use yum instead of apt-get.
Install subversion and the required build tools:
sudo apt-get -y update
sudo apt-get -y install subversion
sudo apt-get -y install make
sudo apt-get -y install g++
sudo apt-get -y install openjdk-6-jdk
Check out google's depot tools and add gclient to your path
svn co http://src.chromium.org/svn/trunk/tools/depot_tools
export PATH=$PATH:`pwd`/depot_tools
Download the dart source at the desired branch.
Replace 1.2 with whatever branch you wish to build. You can see a list of available versions here. In general, the latest numbered branch is best.
gclient config http://dart.googlecode.com/svn/branches/1.2/deps/all.deps
gclient sync
gclient runhooks
Move into the new dart directory
cd dart
Do only A or B below:
Note: For 32bit, use the --arch=ia32 flag instead.
A. Build the entire Dart SDK including pub, dart2js, dart, etc.:
tools/build.py --mode=release --arch=x64 create_sdk
B. Build just the dart executable:
tools/build.py --mode=release --arch=x64 runtime
The dart executable is now at either out/ReleaseX64/dart or out/ReleaseX64/dart-sdk/bin/dart you can do a smoke test by printing the version
dart/out/ReleaseX64/dart --version
The output should be something like Dart VM version: 1.2.0 (Mon Mar 3 03:06:20 2014) on "linux_x64".
How to help fix this issue
This was much more painful than it needed to be, since the binary clearly doesn't need to be built using GLIBC >= 2.15. If you wish to draw attention to this issue, please star this dart bug.
just completed installing oracle linux 6 update 2 on my virtual box and i have been trying to install oracle 11gr2 on the same operating system i am following the installation guide but i have encountered some problems when i run this command on my terminal
yum install oracle-rdbms-server-11gR2-preinstall
i am getting an error
no package oracle-rdbms-server-11gr2-preinstall available
error nothing to do
is there any way i am doing this wrongly??how can i install the oracle-rdbms-server-11gR2-preinstall
It seem you don't have oracle repository configured, do following:
As an authorized user (for example, root), retrieve the file that configures repository locations:
$sudo cd /etc/yum.repos.d
$sudo wget http://public-yum.oracle.com/public-yum-ol6.repo
Using a text editor, modify the file, changing the field enabled=0 to enabled=1 to reflect repositories that correspond to the machine's operating system release.
Next, install the oracle-rdbms-server-11gR2-preinstall RPM using the yum install command.
The output in Listing 1 shows how the installation checks dependencies and then downloads and installs the required packages.
$sudo yum install oracle-rdbms-server-11gR2-preinstall
mv /etc/pki/rpm-gpg/RPM-GPG-KEY-oracle-ol6.repo /etc/pki/rpm-gpg/RPM-GPG-KEY-oracle.repo
I've given :
yum install oracle-rdbms-server-11gR2-preinstall.x86_64
and works perfectly