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Can anyone tell me when the cassandra20 or dsc20 RPM packages will be available on the Datastax yum repository located at http://rpm.datastax.com/community/noarch/ ?
I tried googling for third-party repos but nobody seems to have C* 2.0.0 yet.
Thanks in advance!
It's now available here http://planetcassandra.org/Download/StartDownload (and the usual repository). Please use the new dsc20 package name for apt and yum.
We are working on it. Hopefully tomorrow, kinda depends on how qa goes.
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I am setting up a new Linux device and I'm relatively new to Linux, what are the benefits of using apt for things? is there any other command that is better than apt?
apt is the default package manager on Debian derivatives (like Ubuntu). There are other alternatives like yum (which is the default on the RH family of distros like Fedora). A discussion of "better" or "worse" won't make much sense to you if you're new to Gnu/Linux.
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Most of the packages I have seen on Hackage are libaries released with open-source licenses and I think I have faint memory of a hackage upload with a missing license field triggering a bashing from hackage.haskell.org about not using an open-source license.
Is there a rule that says every package hosted on Hackage is required to be made available under an open-source license?
If you claim that there is such a rule, how does http://hackage.haskell.org/packages/archive/Cabal/1.14.0/doc/html/Distribution-License.html relate?
You may use any license you like. That's what the OtherLicense constructor of License is for. That said, Hackage is a source distribution hub, so keep that in mind if you don't want people looking at your source.
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I was trying to install on Debian postfix or some mail client to have mails,(its ok if i install a client and it install by itself all the things needed, like postfis and stuffs) Ive read a lot and many tutorials seems to be pretty long, complicated and the worste of all at the end of the configuration just doesnt work anything at my mail, i am novice in this, please, could anybody help me to find a solution a tutorial or give me an explination of how to install it??
Thanks in advance
The question would most likely yield better results on SuperUser instead, however I just did the same thing, only in Fedora. Here is the walkthrough I used:
http://www.techotopia.com/index.php/Configuring_a_Fedora_Linux_Email_Server
I'm sure you can use it and simply replace 'yum' with 'apt-get'. Good Luck.
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I am trying to find the linux 2.4 kernel source code. It seems that it has been removed from the official download site and the mirrors. This may have been result of the kernel.org compromise but it would be nice to have access to historical kernel source. I have looked in the following directories on kernel.org and mirrors and found nothing:
http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/Historic/
http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v2.4/
Google gave me very quickly this uk mirror for linux 2.4
but please explain why you want such an old version. Are you sure to have the hardware to run it???
You can download the kernel of 2.4.x from this URL: http://eduunix.ccut.edu.cn/index2/mirrors/kernel3/linux/kernel/v2.4/
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We need to set up a Git server in our team.
I have decided to first go with a VM, and expand in the future if needed.
I've gathered Linux would be the easiest setup.
Problem is, i have very limited experience with Linux, some questions that i'm trying to answer are:
What is the actual procedure for installing the Git package? is it a simple matter of RPM installation ?
Following the installation, i'd need to map the Git repo to some net share. how is this done? i believe that i need to configure xinetd.d, looking for exact steps.
How is authentication is set up for various users to access this machine?
Which version of Linux makes any difference? we have the RHEL 5 64 bit here.
Anything else i'm currently missing?
Haven't used RHEL 5 but yes, any modern distro should have git available in a package. I'm guessing that "yum install git" would do it.
Depends on the type of net share. Google it.
See http://scie.nti.st/2007/11/14/hosting-git-repositories-the-easy-and-secure-way
Shouldn't.