Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-26 Thread Lamar Owen
On Friday, March 25, 2011 09:55:34 pm Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:
 I'm speaking up for our CentOS repackagers here. That kind of
 bootstrapping takes cycles and practice, and double checking. In
 theory, they could. Our CentOS rebuilders have exposed a few
 dependencies for which the SRPM's are not published (and which our
 favorite upstream vendor is fixing them, but they *don't have to!!!*.
 That's not part of a GPL license, it's just good free software
 practice.)

Let me speak up for our CentOS devs too, as the upstream doesn't have to 
bootstrap in this way.  Their bootstrap dates from Mother's Day.

Fedora likewise; they have a previous version, and rolling binaries that are 
pretty well depsolved already.  The rebuilders are the ones who have it more 
difficult, as they have to reproduce a build sequence from a known snapshot 
point (the last public beta).

And the *distribution* as a whole is not covered by the license you might think 
it is.

Les, the upstream source RPMs aren't even the source source for the upstream 
build; SRPMS are just a by product of the build of the binaries from source in 
an SCM (managed by Red Hat's koji), and in theory, given the same identical 
environment that built the upstream binaries they will re-build to the same 
binary.  The environment is the hard thing to replicate, since it is a moving 
target, and each build changes it slightly.  It's questionable if upstream 
could exactly replicate it from their own source RPM's without significant 
effort (that is, outside of koji).

To their credit they fix those sort of bugs in due time, but as mentioned they 
are not bound by any license to do so, since the binary build environment isn't 
part of the 'source code.'  

Karanbir and Johnny have both posted at length about this issue; Russ as well.

What's interesting is the length of time it's taking SL as well to get 4.9 and 
5.6 out in GA, as well as CentOS with a GA for 5.6 and 6.0.  It seems to be 
pretty soon due, at least 5.6.

As it stands, SL has a GA 6.0, and CentOS has a GA 4.9.  I like many others am 
waiting for that middle piece, a GA 5.6.  But I'd rather have it correctly done 
than quickly done if I have to choose.
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-26 Thread Les Mikesell
On 3/26/11 12:44 PM, Lamar Owen wrote:

 Les, the upstream source RPMs aren't even the source source for the 
 upstream build; SRPMS are just a by product of the build of the binaries from 
 source in an SCM (managed by Red Hat's koji), and in theory, given the same 
 identical environment that built the upstream binaries they will re-build to 
 the same binary.  The environment is the hard thing to replicate, since it is 
 a moving target, and each build changes it slightly.  It's questionable if 
 upstream could exactly replicate it from their own source RPM's without 
 significant effort (that is, outside of koji).

I don't see how you could miss if you did a 2nd rebuild where the libraries 
populating the build environment are the product of the source you are shipping 
(correct dependency listings or not).  Or how you can claim to be shipping 
source that matches your binaries if you don't do it that way.   Does an 
rpmbuild --rebuild of one of the packages in question on a stock RH system 
create a binary that would fail the CentOS QA?

-- 
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lesmikes...@gmail.com
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-26 Thread Nico Kadel-Garcia
On Sat, Mar 26, 2011 at 2:53 PM, Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com wrote:
 On 3/26/11 12:44 PM, Lamar Owen wrote:

 Les, the upstream source RPMs aren't even the source source for the 
 upstream build; SRPMS are just a by product of the build of the binaries 
 from source in an SCM (managed by Red Hat's koji), and in theory, given the 
 same identical environment that built the upstream binaries they will 
 re-build to the same binary.  The environment is the hard thing to 
 replicate, since it is a moving target, and each build changes it slightly.  
 It's questionable if upstream could exactly replicate it from their own 
 source RPM's without significant effort (that is, outside of koji).

 I don't see how you could miss if you did a 2nd rebuild where the libraries
 populating the build environment are the product of the source you are 
 shipping
 (correct dependency listings or not).  Or how you can claim to be shipping
 source that matches your binaries if you don't do it that way.   Does an
 rpmbuild --rebuild of one of the packages in question on a stock RH system
 create a binary that would fail the CentOS QA?

rpmbuild --rebuild need not work. Dependencies need not be
satisified by anything Red Hat publishes, and this has happened and
been documented (and addressed in patches upstream).

I went slightly nutso with similar issues when I published an updated
nx.spec for CentOS 6 in Bugzilla. There are dependencies on audio
related devel packages which are not on RHEL 6.0 installation media,
but only available in the optional channel of yum-rhn-plugin.
CentOS, sensibly, doesn't make these funny distinctions and puts all
such publicly licensed packages in one main os repository. This can
save a lot of nuttiness when trying to build such packages in mock,
but for a while there I thought they hadn't published the darn thing.
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-26 Thread Lamar Owen
On Saturday, March 26, 2011 02:53:19 pm Les Mikesell wrote:
 Does an 
 rpmbuild --rebuild of one of the packages in question on a stock RH system 
 create a binary that would fail the CentOS QA?

This is the core of the question.  As I don't have an RHEL 6 system available 
to try, I can't directly answer that.

The answer is 'it depends'.  But you still miss the issue; the buildroot 
repository is the binary tree built against, and it could contain binaries that 
are different from the shipped RHEL system's binaries.  Of course, that's with 
mock, which makes it easier to make something that is not self-hosted; it also 
makes it possible to build multiple versions of systems on a single buildhost 
running yet a different version.

Straight rpmbuild --rebuild may very well fail with missing build dependencies, 
which you would then have to go spelunking for in non-RHEL repositories (but 
they're out there, or SL6 wouldn't be built at all, now would it?).  You have 
the exact source code used to build the package you have installed; you may or 
may not have all of the same versions of the dependencies that your binary 
package actually was built against.

The question can be distilled as 'is RHEL self-hosting' to which the answer has 
been for a while 'No, and that isn't a primary goal of RHEL.'

Why not? would be a reasonable question right about now.

To use an example I work with, current Ardour 3 source code out of subversion 
(Ardour 3 is in alpha test, and is not released) cannot be compiled against 
just any version of the JACK development headers and libraries; to get a 
working executable, you have to compile against a specific version of the 
jack-devel package; but the built binary can run with any recent version of the 
JACK library.  An Ardour 3 binary could be built and shipped that would work 
fine with the current JACK 1.96 but was built with 0.120.1 (which is the 
specific version required for the build to be successful).  I would give you a 
link, but the current 'ardour-dev' archive is only available to members of that 
list.

The point being, there are likely reasons other than carelessness or 
obfuscation-ness that a package might be built against development headers and 
libs that are different from the shipping versions (but with compatible 
sonames, perhaps), or maybe built with a different toolchain (compiler, linker, 
etc) than the shipping version of those tools, perhaps in order to just get the 
package to build; it will run fine with the shipping binaries, but may not 
build with them.  And it may be a niche thing, where other packages in the 
distribution won't build with that particular toolchain

I'll finish by pointing to the following resources for learning more about this 
(and I'm just throwing these out, I've not thoroughly checked everything said 
in these pages, but notice who is posting in some cases):

http://adsm.org/lists/html/Veritas-bu/2010-07/msg00135.html
http://www.redhat.com/archives/rhl-list/2004-January/msg02812.html
http://www.redhat.com/archives/taroon-beta-list/2003-September/msg00038.html
http://www.redhat.com/archives/nahant-beta-list/2004-November/msg00072.html
http://www.redhat.com/archives/nahant-beta-list/2004-November/msg00073.html
http://www.redhat.com/archives/nahant-list/2006-July/msg00059.html
http://www.redhat.com/archives/taroon-list/2004-March/msg00249.html
http://www.redhat.com/archives/taroon-list/2004-March/msg00261.html
http://www.redhat.com/archives/nahant-list/2006-May/msg00266.html
http://www.redhat.com/archives/nahant-list/2006-May/msg00264.html
(side note on that last one there was and maybe still is a 'Cisco 
Enterprise Linux' build..reference:
http://fr2.rpmfind.net/linux/RPM/sourceforge/p/project/pi/pipeviewer/OldFiles/pv-0.8.6-1.x86_64.html
 )
http://www.redhat.com/archives/taroon-list/2005-March/msg00222.html
http://www.redhat.com/archives/taroon-list/2005-March/msg00228.html
http://www.redhat.com/archives/nahant-list/2006-May/msg00273.html

There are more.
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-25 Thread Gordon Messmer
On 03/20/2011 12:30 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 Or, maybe there was back in the days when they released source that matched
 their binaries

Red Hat's published source is what they use to create their binaries. 
There is no mis-match.
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-25 Thread Les Mikesell
On 3/25/2011 4:38 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
 On 03/20/2011 12:30 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 Or, maybe there was back in the days when they released source that matched
 their binaries

 Red Hat's published source is what they use to create their binaries.
 There is no mis-match.

I thought the issue causing the delays is that rebuilding from the 
source does not reproduce their binaries unless you introduce library 
versions that aren't what the source creates.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-25 Thread Nico Kadel-Garcia
On Fri, Mar 25, 2011 at 5:49 PM, Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com wrote:
 On 3/25/2011 4:38 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
 On 03/20/2011 12:30 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 Or, maybe there was back in the days when they released source that matched
 their binaries

 Red Hat's published source is what they use to create their binaries.
 There is no mis-match.

 I thought the issue causing the delays is that rebuilding from the
 source does not reproduce their binaries unless you introduce library
 versions that aren't what the source creates.

One has to be cautious about the bootstrap environment, to make sure
that the libraries available in your mock or other build
environments are the same libraries. Red Hat seems to be very, very
good about this. Scientific Linux isn't so careful in their
recompilation, something that's been documented here recently, but
it's why I want access to the /etc/mock/ setups and the non-existent
source control for tweaked packages.
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-25 Thread Les Mikesell
On 3/25/2011 5:03 PM, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:

 Or, maybe there was back in the days when they released source that matched
 their binaries

 Red Hat's published source is what they use to create their binaries.
 There is no mis-match.

 I thought the issue causing the delays is that rebuilding from the
 source does not reproduce their binaries unless you introduce library
 versions that aren't what the source creates.

 One has to be cautious about the bootstrap environment, to make sure
 that the libraries available in your mock or other build
 environments are the same libraries. Red Hat seems to be very, very
 good about this.

It is not that they are good, they are the authority.  Whatever library 
version happened to be in their build root when the linkage was done is 
correct by definition even if it isn't what you get when you build that 
library from source and/or it isn't specified as a dependency.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-25 Thread Nico Kadel-Garcia
On Fri, Mar 25, 2011 at 6:26 PM, Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com wrote:
 On 3/25/2011 5:03 PM, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:

 Or, maybe there was back in the days when they released source that
 matched
 their binaries

 Red Hat's published source is what they use to create their binaries.
 There is no mis-match.

 I thought the issue causing the delays is that rebuilding from the
 source does not reproduce their binaries unless you introduce library
 versions that aren't what the source creates.

 One has to be cautious about the bootstrap environment, to make sure
 that the libraries available in your mock or other build
 environments are the same libraries. Red Hat seems to be very, very
 good about this.

 It is not that they are good, they are the authority.  Whatever library
 version happened to be in their build root when the linkage was done is
 correct by definition even if it isn't what you get when you build that
 library from source and/or it isn't specified as a dependency.

And they're very good about making sure that they've correctly
bootstrapped their systems, that their build environment matches
the components of the available, rebuilt packages. This was a deadly
problem in the early days of compilers, when to build gcc, you
basically had to build it *4* times to make sure the new gcc compiler
was used to build the new gcc compiler, which rebuilt the gcc
compiler, and then the fourth one was compared to the third one to
make sure it matched.

That takes work, system resources, and some understanding of how to
resolve dependencies. It's especially tricky when several packages
will all satisfy the same dependencies. (Don't get me *STARTED* on JDK
mismatches) And it's doubtless how those Scientific Linux
libtalloc discrepancies crept in.
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-25 Thread Les Mikesell
On 3/25/11 6:31 PM, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:

 One has to be cautious about the bootstrap environment, to make sure
 that the libraries available in your mock or other build
 environments are the same libraries. Red Hat seems to be very, very
 good about this.

 It is not that they are good, they are the authority.  Whatever library
 version happened to be in their build root when the linkage was done is
 correct by definition even if it isn't what you get when you build that
 library from source and/or it isn't specified as a dependency.

 And they're very good about making sure that they've correctly
 bootstrapped their systems, that their build environment matches
 the components of the available, rebuilt packages.

If that were true, you should be able to duplicate their linkages exactly by 
priming the 1st build run with (all of) their binaries, then rebuilding with 
your own output results instead.  But then everything would be done by now.  So 
I don't think that's true.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-25 Thread Nico Kadel-Garcia
On Fri, Mar 25, 2011 at 9:34 PM, Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com wrote:
 On 3/25/11 6:31 PM, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:

 One has to be cautious about the bootstrap environment, to make sure
 that the libraries available in your mock or other build
 environments are the same libraries. Red Hat seems to be very, very
 good about this.

 It is not that they are good, they are the authority.  Whatever library
 version happened to be in their build root when the linkage was done is
 correct by definition even if it isn't what you get when you build that
 library from source and/or it isn't specified as a dependency.

 And they're very good about making sure that they've correctly
 bootstrapped their systems, that their build environment matches
 the components of the available, rebuilt packages.

 If that were true, you should be able to duplicate their linkages exactly by
 priming the 1st build run with (all of) their binaries, then rebuilding with
 your own output results instead.  But then everything would be done by now.
  So I don't think that's true.

I'm speaking up for our CentOS repackagers here. That kind of
bootstrapping takes cycles and practice, and double checking. In
theory, they could. Our CentOS rebuilders have exposed a few
dependencies for which the SRPM's are not published (and which our
favorite upstream vendor is fixing them, but they *don't have to!!!*.
That's not part of a GPL license, it's just good free software
practice.) And they do have to spend time re-arranging centos-release
to publish yum repositories. [  RHEL does it differently, with that
up2date in grandma's clothing known as yum-rhn-plugin. I vastly
prefer the genuine yum repository approach used by CentOS. ] And they
legally need to refactor, oh, what? A couple of dozen of packages to
handle trademarks and upstream references?

It's not easy work. I'd love to help, but keep not seeing little
components like the mock configurations.
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-23 Thread Sam Trenholme
 Not that it matters, but the last time I checked, SL had not released
 their 4.9 or 5.6 releases either.

On the other hand, unlike CentOS, Scientific Linux (SL) is backporting
5.6 security fixes.  Indeed, all of the security issues CentOS 5.5 has
right now aren't in SL.

 SL is a fine product and people can use it if they want, but lets not
 pretend that they are releasing every point release before CentOS.

They haven't.  Indeed, before 2009 they significantly lagged behind
CentOS.  However, for the last two years, every SL release has been on
before the CentOS release, or within two weeks of the CentOS release.

[Left column CentOS release date, right column SL release date.

 4.8     08/22/09        07/21/09
 4.9     03/02/11

For 4.9, I say not applicable; SL is current with security fixes,
and, as I understand it, 4.9 is just 4.8 + security fixes.  Indeed,
CentOS isn't mastering iso images for 4.9.

 5.3     04/01/09        03/19/09

Within two weeks.

 5.4     10/21/09        11/05/09

SL was two weeks after the CentOS release.

 5.5     05/15/10        05/19/10

CentOS won--by all of four days.

 Don't get me wrong, SL is a good build and I highly recommend it ... but
 they do not beat CentOS on releases by months as seems to be insinuated
 here in the last couple of weeks.

SL is tied with CentOS for all 2009, 2010, and 2011 releases.  What
tips the scales in SL's favor is that they have a solid policy in
place to have timely security updates:

https://www.scientificlinux.org/documentation/faq/errata

And, yes, I am repeating myself, but all 5.6 security updates are
available for SL 5.5 users until they can master some SL 5.6 ISO
images.  This has been SL's policy for over a couple of years:

http://ever-increasing-entropy.blogspot.com/2009/08/perfect-illustration-of-why-i-now.html

I blogged about why I am in the process of making the switch to SL here:

http://set.tj/+kcsa

http://samiam.org/blog/20110319.html

---

As an open-source developer, I understand the frustration of working
hard and having a lot of freeloaders not appreciating my work.  I feel
people posting here talking about how unprofessional CentOS is acting
are completely missing the point: CentOS is acting unprofessional
because, well, they aren't being paid.  Being professional means that
money is changing hands.

A person does not get treated like a customer unless they are paying
customer.  Just as most restaurants don't allow people to sit at their
tables unless they order something, open source developers have no
obligation whatsoever to their users unless said users appropriately
compensate them for their time.

CentOS has no obligation to ever make another security patch again.
They have no obligation to release 5.6, 6.0, or any other release of
their software.  Quite frankly, I think Karanbir Singh would be in his
right to say Listen, I need to spend more time with my family and can
not continue working on CentOS unless I get paid for my time.

Yeah, a lot of freeloaders would flame him for asking for money (look
at the flame fest the Nexuiz developers got when they commercialized
their open-source game), but this is a perfectly healthy boundary for
an open-source developer to establish.

Some developers don't like announcing boundaries like that; a lot of
open source projects never formally die.  They have this way of
becoming inactive without any formal announcements and just
floundering.  I've seen this tape played many times before:

http://maradns.blogspot.com/2009/09/rant-putting-closure-on-project.html

Another example is djbdns, which is over ten years old; the last
formal release of djbdns has three known security holes:

http://set.tj/+kcvb

http://samiam.org/blog/20110103.html

- Sam
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-23 Thread Ned Slider
On 23/03/11 03:41, John R. Dennison wrote:
 On Wed, Mar 23, 2011 at 04:22:36AM +0100, Dag Wieers wrote:

 CentOS 4.8 (95 days late) and CentOS 5.3 (69 days late) have been the worst
 delays. But now CentOS 5.6 is already at 69 days and CentOS 6.0 is past
 133 days delay, an all time record (not counting CentOS 2 :-)).

   You keep tossing out late.  late implies a published deadline
   and I've yet to see one.  I see best effort and will try
   comments in many places, but never a published deadline.  So,
   why the focus on late?



I see time-lines clearly published in this FAQ on the CentOS website:

https://www.centos.org/modules/smartfaq/faq.php?faqid=7

Quote:
How long after redhat publishes a fix does it take for CentOS to 
publish a fix?

Our goal is to have individual RPM packages available on the mirrors 
within 72 hours of their release, and normally they are available within 
24 hours.

Occassionally packages are delayed for various reasons.

On rare occasions packages may be built and pushed to the mirrors but 
not available via yum. (This is because yum-arch has not been run on the 
master mirror. This may happen when issues with upstream packages are 
discovered shortly after their release, and if releasing the package 
would break it's functionality.)

Update Sets (see this FAQ) will have Security Errata released was stated 
above, while the BugFix and Enhancement errata are actually tested more 
rigorisly and released after the new ISO for the Update Set is produced. 
This will normally be within 2 weeks of the Update Set release.


The above FAQ creates an expectation of 2 weeks being the norm. Equally 
it is not unreasonable to define any release made after two weeks to be 
late (or later than hoped if you prefer) by the developers own hopes 
and expectations.



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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-23 Thread John R. Dennison
On Wed, Mar 23, 2011 at 06:45:46AM +, Ned Slider wrote:
 
 I see time-lines clearly published in this FAQ on the CentOS website:

Trimmed for brevity.

 This will normally be within 2 weeks of the Update Set release.
 
 The above FAQ creates an expectation of 2 weeks being the norm. Equally 
 it is not unreasonable to define any release made after two weeks to be 
 late (or later than hoped if you prefer) by the developers own hopes 
 and expectations.

later than hoped is a little more on target.  You know as well
as I do that there has never been a release date published for
releases, be they primary or point releases.  I read the above
as an intended goal, not a hard and fast project time-line; but
I will grant that it does lead consumers to expect it within
the time frame referenced.  That write-up should, in my opinion,
be changed to reflect the realities of the situation which are
that there are no published release dates and that releases are
best-effort affairs.

I just get irritated by seeing nothing but negative comments out
of people that have been consumers of the project for years, or
in the case of the post that this is a reply to, by someone that
was part of the project itself.  To be honest I can't recall the
last time I saw Dag have anything positive to say about CentOS.

Heck, I would like to see 5.6 drop as much as the next guy but I
am not, nor for that matter is the overwhelming majority of the
user base, crying and complaining about it.  Do people honestly
think that the constant lambasting as seen here and in the
forums is doing anything to get 5.6 out the door faster?  Do
people think the suggestions on the -devel list build
motivation for the developers to put in even more hours churning
out that which people get for free?

If people have nothing positive to say then, please, don't say
anything at all.

Seriously...  If you don't like how the releases are going then
make arrangements to use something else; but please do the rest
of us a favor and do so quietly as no one cares to hear about it
and it's just more noise for this list.  CentOS isn't the only
game in town unless binary compatibility with upstream is an
organizational requirement; and if that's the case wait for the
releases patiently.  Or, and here's a truly novel idea, purchase
the upstream product.  Just realize that _they_ don't publish
release dates, either.

If these two alternatives don't meet your needs and you require
binary compatibility with upstream then roll up your sleeves,
get your hands dirty, and start building the releases yourself.
Steps to do so have recently been published on centos-devel and
are in the web-accessible archive for that list.

It wasn't all that far in the past that there would be core
project members posting on this list fairly regularly; sadly all
the negative crap directed at them, both directly and
indirectly, has pushed most all of them away.  Personally I'd
rather they be here and the complainers move on elsewhere.





John

-- 
Anybody can win unless there happens to be a second entry.

-- George Ade (1866 - 1944), American writer, newspaper columnist,
   and playwright


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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-23 Thread Tom H
On Wed, Mar 23, 2011 at 2:29 AM, Sam Trenholme
strenholme.use...@gmail.com wrote:

 As an open-source developer, I understand the frustration of working
 hard and having a lot of freeloaders not appreciating my work. I feel
 people posting here talking about how unprofessional CentOS is acting
 are completely missing the point: CentOS is acting unprofessional
 because, well, they aren't being paid. Being professional means that
 money is changing hands.

Being a professional isn't just a question of money; it's also a
question of attitude and presentation.

The developers' use something else if you're unhappy replies are
unprofessional, no matter what their level of frustration with the
criticism being directed at them might be.
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-23 Thread Nico Kadel-Garcia
On Wed, Mar 23, 2011 at 4:54 AM, Tom H tomh0...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Wed, Mar 23, 2011 at 2:29 AM, Sam Trenholme
 strenholme.use...@gmail.com wrote:

 As an open-source developer, I understand the frustration of working
 hard and having a lot of freeloaders not appreciating my work. I feel
 people posting here talking about how unprofessional CentOS is acting
 are completely missing the point: CentOS is acting unprofessional
 because, well, they aren't being paid. Being professional means that
 money is changing hands.

 Being a professional isn't just a question of money; it's also a
 question of attitude and presentation.

 The developers' use something else if you're unhappy replies are
 unprofessional, no matter what their level of frustration with the
 criticism being directed at them might be.

Developer, singular. It's just Johnny doing that.
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-23 Thread Dag Wieers
On Tue, 22 Mar 2011, John R. Dennison wrote:

 On Wed, Mar 23, 2011 at 04:22:36AM +0100, Dag Wieers wrote:

 CentOS 4.8 (95 days late) and CentOS 5.3 (69 days late) have been the worst
 delays. But now CentOS 5.6 is already at 69 days and CentOS 6.0 is past
 133 days delay, an all time record (not counting CentOS 2 :-)).

You keep tossing out late.  late implies a published deadline
and I've yet to see one.  I see best effort and will try
comments in many places, but never a published deadline.  So,
why the focus on late?

John,

The definition of late according to many dictionaries:

 after the expected or usual time

Let me ask you the same question, why the focus on late ?

Kind regards,
-- 
-- dag wieers, d...@wieers.com, http://dag.wieers.com/
-- dagit linux solutions, i...@dagit.net, http://dagit.net/

[Any errors in spelling, tact or fact are transmission errors]
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[CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-23 Thread R P Herrold
On Tue, 22 Mar 2011, Les Mikesell wrote:

 Building the kernel shouldn't be an issue - but look at the 
 SL notes on the srpms that don't build with the listed 
 dependencies as shipped - and they aren't being picky about 
 the library linkages matching the RH binaries like CentOS 
 is.

  If the RH build links things from source they don't ship, 
 how much can you trust the projects that depend on that 
 source to be able to ship timely updates?

Sometimes looking at the list and the posts, I feel like I am 
watching a group of nuns, talking (speculating) about the life 
issues of Las Vegas showgirls

In trial building the upstream's '6' sources, about the only 
circular build dependency that comes to mind was an openMPI / 
valgrind '-devel' pair that was cross dependent and needed for 
later packages.  It was easy enough to 'bootstrap' around, as 
the dependencies were not 'versioned' such that a prior 
valgrind worked just fine to break the circularity

The compulsive obsession on matching every library version 
exactly is usually just not an issue to most users of any 
distribution, so long as they do not have a third-party (and 
non-LSB conformant) application that absolutely positively 
needs a given library for some reason.  Some of the very high 
end accellerated graphics drivers oriented for some NVidia 
chipsets in certain blade configurations fall over and die 
back to non-accelerated, because the driver vendor is calling 
some non-exposed library interface; some simulation software 
return slightly varying results out several bits of precision. 
Other than that, the Unix that we live in is very forgiving 
with a quick recompile thanks to the FSF / GNU work on the 
autotools

PLUG: if the darn applications were written to a given LSB 
level, these issues would go away.  But frankly for what one 
pays for some of these applications, adding a license from 
upstream is lost in the 'rounding error' of the price /PLUG

I am not against such efforts to match at the library version 
level [it is articulated as part of what CentOS does], but it 
is usually not the end of the world when a person has to port 
around some minor deviation in the build environment

'Mother superior 'Les, later ... 
 they do rely on the upstream which previously was not
 openly hostile to rebuilds

It was not always so ... in the early days, there was pushback 
against the rebuild efforts in general; there is pushback 
toward commercial 'free-riders' now.  This comes and goes, and 
really there is no substitute for actually 'doing' rather than 
talking in the cloister

It is not the end of the world when one hits a build problem, 
as the sources, at the end of the day, are provided, and one 
can study and read.  Indeed, as the collection of Linux 
variants (and thus soliutons of others to study) out there has 
grown, it is much easier these days to solve such issues [I 
solved a cfengine-3.1.4 yesterday with minimal effort]

-- Russ herrold
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-23 Thread Les Mikesell
On 3/23/2011 10:40 AM, R P Herrold wrote:

 Sometimes looking at the list and the posts, I feel like I am
 watching a group of nuns, talking (speculating) about the life
 issues of Las Vegas showgirls

The showgirls are picky about who they let under the covers.  So I 
suppose we have to wait for the movie version to get the inside story...

 It is not the end of the world when one hits a build problem,
 as the sources, at the end of the day, are provided, and one
 can study and read.

It is just hard for an outsider to reconcile the statements about the 
build process not needing any changes or more resources with the lack of 
a target time.  Or that binary compatibility is the critical thing with 
the distribution becoming incompatible with 3rd party repositories built 
against upstream's current base.  Or that it is easy enough to do by 
yourself with problems delaying a release.  The parts just don't seem to 
fit together.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
 lesmikes...@gmail.com

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[CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-23 Thread R P Herrold
On Wed, 23 Mar 2011, Les Mikesell wrote:

 It is just hard for an outsider to reconcile the statements about the
 build process not needing any changes or more resources with the lack of
 a target time.  Or that binary compatibility is the critical thing with
 the distribution becoming incompatible with 3rd party repositories built
 against upstream's current base.  Or that it is easy enough to do by
 yourself with problems delaying a release.  The parts just don't seem to
 fit together.

I guess you are saying you are an outsider, Les ... get off 
the bench talking the game, and start testing

As to the needs of an individual rebuilding the sources, 
compared to a distribution of CentOS much wider coverage, 
HughesJr already pointed out that literally millions of 
machines are affected by a rushed release; exploratory 
trailling builds for a single build 'scratch' effort are 
scarcely comparable.  There is no reason they SHOULD 'fit 
together'

Life is like that -- messy and not exact --- I gave two 
specific examples of binary compatability mattering; on the 
-devel list a person says they've never seen the problem.

These are not conflicting observations --- just the well known 
fact that one cannot 'prove' a negative fact

The absence of evidence is not evidence of absence

-- Russ herrold
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-22 Thread Johnny Hughes
On 03/20/2011 05:02 PM, aurfal...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 On Mar 20, 2011, at 1:52 PM, William Warren wrote:
 
 On 3/20/2011 3:30 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 On 3/20/11 1:57 PM, Eero Volotinen wrote:
 .
 I hope the situation may change now with Oracle in direct  
 competition with
 RH
 for RH and RH-based distros user base. BTW Oracle offers  
 installable
 binaries for free.
 Yes, but patches (support) cost money, as you might know. Anyway, it
 is better to pay for real
 RH instead of oracle linux..
 Or, maybe there was back in the days when they released source that  
 matched
 their binaries...  Personally, I think everyone would be better off  
 today if
 they had turned their back on anything RH-related the day they  
 stopped
 permitting redistribution of their binaries among the community  
 that created
 them and made them usable in the first place.  I was too lazy to  
 change and
 Centos made it look reasonable to leave things approximately the  
 same.  But, now
 that RH is putting the screws on anyone who doesn't pay up it is  
 probably time
 for anyone who cares about free software to rethink things.

 exactly.  Nothing against Centos but I've deployed my last RH based
 box.  It'll be either Debian or Ubuntu from now on.
 
 I don't get it, why so radical?
 
 Why not go SL and maintain the same methodology?

Not that it matters, but the last time I checked, SL had not released
their 4.9 or 5.6 releases either.  I am not sure what you are trying to
accomplish here.

SL is a fine product and people can use it if they want, but lets not
pretend that they are releasing every point release before CentOS.

In fact, I would suggest that someone check the release dates for all
version 3.x, 4.x, and 5.x releases for both CentOS and SL (I'll include
it in this post)

SL did indeed release a 6.0 before CentOS.  For all of the other 25
possible releases, SL released before CentOS on 5 of the 25 times.

Here is the list:

CentOS SL
3.1 03/19/0405/10/04
3.2 NR  06/28/04
3.3 09/17/0410/01/04
3.4 01/10/0502/13/05
3.5 06/09/0507/26/05
3.6 10/31/05NR
3.7 04/10/0605/27/06
3.8 08/25/0608/02/06
3.9 07/26/0710/12/07

4.0 03/02/0504/21/05
4.1 06/15/0508/26/05
4.2 10/13/0512/03/05
4.3 03/21/0605/08/06
4.4 08/30/0610/10/06
4.5 05/18/0706/26/07
4.6 12/16/0703/12/08
4.7 09/13/0809/03/08
4.8 08/22/0907/21/09
4.9 03/02/11NR

5.0 04/12/0705/07/07
5.1 12/02/0701/16/08
5.2 06/24/0806/28/08
5.3 04/01/0903/19/09
5.4 10/21/0911/05/09
5.5 05/15/1005/19/10
5.6 NR  NR

Don't get me wrong, SL is a good build and I highly recommend it ... but
they do not beat CentOS on releases by months as seems to be insinuated
here in the last couple of weeks.



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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-22 Thread Johnny Hughes
On 03/21/2011 07:08 AM, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:
 On Mon, Mar 21, 2011 at 12:51 AM, Matthew Feinberg matt...@choopa.com wrote:
 I don't see the problem here. I just tested this and it works fine. The
 drupal6 package only requires php 5.2 or greater.
 
 Right. The php53 package is in the upstream vendor's updates, all of
 which are held up for CentOS release behind the 5.6 release. I'd like
 to see it get somewhere into the CentOS 5.5 releases, even if it's one
 of a select few components in the updates that are published in the
 5.5 release.
 
 It's hard to consider CentOS equivalent to the upstream vendor's OS
 if the updates are so far behind that commonly available packages are
 incompatible with it.

So ... go away and don't use it.  Is someone forcing you to use CentOS?

What other distribution that is free has released their 5.6 release?



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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-22 Thread aurfalien
On Mar 22, 2011, at 3:49 PM, Johnny Hughes wrote:

 On 03/20/2011 05:02 PM, aurfal...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Mar 20, 2011, at 1:52 PM, William Warren wrote:

 On 3/20/2011 3:30 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 On 3/20/11 1:57 PM, Eero Volotinen wrote:
 .
 I hope the situation may change now with Oracle in direct
 competition with
 RH
 for RH and RH-based distros user base. BTW Oracle offers
 installable
 binaries for free.
 Yes, but patches (support) cost money, as you might know.  
 Anyway, it
 is better to pay for real
 RH instead of oracle linux..
 Or, maybe there was back in the days when they released source that
 matched
 their binaries...  Personally, I think everyone would be better off
 today if
 they had turned their back on anything RH-related the day they
 stopped
 permitting redistribution of their binaries among the community
 that created
 them and made them usable in the first place.  I was too lazy to
 change and
 Centos made it look reasonable to leave things approximately the
 same.  But, now
 that RH is putting the screws on anyone who doesn't pay up it is
 probably time
 for anyone who cares about free software to rethink things.

 exactly.  Nothing against Centos but I've deployed my last RH based
 box.  It'll be either Debian or Ubuntu from now on.

 I don't get it, why so radical?

 Why not go SL and maintain the same methodology?

 Not that it matters, but the last time I checked, SL had not released
 their 4.9 or 5.6 releases either.  I am not sure what you are trying  
 to
 accomplish here.


You missed my point to the poster.  While Centos is my defacto  
production OS, he mentioned switching to Ubuntu which is nothing like  
RHEL.

So I thought instead of going with such a diff paradigm, that using SL  
might be more similar in tool set then Ubuntu.

- aurf

  
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-22 Thread Les Mikesell
On 3/22/11 7:38 PM, aurfal...@gmail.com wrote:

 You missed my point to the poster.  While Centos is my defacto
 production OS, he mentioned switching to Ubuntu which is nothing like
 RHEL.

 So I thought instead of going with such a diff paradigm, that using SL
 might be more similar in tool set then Ubuntu.


But if the underlying issue is that Red Hat is intentionally making the 
rebuilds 
difficult, any derivative is going to be fragile.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-22 Thread William Hooper
On Tue, Mar 22, 2011 at 8:54 PM, Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com wrote:
 On 3/22/11 7:38 PM, aurfal...@gmail.com wrote:

 You missed my point to the poster.  While Centos is my defacto
 production OS, he mentioned switching to Ubuntu which is nothing like
 RHEL.

 So I thought instead of going with such a diff paradigm, that using SL
 might be more similar in tool set then Ubuntu.


 But if the underlying issue is that Red Hat is intentionally making the 
 rebuilds
 difficult, any derivative is going to be fragile.

 --
   Les Mikesell

The change doesn't make anything more difficult for rebuilds.

http://www.channelregister.co.uk/2011/03/04/red_hat_twarts_oracle_and_novell_with_change_to_source_code_packaging/

We haven't at all restricted CentOS's ability to grab source code and
recompile it and clean-out trademarks and package it. It's just some
of the knowledge of the insides that we're hiding, he [Red Hat chief
technology officer Brian Stevens] explains. One longtime CentOS
developer agrees.

I'll not lose sleep on the matter, CentOS co-founder Russ Herold
tells The Reg.

http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/2011-March/107338.html

This should not impact building the kernel ... it might impact things
like the CentOSPlus Kernel or CentOS providing a stop gap kernel (in
the testing repo) while waiting for Red Hat to correct a problem and get
their kernel through engineering and then released.

-- 
William Hooper
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-22 Thread Les Mikesell
On 3/22/11 8:07 PM, William Hooper wrote:
 On Tue, Mar 22, 2011 at 8:54 PM, Les Mikeselllesmikes...@gmail.com  wrote:
 On 3/22/11 7:38 PM, aurfal...@gmail.com wrote:

 You missed my point to the poster.  While Centos is my defacto
 production OS, he mentioned switching to Ubuntu which is nothing like
 RHEL.

 So I thought instead of going with such a diff paradigm, that using SL
 might be more similar in tool set then Ubuntu.


 But if the underlying issue is that Red Hat is intentionally making the 
 rebuilds
 difficult, any derivative is going to be fragile.

 --
Les Mikesell

 The change doesn't make anything more difficult for rebuilds.

 http://www.channelregister.co.uk/2011/03/04/red_hat_twarts_oracle_and_novell_with_change_to_source_code_packaging/

 We haven't at all restricted CentOS's ability to grab source code and
 recompile it and clean-out trademarks and package it. It's just some
 of the knowledge of the insides that we're hiding, he [Red Hat chief
 technology officer Brian Stevens] explains. One longtime CentOS
 developer agrees.

 I'll not lose sleep on the matter, CentOS co-founder Russ Herold
 tells The Reg.

 http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/2011-March/107338.html

 This should not impact building the kernel ... it might impact things
 like the CentOSPlus Kernel or CentOS providing a stop gap kernel (in
 the testing repo) while waiting for Red Hat to correct a problem and get
 their kernel through engineering and then released.

Building the kernel shouldn't be an issue - but look at the SL notes on the 
srpms that don't build with the listed dependencies as shipped - and they 
aren't 
being picky about the library linkages matching the RH binaries like CentOS is. 
  If the RH build links things from source they don't ship, how much can you 
trust the projects that depend on that source to be able to ship timely updates?

---
 Les Mikesell
  lesmikes...@gmail.com



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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-22 Thread John R. Dennison
On Tue, Mar 22, 2011 at 08:18:31PM -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:
 
 Building the kernel shouldn't be an issue - but look at the SL notes
 on the srpms that don't build with the listed dependencies as shipped
 - and they aren't being picky about the library linkages matching the
 RH binaries like CentOS is.  If the RH build links things from source
 they don't ship, how much can you trust the projects that depend on
 that source to be able to ship timely updates?

If you don't trust the project _why_ are you here?



John

-- 
Public opinion rarely considers the needs of the next generation or the history
of the last.  It is frequently hampered by myths and misinformation, by
stereotypes and shibboleths, and by an innate resistance to innovation.

-- Theodore C. Sorensen (1928-2010), presidential advisor, lawyer, and writer


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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-22 Thread Johnny Hughes
On 03/22/2011 08:18 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 On 3/22/11 8:07 PM, William Hooper wrote:
 On Tue, Mar 22, 2011 at 8:54 PM, Les Mikeselllesmikes...@gmail.com  wrote:
 On 3/22/11 7:38 PM, aurfal...@gmail.com wrote:

 You missed my point to the poster.  While Centos is my defacto
 production OS, he mentioned switching to Ubuntu which is nothing like
 RHEL.

 So I thought instead of going with such a diff paradigm, that using SL
 might be more similar in tool set then Ubuntu.


 But if the underlying issue is that Red Hat is intentionally making the 
 rebuilds
 difficult, any derivative is going to be fragile.

 --
Les Mikesell

 The change doesn't make anything more difficult for rebuilds.

 http://www.channelregister.co.uk/2011/03/04/red_hat_twarts_oracle_and_novell_with_change_to_source_code_packaging/

 We haven't at all restricted CentOS's ability to grab source code and
 recompile it and clean-out trademarks and package it. It's just some
 of the knowledge of the insides that we're hiding, he [Red Hat chief
 technology officer Brian Stevens] explains. One longtime CentOS
 developer agrees.

 I'll not lose sleep on the matter, CentOS co-founder Russ Herold
 tells The Reg.

 http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/2011-March/107338.html

 This should not impact building the kernel ... it might impact things
 like the CentOSPlus Kernel or CentOS providing a stop gap kernel (in
 the testing repo) while waiting for Red Hat to correct a problem and get
 their kernel through engineering and then released.
 
 Building the kernel shouldn't be an issue - but look at the SL notes on the 
 srpms that don't build with the listed dependencies as shipped - and they 
 aren't 
 being picky about the library linkages matching the RH binaries like CentOS 
 is. 
   If the RH build links things from source they don't ship, how much can you 
 trust the projects that depend on that source to be able to ship timely 
 updates?

This is really nothing new, we have been finding and fixing these kind
of things for 8 years.

All it takes is time ... start the build, if it does not build (or if it
is linked incorrectly when it builds), figure out why and rebuild.






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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-22 Thread Les Mikesell
On 3/22/11 8:23 PM, John R. Dennison wrote:
 On Tue, Mar 22, 2011 at 08:18:31PM -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:

 Building the kernel shouldn't be an issue - but look at the SL notes
 on the srpms that don't build with the listed dependencies as shipped
 - and they aren't being picky about the library linkages matching the
 RH binaries like CentOS is.  If the RH build links things from source
 they don't ship, how much can you trust the projects that depend on
 that source to be able to ship timely updates?

   If you don't trust the project _why_ are you here?


The CentOS team has a good history and tested binary compatibility has its 
advantages - but they do rely on the upstream which previously was not openly 
hostile to rebuilds.  It's not necessarily even possible to get binary 
compatibility if matching source isn't made available.

-- 
Les Mikesell
  lesmikes...@gmail.com
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-22 Thread Dag Wieers
On Tue, 22 Mar 2011, Johnny Hughes wrote:

 SL did indeed release a 6.0 before CentOS.  For all of the other 25
 possible releases, SL released before CentOS on 5 of the 25 times.

Right, but as these numbers reveal, since June 2008 Scientific Linux is 
closing the gap with CentOS (or rather, CentOS is slacking). You can 
see this when comparing CentOS and RHEL release dates. Since June 2008 
CentOS started having longer delays (source: Wikipedia)

 https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/CentOS

Where the average release delay was 25 days before June 2008, the average 
release delay after June 2008 increased to 51 days, and I am not including 
the already late CentOS 5.6 and CentOS 6.0 (otherwise it would be 62 days).

CentOS 4.8 (95 days late) and CentOS 5.3 (69 days late) have been the worst 
delays. But now CentOS 5.6 is already at 69 days and CentOS 6.0 is past 
133 days delay, an all time record (not counting CentOS 2 :-)).

So the trend is a decline in release speed and maybe we should lower our 
expectations. CentOS users have been spoiled in the past.

Kind regards,
-- 
-- dag wieers, d...@wieers.com, http://dag.wieers.com/
-- dagit linux solutions, i...@dagit.net, http://dagit.net/

[Any errors in spelling, tact or fact are transmission errors]
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-22 Thread John R. Dennison
On Wed, Mar 23, 2011 at 04:22:36AM +0100, Dag Wieers wrote:
 
 CentOS 4.8 (95 days late) and CentOS 5.3 (69 days late) have been the worst 
 delays. But now CentOS 5.6 is already at 69 days and CentOS 6.0 is past 
 133 days delay, an all time record (not counting CentOS 2 :-)).

You keep tossing out late.  late implies a published deadline
and I've yet to see one.  I see best effort and will try
comments in many places, but never a published deadline.  So,
why the focus on late?




John

-- 
Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not
sure about the former.
-- Albert Einstein


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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-21 Thread Dag Wieers
On Sun, 20 Mar 2011, Marko A. Jennings wrote:

 On Sun, March 20, 2011 7:29 pm, William Warren wrote:
 their changes are really aimed at oracle..the rest is smoke and
 mirrors..:)  oracle is basically(pardon me here) Centos with charges.
 That's basically all oracle is going with unbreakable Linux.

 Not just Oracle.  Novell is actively pursuing Red Hat customers and
 offering to support their Red Hat installations cheaper than Read Hat
 does.  I know a large international technology company which buys RHEL
 licenses only for the first year and then switches to Novell for support
 after that.

Does Novell provide their own updates (RHEL rebuilds) or how does this 
exactly work ? I doubt Novell can redistribute RHEL binaries in this case.

-- 
-- dag wieers, d...@wieers.com, http://dag.wieers.com/
-- dagit linux solutions, i...@dagit.net, http://dagit.net/

[Any errors in spelling, tact or fact are transmission errors]
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-21 Thread Marko A. Jennings
On Mon, March 21, 2011 5:51 am, Dag Wieers wrote:
 On Sun, 20 Mar 2011, Marko A. Jennings wrote:
 On Sun, March 20, 2011 7:29 pm, William Warren wrote:
 their changes are really aimed at oracle..the rest is smoke and
 mirrors..:)  oracle is basically(pardon me here) Centos with charges.
 That's basically all oracle is going with unbreakable Linux.

 Not just Oracle.  Novell is actively pursuing Red Hat customers and
 offering to support their Red Hat installations cheaper than Read Hat
 does.  I know a large international technology company which buys RHEL
 licenses only for the first year and then switches to Novell for support
 after that.

 Does Novell provide their own updates (RHEL rebuilds) or how does this
 exactly work ? I doubt Novell can redistribute RHEL binaries in this case.

As far as I understand (I don't have first-hand knowledge of this aspect
of their offering), Novell is providing their own updates.

Here is the link to their web page that advertises 30 day free support for
RHEL: http://www.novell.com/promo/suse/free-30days-expanded-support.html

Marko

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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-21 Thread Simon Matter
 On Mon, March 21, 2011 5:51 am, Dag Wieers wrote:
 On Sun, 20 Mar 2011, Marko A. Jennings wrote:
 On Sun, March 20, 2011 7:29 pm, William Warren wrote:
 their changes are really aimed at oracle..the rest is smoke and
 mirrors..:)  oracle is basically(pardon me here) Centos with charges.
 That's basically all oracle is going with unbreakable Linux.

 Not just Oracle.  Novell is actively pursuing Red Hat customers and
 offering to support their Red Hat installations cheaper than Read Hat
 does.  I know a large international technology company which buys RHEL
 licenses only for the first year and then switches to Novell for
 support
 after that.

 Does Novell provide their own updates (RHEL rebuilds) or how does this
 exactly work ? I doubt Novell can redistribute RHEL binaries in this
 case.

 As far as I understand (I don't have first-hand knowledge of this aspect
 of their offering), Novell is providing their own updates.

 Here is the link to their web page that advertises 30 day free support for
 RHEL: http://www.novell.com/promo/suse/free-30days-expanded-support.html

As the faq states
(http://www.novell.com/products/expandedsupport/faq.html) Novell simply
rebuilds the RHEL source rpms and sells them to RedHat customers.

So, it's like CentOS, but only with updates, no full distribution, no
installer, but you can pay for it :)

Simon

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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-21 Thread Nico Kadel-Garcia
On Mon, Mar 21, 2011 at 12:51 AM, Matthew Feinberg matt...@choopa.com wrote:
 I don't see the problem here. I just tested this and it works fine. The
 drupal6 package only requires php 5.2 or greater.

Right. The php53 package is in the upstream vendor's updates, all of
which are held up for CentOS release behind the 5.6 release. I'd like
to see it get somewhere into the CentOS 5.5 releases, even if it's one
of a select few components in the updates that are published in the
5.5 release.

It's hard to consider CentOS equivalent to the upstream vendor's OS
if the updates are so far behind that commonly available packages are
incompatible with it.
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-21 Thread compdoc
 Not just Oracle.  Novell is actively pursuing Red Hat customers and
 offering to support their Red Hat installations cheaper than Read Hat
 does.  I know a large international technology company which buys RHEL
 licenses only for the first year and then switches to Novell for support
 after that.

Does Novell provide their own updates (RHEL rebuilds) or how does this
exactly work ? I doubt Novell can redistribute RHEL binaries in this case.


RHEL and opensuse are different - defferent kernels, different config files
and slightly different locations for some config files.

It's not like one is a drop in replacement for the other, so it doesn't make
sense to me that a business would buy RHEL support and then switch to
opensuse.




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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-21 Thread Tom H
On Mon, Mar 21, 2011 at 10:34 AM, compdoc comp...@hotrodpc.com wrote:

 RHEL and opensuse are different - defferent kernels, different config files
 and slightly different locations for some config files.

 It's not like one is a drop in replacement for the other, so it doesn't make
 sense to me that a business would buy RHEL support and then switch to
 opensuse.

Did you read the SUSE page?!

They are offering to support the RHEL install(s) not to replace RHEL
by SUSE, just like Oracle.
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-21 Thread Dag Wieers
On Mon, 21 Mar 2011, compdoc wrote:

 Not just Oracle.  Novell is actively pursuing Red Hat customers and
 offering to support their Red Hat installations cheaper than Read Hat
 does.  I know a large international technology company which buys RHEL
 licenses only for the first year and then switches to Novell for support
 after that.

 Does Novell provide their own updates (RHEL rebuilds) or how does this
 exactly work ? I doubt Novell can redistribute RHEL binaries in this case.

 RHEL and opensuse are different - defferent kernels, different config files
 and slightly different locations for some config files.

Oh, really ? :-)


 It's not like one is a drop in replacement for the other, so it doesn't make
 sense to me that a business would buy RHEL support and then switch to
 opensuse.

Please read the previous posts again carefully and the link that was 
provided:

 http://www.novell.com/products/expandedsupport/faq.html

Novell apparently provides (own rebuilt) updates to RHEL3, RHEL4 and RHEL5 
for the purpose of supporting your setup for up to three years while you 
are migrating those systems.

I guess this is a free service so you can stop paying Red Hat as soon as 
you plan to migrate to SLES. But they expect you to migrate to SLES in the 
next three years...

So this is not related to OpenSUSE.

-- 
-- dag wieers, d...@wieers.com, http://dag.wieers.com/
-- dagit linux solutions, i...@dagit.net, http://dagit.net/

[Any errors in spelling, tact or fact are transmission errors]
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-21 Thread Simon Matter
 On Mon, Mar 21, 2011 at 10:34 AM, compdoc comp...@hotrodpc.com wrote:

 RHEL and opensuse are different - defferent kernels, different config
 files
 and slightly different locations for some config files.

 It's not like one is a drop in replacement for the other, so it doesn't
 make
 sense to me that a business would buy RHEL support and then switch to
 opensuse.

 Did you read the SUSE page?!

 They are offering to support the RHEL install(s) not to replace RHEL
 by SUSE, just like Oracle.

Did we read the same page? When you buy Novell (SUSE) support for RedHat
EL, you will still run your original RedHat EL installation but then
update packages rebuilt by Novell. Technically that's the same like adding
the CentOS repo config to your RedHat installation and then install all
updates from CentOS instead of RedHat. What a mess, why would anyone in
the world want this? And then pay $ for the mess...

Simon

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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-21 Thread Drew
 Did we read the same page? When you buy Novell (SUSE) support for RedHat
 EL, you will still run your original RedHat EL installation but then
 update packages rebuilt by Novell. Technically that's the same like adding
 the CentOS repo config to your RedHat installation and then install all
 updates from CentOS instead of RedHat. What a mess, why would anyone in
 the world want this? And then pay $ for the mess...

Most likely because of relative cost and/or perceived value of SLES vs RHEL?

Novell is essentially offering to help you while you switch existing
kit over to SLES. If you're already paying for a RHEL subscription,
Novell's offer may have a lower cost or offer better value then RHEL


-- 
Drew

Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
--Marie Curie
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[CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-21 Thread R P Herrold
On Mon, 21 Mar 2011, Drew wrote:

 Most likely because of relative cost and/or perceived value of SLES vs RHEL?

 Novell is essentially offering to help you while you switch existing
 kit over to SLES. If you're already paying for a RHEL subscription,
 Novell's offer may have a lower cost or offer better value then RHEL

Please, folks -- These are just not CentOS issues -- and the 
commercial player chess-games and interplay not even vaguely 
related to the subject matter which started this thread.

Please take this elsewhere

Thank you

-- Russ herrold
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-21 Thread Nico Kadel-Garcia
On Mon, Mar 21, 2011 at 12:13 PM, Drew drew@gmail.com wrote:
 Did we read the same page? When you buy Novell (SUSE) support for RedHat
 EL, you will still run your original RedHat EL installation but then
 update packages rebuilt by Novell. Technically that's the same like adding
 the CentOS repo config to your RedHat installation and then install all
 updates from CentOS instead of RedHat. What a mess, why would anyone in
 the world want this? And then pay $ for the mess...

 Most likely because of relative cost and/or perceived value of SLES vs RHEL?

 Novell is essentially offering to help you while you switch existing
 kit over to SLES. If you're already paying for a RHEL subscription,
 Novell's offer may have a lower cost or offer better value then RHEL

From experience with previous SuSE releases, it's also a really bad
move. Has anyone else worked with SuSE the last few years and attest
whether they've addressed the joke that is their setup tool (YaST),
the insistence on only one kernel, or the mish-mosh of installing
their authorized non-RPM bundled NVidia or other drivers? I'd urge
someone considering both to jump to our favorite upstream vendor
*immediately* for commercial support, and migrate exactly the *other*
way. There were some preferences in Europe for KDE, which is why I
wound up working with SuSE, but the compatibility of Gnome and KDE has
matured to where one can reasonable select either on CentOS and our
favorite upstream vendor's enterprise linux. And for that money, you
actually get feature requests accomplished and the authors of the
technology to help fix bugs.
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-21 Thread Tom H
On Mon, Mar 21, 2011 at 12:00 PM, Simon Matter simon.mat...@invoca.ch wrote:
 On Mon, Mar 21, 2011 at 10:34 AM, compdoc comp...@hotrodpc.com wrote:

 RHEL and opensuse are different - defferent kernels, different config
 files
 and slightly different locations for some config files.

 It's not like one is a drop in replacement for the other, so it doesn't
 make
 sense to me that a business would buy RHEL support and then switch to
 opensuse.

 Did you read the SUSE page?!

 They are offering to support the RHEL install(s) not to replace RHEL
 by SUSE, just like Oracle.

 Did we read the same page? When you buy Novell (SUSE) support for RedHat
 EL, you will still run your original RedHat EL installation but then
 update packages rebuilt by Novell. Technically that's the same like adding
 the CentOS repo config to your RedHat installation and then install all
 updates from CentOS instead of RedHat. What a mess, why would anyone in
 the world want this? And then pay $ for the mess...

Same page. They're not installing SUSE, they're offering to support
and update RHEL installs.

I know a company that has a few RHEL installs whose RHN subs have
expired and which they're updating through CentOS repos. Not anything
that I'd be willing to do or support but if Oracle's charging to do
something similar to that, they must've tested and tested and tested,
and decided that they have a way of doing it reliably.
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-21 Thread compdoc
I guess this is a free service so you can stop paying Red Hat as soon as
you plan to migrate to SLES. But they expect you to migrate to SLES in the
next three years.

 So this is not related to OpenSUSE.

When I said opensuse, I was referring to suse. Sorry.

The problem I have is that RHEL and SLES are different enough that it's no
small thing for a business to make the change.

I'm guessing RHEL 6 and SUSE 11 are at least equal in quality. (I haven't
tried either of them) Cost of subscription for each seems close.

So it doesn't make sense that a business would switch - unless maybe the
support from Red Hat wasn't great, or if RHEL 6 wasn't great.

I do know that centos 5.5 is great, which in my mind, reflects on Red Hat's
ability to produce an excellent product. And they certainly provide releases
and updates in a timely manner. So Red Hat isn't resting on its laurels.

Are there that many Red Hat customers ready to jump ship? Does their support
suck?

I think both companies should concentrate on providing a good product and
decent service, and not waste time on trying to thwart the competition's
efforts to provide service to customers.

If they all start trying to hinder each other, it seems the beginning of a
war. And the only ones to suffer are IT and the communities. (in other
words, the innocent)









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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-21 Thread compdoc
Please, folks -- These are just not CentOS issues -- and the
commercial player chess-games and interplay not even vaguely
related to the subject matter which started this thread.

Please take this elsewhere


Sorry, you're right.



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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-21 Thread Alexander Dalloz
Am 21.03.2011 15:34, schrieb compdoc:
 Not just Oracle.  Novell is actively pursuing Red Hat customers and
 offering to support their Red Hat installations cheaper than Read Hat
 does.  I know a large international technology company which buys RHEL
 licenses only for the first year and then switches to Novell for support
 after that.
 
 Does Novell provide their own updates (RHEL rebuilds) or how does this
 exactly work ? I doubt Novell can redistribute RHEL binaries in this case.
 
 
 RHEL and opensuse are different - defferent kernels, different config files
 and slightly different locations for some config files.
 
 It's not like one is a drop in replacement for the other, so it doesn't make
 sense to me that a business would buy RHEL support and then switch to
 opensuse.

With all respect, it is even strange to compare RHEL and OpenSUSE
because OpenSUSE is for SUSE what Fedora is for RHEL (fast lifecycle,
community driven/influenced development platform for the SLES product,
which costs for subscriptions as well).

Alexander
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[CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread Nico Kadel-Garcia
There are significant components of the upstream 5.6 release which are
stuck behind the CentOS 5.6 release process, but are now incorporated
in EPEL 5 components. In particular, the php53 package is now
necessary for the drupal6 EPEL components, due to the long out of
date PHP 5.1 in the default upstream vendor's codebase.

I see that some of these components are available in the testing
repository at http://dev.centos.org/centos/5/CentOS-Testing.repo. But
this isn't published with centos-release. fasttrack is. Would it be
reasonable to push these testing components over to fasttrack?
Given our upstream vendor's policy of making all the updates
available to all the previous releases in their main channels, I'm
not sure there's any reason not to present them, at least to the
fasttrack channel, and migrate them from fasttrack to updates as
necessary.

Other components for such fasttrack publication might include bind97,
which some CentOS users have been asking for.
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread Ned Slider
On 20/03/11 15:23, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:
 There are significant components of the upstream 5.6 release which are
 stuck behind the CentOS 5.6 release process, but are now incorporated
 in EPEL 5 components. In particular, the php53 package is now
 necessary for the drupal6 EPEL components, due to the long out of
 date PHP 5.1 in the default upstream vendor's codebase.

 I see that some of these components are available in the testing
 repository at http://dev.centos.org/centos/5/CentOS-Testing.repo. But
 this isn't published with centos-release. fasttrack is. Would it be
 reasonable to push these testing components over to fasttrack?
 Given our upstream vendor's policy of making all the updates
 available to all the previous releases in their main channels, I'm
 not sure there's any reason not to present them, at least to the
 fasttrack channel, and migrate them from fasttrack to updates as
 necessary.

 Other components for such fasttrack publication might include bind97,
 which some CentOS users have been asking for.

We've had this discussion before - the fasttrack repository is a rebuild 
of the upstream FasTrack channel, nothing more. Except it's never 
actually been populated for CentOS-5.

The correct place for these packages is in os/5.6 when released. In the 
meantime they have been publicly released to testing for those who want 
early access (fasttrack access if you prefer) or who want to test and 
provide feedback.

Incompatibilities between EPEL and CentOS caused due to the delay in 
releasing 5.6 are a matter for EPEL to resolve. CentOS are doing their 
best to resolve the issue their end by getting 5.6 out as fast as possible.

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[CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread R P Herrold
On Sun, 20 Mar 2011, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:

 There are significant components of the upstream 5.6 release which are
 stuck behind the CentOS 5.6 release process, but are now incorporated
 in EPEL 5 components.

Sad that -- that the dependent partial Red Hat adjunct project 
is not compatible with people not using Red Hat's product

The unpleasantness of reading continual criticism, from those 
who will not do the minimal local rebuilds, to use the 
packages from a project not affiliated with the CentOS 
project, has pretty effectively driven the CentOS core 
developers away from this mailing list

Congratulations


Niko, I notice you did out post your 'helpful criticism' to 
which I respond, on the EPEL list on how to do the workaround 
EPEL's policies of not shipping packages competing with Red 
Hat's enterprise product.  Perhaps they would welcome it 
(probably not, as they consciously DO NOT COMPETE with the 
parent product)

CentOS has an ethic of delivering a product with certain 
quality expectations and testing before it is released (rather 
than inflicting a partially baked release and then streaming 
out curative fixes)

If a person doesn't like CentOS's pace and attention to
shipping durable and 'correct' releases or with different
features (as with EPEL), or want packages faster than CentOS'
rate, PLEASE encourage them to either learn to show some
minimal self-reliance in building, or to not use CentOS as a
base

my $ 0.02

-- Russ herrold
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread Александр Кириллов
 The unpleasantness of reading continual criticism, from those 
 who will not do the minimal local rebuilds, to use the 
 packages from a project not affiliated with the CentOS 
 project, has pretty effectively driven the CentOS core 
 developers away from this mailing list

... 

 If a person doesn't like CentOS's pace and attention to
 shipping durable and 'correct' releases or with different
 features (as with EPEL), or want packages faster than CentOS'
 rate, PLEASE encourage them to either learn to show some
 minimal self-reliance in building, or to not use CentOS as a
 base

http://www.usatoday.com/money/smallbusiness/columnist/abrams/2011-03-18-how-to-lose-a-client_N.htm

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[CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread R P Herrold
On Sun, 20 Mar 2011, Александр Кириллов wrote:

 http://www.usatoday.com/money/smallbusiness/columnist/abrams/2011-03-18-how-to-lose-a-client_N.htm

CentOS has no clients to whom a contractual duty of support is 
owed.  If SLAs, sales engineers, 800 numbers, and such are 
wanted or needed, PLEASE buy a contract from someone

TANSTAAFL

I have a blog series in preparation of a generalized nature, 
on doing spot rebuilds of packages in a one-off per package 
build chroot.  Shall I make it freely available on my bloc, 
which the CentOS Planet, put it behund a paywall, or sell it 
in print form at Lulu?  Entirely my decision as I alone have 
done the work and hold the copyright

I appreciate the thoughtfulness behind a one line URL post 
pointing out that I am wrong and to be berated

-- Russ herrold
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread Александр Кириллов

http://www.usatoday.com/money/smallbusiness/columnist/abrams/2011-03-18-how-to-lose-a-client_N.htm
 
 CentOS has no clients to whom a contractual duty of support is 
 owed.  If SLAs, sales engineers, 800 numbers, and such are 
 wanted or needed, PLEASE buy a contract from someone
 
 TANSTAAFL

The point is it's probably as easy to lose a community if this still
matters to the core CentOS team.
After so many suggestions to look elsewhere instead of providing minimal
feedback
for those still interested the long overdue free lunch would probably
stuck down the throat.
And yes I started looking elsewhere and with reasonably priced offer from
Oracle
this project is probably dead in the water.

Best regards,
AK

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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread Nico Kadel-Garcia
On Sun, Mar 20, 2011 at 11:56 AM, R P Herrold herr...@owlriver.com wrote:
 On Sun, 20 Mar 2011, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:

 There are significant components of the upstream 5.6 release which are
 stuck behind the CentOS 5.6 release process, but are now incorporated
 in EPEL 5 components.

 Sad that -- that the dependent partial Red Hat adjunct project
 is not compatible with people not using Red Hat's product

Whoa, there. Try to be as careful with branding it as our faithful
CentOS maintainers are with their branding. It's a *volunteer* effort,
much like CentOS (with a much broader set of tasks and goals). It's a
very, very useful and worthwhile project, and profoundly extends the
useful lifespan of RHEL, CentOS, Scientific Linux, and any other
upstream based vendor distributions, and a great testing place for
software for the next upstream vendor major releases. It's very much
worth cooperating with EPEL, it's compatibility with that upstream
vendor is *excellent*, and they're playing it just right.

Since the php53 package is in the upstream vendor published
codelines and updates, there's no reason not to include it in EPEL
dependencies. The out-of-date php-5.1 codeline is years old, and the
approach is reasonable, and has been used before for samba (which had
samba3x), gcc (which had gcc43 and gcc44 in CentOS releases), and
bind97 (which is still pending the CentOS 5.7 release).

So there's precedent, and a pattern, for including such updates in the
upstream vendor's codelines. Unfortunately, right now, it's all
blocked in CentOS by the not-yet-announced 5.6 code release. I'd like
to see that block lifted on a case by case basis, if feasbile. I've
personally tested this php53 package against CentOS 5.5, and it works
well and resolves the dependency.

Note that Scientific Linux is publishing these updates in a much more
up-to-date, rolling fashion. I don't want to switch to that
distribution, because the line-for-line compatibility between CentOS
and that upstream vendor is better, and reassuring to people when I
try to get them to switch from one to the other for support reasons.
But if I have to, because these updates are blocked for so long, I'll
have to take all my testing and bug reports over there. I don't have
resources to help yet another distro.

 The unpleasantness of reading continual criticism, from those
 who will not do the minimal local rebuilds, to use the
 packages from a project not affiliated with the CentOS
 project, has pretty effectively driven the CentOS core
 developers away from this mailing list

I *just did* the local rebuilds, and tested them. They work. I want
them in the available upstream repositories, which they're not.

The testing repository is not available by default, and is not
generally mirrored. Should it be, by being included in the main
websites in their own folder? That would make such testin components
available to the rest of us.

 Niko, I notice you did out post your 'helpful criticism' to
 which I respond, on the EPEL list on how to do the workaround
 EPEL's policies of not shipping packages competing with Red
 Hat's enterprise product.  Perhaps they would welcome it
 (probably not, as they consciously DO NOT COMPETE with the
 parent product)

RHEL and Scientific Linux do not have this issue, due to the
up-to-date php53 access. CentOS does. It's therefore a CentOS issue,
not an EPEL issue, although if you point me to the EPEL list message,
I'll be happy to follow up there.

 If a person doesn't like CentOS's pace and attention to
 shipping durable and 'correct' releases or with different
 features (as with EPEL), or want packages faster than CentOS'
 rate, PLEASE encourage them to either learn to show some
 minimal self-reliance in building, or to not use CentOS as a
 base

I've said *nothing* against the attention to detail. The pace,
however, is becoming problematic. The upstream vendor does not
separate the updates by minor release number, and hasn't done that
since Red Hat 9. CentOS does not have to emulate.

In fact, hey! I just tested a component and announced the results to
solve a specific compatibility problem!
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread aurfalien
On Mar 20, 2011, at 10:30 AM, Александр Кириллов wrote:


 http://www.usatoday.com/money/smallbusiness/columnist/abrams/2011-03-18-how-to-lose-a-client_N.htm

 CentOS has no clients to whom a contractual duty of support is
 owed.  If SLAs, sales engineers, 800 numbers, and such are
 wanted or needed, PLEASE buy a contract from someone

 TANSTAAFL

 And yes I started looking elsewhere and with reasonably priced offer  
 from
 Oracle
 this project is probably dead in the water.

Hi AK,

Why would you swing so radically in the other direction from free to  
fee?

Have you looked at SL?  They don't have 5.6 but seem to be on a stable  
6.0 rel.

- aurf
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[CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread R P Herrold
On Sun, 20 Mar 2011, Александр Кириллов wrote:

 TANSTAAFL

 ... long overdue free lunch

I get it -- you dont (or choose not to) understand the written 
word

-- Russ herrold
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread Александр Кириллов

 TANSTAAFL
 
 ... long overdue free lunch
 
 I get it -- you dont (or choose not to) understand the written 
 word

Yeah, the picture's pretty bleak. The world's climates are changing,
the mammals are taking over, and we all have a brain about the size of a
walnut.

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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread Александр Кириллов
 CentOS has no clients to whom a contractual duty of support is
 owed.  If SLAs, sales engineers, 800 numbers, and such are
 wanted or needed, PLEASE buy a contract from someone

 TANSTAAFL

 And yes I started looking elsewhere and with reasonably priced offer  
 from
 Oracle
 this project is probably dead in the water.
 
 Hi AK,
 
 Why would you swing so radically in the other direction from free to  
 fee?
 
 Have you looked at SL?  They don't have 5.6 but seem to be on a stable  
 6.0 rel.

Hi,

I'm not actually looking for free.
I'd gladly support the efforts of our prominent North American Enterprise
Linux vendor
with what little I have if their offers wouldn't be so ridiculously
expensive.
I hope the situation may change now with Oracle in direct competition with
RH
for RH and RH-based distros user base. BTW Oracle offers installable
binaries for free.
I didn't get into details yet but this sounds like a viable alternative.

AK

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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread Always Learning

On Sun, 2011-03-20 at 20:30 +0300, Александр Кириллов wrote:

 The point is it's probably as easy to lose a community if this still
 matters to the core CentOS team.

Centos offers free and very reliable Linux with free and very reliable
updates.

The people providing this free service are volunteers.

 And yes I started looking elsewhere and with reasonably priced offer from
 Oracle 

You come here for the free and very reliable product whilst wanting to
spend money on a different product. Perhaps you should have spent your
money several months ago and then subscribed to the Oracle mailing list?

I come here because I like Centos. I admire and respect the volunteers
who make Centos the great product it is. I've seen it used all around
the world running Apache.

 this project is probably dead in the water.

Nonsense. Centos is definitely not about to die. Especially not with
some still on version 4.9 ;-)  Versions 5.6 and 6 will come. 6 will be
useful because it has a latter kernel adapted for the Arduino
microcomputer boards.

Good luck with Oracle. Hope it makes you happier.

With best regards,

Paul.
England,
EU.


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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread Eero Volotinen
.
 I hope the situation may change now with Oracle in direct competition with
 RH
 for RH and RH-based distros user base. BTW Oracle offers installable
 binaries for free.

Yes, but patches (support) cost money, as you might know. Anyway, it
is better to pay for real
RH instead of oracle linux..

--
Eero
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread John R. Dennison
On Sun, Mar 20, 2011 at 08:30:41PM +0300, Александр Кириллов wrote:

 And yes I started looking elsewhere and with reasonably priced offer from
 Oracle
 this project is probably dead in the water.

Hahahaha.

Thanks for the chuckle.  Do you have an encore performance
prepared?



John

-- 
I have come to believe that a great teacher is a great artist and that
there are as few as there are any other great artists.  It might even be
the greatest of the arts since the medium is the human mind and spirit.

-- John Steinbeck (1902-1968), American writer, Nobel laureate, Pultizer
   Prize awardee, ...like captured fireflies (1955)


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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread Les Mikesell
On 3/20/11 1:57 PM, Eero Volotinen wrote:
 .
 I hope the situation may change now with Oracle in direct competition with
 RH
 for RH and RH-based distros user base. BTW Oracle offers installable
 binaries for free.

 Yes, but patches (support) cost money, as you might know. Anyway, it
 is better to pay for real
 RH instead of oracle linux..

Or, maybe there was back in the days when they released source that matched 
their binaries...  Personally, I think everyone would be better off today if 
they had turned their back on anything RH-related the day they stopped 
permitting redistribution of their binaries among the community that created 
them and made them usable in the first place.  I was too lazy to change and 
Centos made it look reasonable to leave things approximately the same.  But, 
now 
that RH is putting the screws on anyone who doesn't pay up it is probably time 
for anyone who cares about free software to rethink things.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
 lesmikes...@gmail.com
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread Alain Péan
Le 20/03/2011 19:36, Always Learning a écrit :

 On Sun, 2011-03-20 at 20:30 +0300, Александр Кириллов wrote:

 The point is it's probably as easy to lose a community if this still
 matters to the core CentOS team.

 Centos offers free and very reliable Linux with free and very reliable
 updates.


With no updates since more than three months (for 5.6), and no news from 
the core team on the progress or difficulties, do you still consider it 
as very reliable ?

For a free project and work done by volunteers, you cannot ask the job 
been done for a given date. It is best effort, and cannot be completly 
be reliable.

But when the core team refuse to give any update (no news) at all (black 
out), since more than one week, I consider this as even less reliable...

Alain
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread John R. Dennison
On Sun, Mar 20, 2011 at 09:00:54PM +0100, Alain Péan wrote:

 But when the core team refuse to give any update (no news) at all (black 
 out), since more than one week, I consider this as even less reliable...

Stop this nonsense, would you?  We rehash this same crap every
few weeks and it's ridiculous. 

Yes, the project is reliable.  No, the project isn't going
anywhere.  No, you don't have a gun to your head and if you
are unhappy you are free to move on elsewhere.




John
-- 
Spring is nature's way of saying, Let's party!

-- Robin Williams (1952-), American actor and comedian


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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread Александр Кириллов
 But when the core team refuse to give any update (no news) at all
(black 
 out), since more than one week, I consider this as even less
reliable...
 
   Stop this nonsense, would you?  We rehash this same crap every
   few weeks and it's ridiculous. 

And this same crap it is.

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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread Rob Kampen

Александр Кириллов wrote:

CentOS has no clients to whom a contractual duty of support is
owed.  If SLAs, sales engineers, 800 numbers, and such are
wanted or needed, PLEASE buy a contract from someone

TANSTAAFL

And yes I started looking elsewhere and with reasonably priced offer  
from

Oracle
this project is probably dead in the water.
  

Hi AK,

Why would you swing so radically in the other direction from free to  
fee?


Have you looked at SL?  They don't have 5.6 but seem to be on a stable  
6.0 rel.



Hi,

I'm not actually looking for free.
I'd gladly support the efforts of our prominent North American Enterprise
Linux vendor
with what little I have if their offers wouldn't be so ridiculously
expensive.
I hope the situation may change now with Oracle in direct competition with
RH
for RH and RH-based distros user base. BTW Oracle offers installable
binaries for free.
I didn't get into details yet but this sounds like a viable alternative.

  

rant
Scary how our society's ethics and decisions are driven by money.
Pay less money - must be better - right even.
So easy to forget the reason this debate turns up every 10 days or so
- Oracle and others have been free-loading on RH
and in order to survive RH had to take some action - action that in 
large part

contributes to the delay so many complain about.
Why is it that we don't see the issue that really has driven all this - 
A large

unethical corporation has taken a free ride on the open-source community
and stuffed it up for all of us.
The cost of doing all the things that RH does, and contributing so much to
the open-source community is paid for by those that need on-call support
and responsiveness.
Now along comes an unethical corporation that sees an opportunity to make
some more money - doing what is right doesn't come into the equation
As I said at the beginning of my rant - if it makes money it must be right -
if it looses money or makes less money it must be wrong.
Please don't put the blame in the wrong place - punish the real villain -
buy something other than oracle!
/rant

AK

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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread William Warren
On 3/20/2011 3:30 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 On 3/20/11 1:57 PM, Eero Volotinen wrote:
 .
 I hope the situation may change now with Oracle in direct competition with
 RH
 for RH and RH-based distros user base. BTW Oracle offers installable
 binaries for free.
 Yes, but patches (support) cost money, as you might know. Anyway, it
 is better to pay for real
 RH instead of oracle linux..
 Or, maybe there was back in the days when they released source that matched
 their binaries...  Personally, I think everyone would be better off today if
 they had turned their back on anything RH-related the day they stopped
 permitting redistribution of their binaries among the community that created
 them and made them usable in the first place.  I was too lazy to change and
 Centos made it look reasonable to leave things approximately the same.  But, 
 now
 that RH is putting the screws on anyone who doesn't pay up it is probably time
 for anyone who cares about free software to rethink things.

exactly.  Nothing against Centos but I've deployed my last RH based 
box.  It'll be either Debian or Ubuntu from now on.
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread Alain Péan
Le 20/03/2011 21:00, Alain Péan a écrit :


 With no updates since more than three months (for 5.6)

Correction : more than two months...

Alain
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread aurfalien

On Mar 20, 2011, at 1:52 PM, William Warren wrote:

 On 3/20/2011 3:30 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 On 3/20/11 1:57 PM, Eero Volotinen wrote:
 .
 I hope the situation may change now with Oracle in direct  
 competition with
 RH
 for RH and RH-based distros user base. BTW Oracle offers  
 installable
 binaries for free.
 Yes, but patches (support) cost money, as you might know. Anyway, it
 is better to pay for real
 RH instead of oracle linux..
 Or, maybe there was back in the days when they released source that  
 matched
 their binaries...  Personally, I think everyone would be better off  
 today if
 they had turned their back on anything RH-related the day they  
 stopped
 permitting redistribution of their binaries among the community  
 that created
 them and made them usable in the first place.  I was too lazy to  
 change and
 Centos made it look reasonable to leave things approximately the  
 same.  But, now
 that RH is putting the screws on anyone who doesn't pay up it is  
 probably time
 for anyone who cares about free software to rethink things.

 exactly.  Nothing against Centos but I've deployed my last RH based
 box.  It'll be either Debian or Ubuntu from now on.

I don't get it, why so radical?

Why not go SL and maintain the same methodology?

- aurf
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread William Warren
On 3/20/2011 6:02 PM, aurfal...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Mar 20, 2011, at 1:52 PM, William Warren wrote:

 On 3/20/2011 3:30 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 On 3/20/11 1:57 PM, Eero Volotinen wrote:
 .
 I hope the situation may change now with Oracle in direct
 competition with
 RH
 for RH and RH-based distros user base. BTW Oracle offers
 installable
 binaries for free.
 Yes, but patches (support) cost money, as you might know. Anyway, it
 is better to pay for real
 RH instead of oracle linux..
 Or, maybe there was back in the days when they released source that
 matched
 their binaries...  Personally, I think everyone would be better off
 today if
 they had turned their back on anything RH-related the day they
 stopped
 permitting redistribution of their binaries among the community
 that created
 them and made them usable in the first place.  I was too lazy to
 change and
 Centos made it look reasonable to leave things approximately the
 same.  But, now
 that RH is putting the screws on anyone who doesn't pay up it is
 probably time
 for anyone who cares about free software to rethink things.

 exactly.  Nothing against Centos but I've deployed my last RH based
 box.  It'll be either Debian or Ubuntu from now on.
 I don't get it, why so radical?

 Why not go SL and maintain the same methodology?

 - aurf
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because the software i use for myself and my clients...rhel availability 
is dropping and unbuntu debian is increasing.  rhel's various code 
decisions aren't helping.  It's not radical..it's still Linux and still 
free.
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread compdoc
It'll be either Debian or Ubuntu from now on.


Ubuntu makes a great server. But because of recent news I tried opensuse for
the first time and I really like it.

I understand the need for stability, but for what I do, having the newest
(stable) kernel and packages has a greater benefit.

Kernel 2.6.37 is in some releases now, and although everyone is crazy about
2.6.38, I'll wait until its released as an official upgrade.

And that won't be long - just a few months, likely...





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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread aurfalien
On Mar 20, 2011, at 4:00 PM, compdoc wrote:

 It'll be either Debian or Ubuntu from now on.


 Ubuntu makes a great server. But because of recent news I tried  
 opensuse for
 the first time and I really like it.

Yes, PVOPS and over all better Xen tools is a great reason to use  
OpenSuse.

However, having a distro like Centos is great because it is RHEL minus  
the support offerings.

- aurf
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread William Warren
On 3/20/2011 7:00 PM, compdoc wrote:
 It'll be either Debian or Ubuntu from now on.

 Ubuntu makes a great server. But because of recent news I tried opensuse for
 the first time and I really like it.

 I understand the need for stability, but for what I do, having the newest
 (stable) kernel and packages has a greater benefit.

 Kernel 2.6.37 is in some releases now, and although everyone is crazy about
 2.6.38, I'll wait until its released as an official upgrade.

 And that won't be long - just a few months, likely...





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to which news are you referring about ubuntu-wise?
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread compdoc
 to which news are you referring about ubuntu-wise?

I meant recent redhat news about the change in how it will deliver code to
the community. They mentioned opensuse as being a competitor, I believe.




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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread William Warren
On 3/20/2011 7:11 PM, compdoc wrote:
 to which news are you referring about ubuntu-wise?
 I meant recent redhat news about the change in how it will deliver code to
 the community. They mentioned opensuse as being a competitor, I believe.




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their changes are really aimed at oracle..the rest is smoke and 
mirrors..:)  oracle is basically(pardon me here) Centos with charges.  
That's basically all oracle is going with unbreakable Linux.
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread compdoc
 their changes are really aimed at oracle..the rest is smoke and

Somehow a story led me to try opensuse. Sorry, don't know which it was that
I read.



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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread William Warren
On 3/20/2011 7:29 PM, compdoc wrote:
 their changes are really aimed at oracle..the rest is smoke and
 Somehow a story led me to try opensuse. Sorry, don't know which it was that
 I read.



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oh they mentioned opensuse as part of the kernel patch obfuscation issue 
that was raised..that's probably where opensuse got your attention..but 
their mention of opensuse is jsut to hide the fact their latest thing is 
aimed at oracle..:)
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread Les Mikesell
On 3/20/11 6:59 PM, William Warren wrote:

 http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
 oh they mentioned opensuse as part of the kernel patch obfuscation issue
 that was raised..that's probably where opensuse got your attention..but
 their mention of opensuse is jsut to hide the fact their latest thing is
 aimed at oracle..:)

If you are going to pretend you aren't selling software, just the support 
service, you can't at the same time complain about what others do with that 
software.  It was enough of a farce when they just restricted redistribution of 
their binaries.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread Marko A. Jennings
On Sun, March 20, 2011 7:29 pm, William Warren wrote:
 their changes are really aimed at oracle..the rest is smoke and
 mirrors..:)  oracle is basically(pardon me here) Centos with charges.
 That's basically all oracle is going with unbreakable Linux.

Not just Oracle.  Novell is actively pursuing Red Hat customers and
offering to support their Red Hat installations cheaper than Read Hat
does.  I know a large international technology company which buys RHEL
licenses only for the first year and then switches to Novell for support
after that.

Marko
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread William Warren
On 3/20/2011 10:44 PM, Marko A. Jennings wrote:
 On Sun, March 20, 2011 7:29 pm, William Warren wrote:
 their changes are really aimed at oracle..the rest is smoke and
 mirrors..:)  oracle is basically(pardon me here) Centos with charges.
 That's basically all oracle is going with unbreakable Linux.
 Not just Oracle.  Novell is actively pursuing Red Hat customers and
 offering to support their Red Hat installations cheaper than Read Hat
 does.  I know a large international technology company which buys RHEL
 licenses only for the first year and then switches to Novell for support
 after that.

 Marko
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nods i forgot about that mention in same said article..:)
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Re: [CentOS] The delays on CentOS 5.6 are causing EPEL incompatibilities

2011-03-20 Thread Matthew Feinberg
I don't see the problem here. I just tested this and it works fine. The 
drupal6 package only requires php 5.2 or greater.

This is out of the drupal6-date.spec file

Requires: drupal6 = 6.0, drupal6-cck, php = 5.2

You can get php52 or php53 from the IUS repository.
Install the IUS repo from http://iuscommunity.org/ 
http://wiki.iuscommunity.org/Doc/ClientUsageGuide

Install the yum-plugin-replace package and follow the instructions.

ps. Somewhere there is a dozen people in a Red Hat conference room 
reading this list laughing their heads off. Don't give them more fuel. 
The CentOS team will get 5.6 out soon enough.

On 03/20/2011 11:23 AM, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:
 There are significant components of the upstream 5.6 release which are
 stuck behind the CentOS 5.6 release process, but are now incorporated
 in EPEL 5 components. In particular, the php53 package is now
 necessary for the drupal6 EPEL components, due to the long out of
 date PHP 5.1 in the default upstream vendor's codebase.

-- 
Matthew Feinberg
matt...@choopa.com
AIM: matthewchoopa

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