>> (guessing) the latest pacemaker package specifies corosync as a >> dependency so effectively this command tries to install both?
>Right. You can drop the "openais = 0.80.6" part I totally believe you, but when I do 'yum install pacemaker' it shows the following resolved dependency... corosync x86_64 1.2.0-1.el5 ...whereas openais is not listed as a dependency. That is pretty confusing to me because (1) people seem to say that OpenAIS 0.80.6 (whitetank) is the way to go because the alternative (wilson+flatiron) is not ready for prime time and also contains features that many simple clusters don't need, and (2) the ClusterLabs page on Pacemaker recommends that people use Pacemaker with OpenAIS (in preference to heartbeat) and does not mention Corosync. So... when I do 'yum install pacemaker' what do I actually end up with? -- Eric Robinson Disclaimer - March 10, 2010 This email and any files transmitted with it are confidential and intended solely for General Linux-HA mailing list. If you are not the named addressee you should not disseminate, distribute, copy or alter this email. Any views or opinions presented in this email are solely those of the author and might not represent those of . Warning: Although has taken reasonable precautions to ensure no viruses are present in this email, the company cannot accept responsibility for any loss or damage arising from the use of this email or attachments. This disclaimer was added by Policy Patrol: http://www.policypatrol.com/ _______________________________________________ Linux-HA mailing list [email protected] http://lists.linux-ha.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-ha See also: http://linux-ha.org/ReportingProblems
