On Fri, Aug 12, 2011 at 6:04 PM, Marco van Putten <marco.vanput...@tudelft.nl> wrote: > On 08/12/2011 06:05 AM, Larry Brigman wrote: >> >> On Thu, Aug 11, 2011 at 8:51 PM, Larry Brigman <larry.brig...@gmail.com >> <mailto:larry.brig...@gmail.com>> wrote: >> >> On Thu, Aug 11, 2011 at 5:37 PM, Andrew Beekhof <and...@beekhof.net >> <mailto:and...@beekhof.net>> wrote: >> >> On Fri, Aug 12, 2011 at 1:13 AM, Larry Brigman >> <larry.brig...@gmail.com <mailto:larry.brig...@gmail.com>> wrote: >> > On Wed, Aug 10, 2011 at 10:50 PM, Marco van Putten >> > <marco.vanput...@tudelft.nl >> <mailto:marco.vanput...@tudelft.nl>> wrote: >> >> >> >> On 08/10/2011 06:23 PM, David Coulson wrote: >> >>> >> >>> On 8/10/11 11:43 AM, Marco van Putten wrote: >> >>>> >> >>>> Thanks Andreas. But our managers persist on using Redhat. >> >>> >> >>> I think the idea would be to take the HA packages >> distributed with >> >>> Scientific Linux 6.x and run them on RHEL. >> >> >> >> >> >> OK Thanks for the heads up. I will give it a try with the >> Scientific Linux >> >> packages on RHEL. >> >> >> >> >> >>> >> >>> Note that even when you do subscribe to the HA add-on in >> RHEL6, >> >>> pacemaker is not supported by RedHat. Are you sure you >> can't buy the HA >> >>> add-on to go with your base entitlement for RHEL? >> >> >> >> >> >> No unfortunately Redhat's license model doesn't work that >> way. In stead of >> >> the 150$ academic license you have to buy the full licensed >> version and then >> >> some extra for the add-on. >> >> >> > If you have the install DVD then the packages are there, just >> in a different >> > repo on the disk. >> > Directory is HighAvailability. >> > ls pacemaker-* >> > pacemaker-1.1.2-7.el6.x86_64.rpm >> pacemaker-libs-1.1.2-7.el6.i686.rpm >> > pacemaker-libs-1.1.2-7.el6.x86_64.rpm >> >> Is corosync and cluster-glue in there too? >> >> Yes. >> Packages]$ ls coro* >> corosync-1.2.3-21.el6.x86_64.rpm corosynclib-1.2.3-21.el6.x86_64.rpm >> corosynclib-1.2.3-21.el6.i686.rpm >> Packages]$ ls cluster* >> cluster-cim-0.16.2-10.el6.x86_64.rpm >> clusterlib-3.0.12-23.el6.i686.rpm >> cluster-glue-1.0.5-2.el6.x86_64.rpm >> clusterlib-3.0.12-23.el6.x86_64.rpm >> cluster-glue-libs-1.0.5-2.el6.i686.rpm >> cluster-snmp-0.16.2-10.el6.x86_64.rpm >> cluster-glue-libs-1.0.5-2.el6.x86_64.rpm >> >> >> The source packages are also available. >> ftp://ftp.redhat.com/pub/redhat/linux/enterprise/6Server/en/os/SRPMS/ >> >> > > > I also found the rpm's on our Redhat satellite server. But this doesn't make > it much easier if you want to do a upgrade to a newer version. > > I've tried the Scientific Linux way by adding it as a disabled repository. > > And then installing pacemaker by: > # yum install --enablerepo=scientificlinux pacemaker > > Yum then takes care of all the dependencies and (somehow) only uses the > pacemaker/corosync/etc packages from scientific while the rest comes from > Redhat. You still need the epel repository as well btw. > > So The Scientific Linux option works best for our situation I think. > > Thanks everyone for all the reply's, > Marco.
I've written this up for the wiki: http://clusterlabs.org/wiki/RHEL _______________________________________________ Pacemaker mailing list: Pacemaker@oss.clusterlabs.org http://oss.clusterlabs.org/mailman/listinfo/pacemaker Project Home: http://www.clusterlabs.org Getting started: http://www.clusterlabs.org/doc/Cluster_from_Scratch.pdf Bugs: http://developerbugs.linux-foundation.org/enter_bug.cgi?product=Pacemaker