RedHat 6.0 is Out 237
Jan Kautz wrote in to tell us that Red Hat 6.0 has begun
appearing on the mirrors, so all you mad hatters can
cruise on it, avoid the traffic, and download the latest.
"Your stupidity, Allen, is simply not up to par." -- Dave Mack (mack@inco.UUCP) "Yours is." -- Allen Gwinn (allen@sulaco.sigma.com), in alt.flame
but, it's not May 10. (Score:1)
rpmfind (Score:1)
Debian... there are substitutes :) (Score:1)
rpm --freshen *.rpm
will basically do the same thing on a Redhat box, look for the latest upgrades and upgrade them on-the-fly with dependancy checking.
There are of course other methods but I digress...
Another fast mirror (Score:1)
freebsd (Score:1)
So many dists to try! (Score:1)
mirror... (Score:1)
BTW, anyone know if you can you mount an iso image as a loopback device (just for peeking around?)
mount -t iso9660 image.iso
??
What to do, what to do? (Score:1)
Does it matter whether to run 2.0.36 or 2.2.x? Don't think so, as long as 2.2 kernels keep getting released about every other day I'd stick with 2.0.. but hey, some may argue different ;)
I find it quite amusing that...... (Score:1)
cool. (Score:1)
Why don't you create a page with mirrors? (Score:1)
probably http://donut.tho.org/mirrors.html [tho.org]
Mirror listing is up (Score:1)
Another mirror (Score:2)
heh. not easy with... (Score:1)
Keep the uptime! :) (Score:1)
i.e.: Don't upgrade yet!
RPM 3.0 in RH 6.0? (Score:1)
mirror... (Score:1)
What to do, what to do? (Score:1)
Rofl, that was slightly harsh
Quote from the guy that tries to administrate the NT box here:
"Wow, it had 200 file request this weekend... man! Its been up for a week and a half.. better reboot"
heh.. as you can see we havent put the NT box into play... I doubt we will... Linux is doing just great. That box is a toy
(more) Differences? (Score:1)
http://www.redhat.com/corp/press/current_redhat
Finally KDE! (Score:1)
It's nice to see that they finally included KDE. It's way better than Gnome, so thanx Red Hat!
mirror... (Score:1)
iso image and i386 subtree are here:
ftp://light-brigade.mit.edu/pub/redhat- 6.0/ [mit.edu]
http://light-brigade.mit.edu/redhat-6.0/ [mit.edu]
Wish I could get it ... (Score:1)
I have found a site that lists mirrors for red hat. I don't know about you but the list of sites at redhat's mirrors seem very busy. This list has many different mirror sites listed and I found one that flew through the download (ftp.real-time.com). The site listing those mirrors is http://www.multithread.co.uk/mirrors.html. Hope that helps for those of us that don't want to wait until the volume of downloads decreases
Re:How to confirm a complete download? (Score:1)
I wrote a perl script to do this for me the last time I downloaded RedHat:
http://www.hepl.harvard.edu/~daniel s/compare.pl [harvard.edu]
Mirrors (Score:2)
http://www.redhat.com/mirrors.html
Has all the mirrors that are officially known to redhat.
LK
Need a mirror! (Score:1)
What to do, what to do? (Score:1)
Hell, NT could do that.
What to do, what to do? (Score:2)
12:31pm up 319 days, 0:40, 1 user, load average: 0.00, 0.00, 0.00
RPM 3.0 in RedHat 6: is Bug 236 fixed yet? (Score:1)
Which versions of... (Score:1)
glibc2.1
kernel-2.2.5 or if we are lucky 2.2.6
egcs-1.1.2
GNOME libs 1.0.8
GNOME core 1.0.5
it'll probably have RPM 3.0 as well, even though it was only released today...
Don't quote me but that's a pretty good guess
Does anyone know if... (Score:2)
with the Appletalk module in kernel 2.0.x,
I tried to use RawHide 5.9 to get up to kernel
2.2 with the appropriate package modifications;
however, the kerner RPM as shipped was larger
than 640k, and nearly blew my 486 to chunks.
Does anyone know if 6.0 kernel RPM is made
safe for 486 or lower users?
Mirrors (Score:1)
What to do, what to do? (Score:1)
heh (Score:1)
axolotl
heh (Score:1)
axolotl
Nay! (Score:1)
axolotl
See Previous Artical (Score:1)
There will be several kernels (Score:1)
kernel-2.2.3-5.i386.rpm 3266 Kb Mon Mar 15 20:14:00 1999 kernel-2.2.5-4.i386.rpm 4439 Kb Tue Apr 6 18:50:00 1999 kernel-2.2.5-4.i586.rpm 4356 Kb Tue Apr 6 19:27:00 1999 kernel-2.2.5-4.i686.rpm 4355 Kb Tue Apr 6 20:04:00 1999 kernel-BOOT-2.2.3-5.i386.rpm 2546 Kb Mon Mar 15 20:14:00 1999 kernel-BOOT-2.2.5-4.i386.rpm 2757 Kb Tue Apr 6 18:51:00 1999 kernel-doc-2.2.3-5.i386.rpm 762 Kb Mon Mar 15 20:14:00 1999 kernel-doc-2.2.5-4.i386.rpm 766 Kb Tue Apr 6 18:50:00 1999 kernel-headers-2.2.3-5.i386.rpm 811 Kb Mon Mar 15 20:14:00 1999 kernel-headers-2.2.5-4.i386.rpm 829 Kb Tue Apr 6 18:50:00 1999 kernel-ibcs-2.2.3-5.i386.rpm 27 Kb Mon Mar 15 20:14:00 1999 kernel-pcmcia-cs-2.2.3-5.i386.rpm 184 Kb Mon Mar 15 20:14:00 1999 kernel-pcmcia-cs-2.2.5-4.i386.rpm 185 Kb Tue Apr 6 18:51:00 1999 kernel-smp-2.2.3-5.i386.rpm 3070 Kb Mon Mar 15 20:14:00 1999 kernel-smp-2.2.5-4.i386.rpm 4229 Kb Tue Apr 6 18:51:00 1999 kernel-smp-2.2.5-4.i586.rpm 4212 Kb Tue Apr 6 19:27:00 1999 kernel-smp-2.2.5-4.i686.rpm 4212 Kb Tue Apr 6 20:04:00 1999 kernel-source-2.2.3-5.i386.rpm 11065 Kb Mon Mar 15 20:14:00 1999 kernel-source-2.2.5-4.i386.rpm 11608 Kb Tue Apr 6 18:50:00 1999 kernelcfg-0.5-4.i386.rpm 17 Kb Thu Feb 25 16:47:00 1999 kernelcfg-0.5-5.i386.rpm 16 Kb Sun Mar 21 20:20:00 1999
So, it looks like there is now at least a smp kernel that will ship and be an option. But, Red Hat enables a heck-of-a-lot in thier default kernels. The best bet is to get the kernel__src.rpm and compile it yourself, because only inabling what _you_ need will always increase your system preformance a bit. (sometimes only a little, but it's a lot on older systems, so, it's a catch 22... if you have a slow system, you need to compile it, and it will compile slow, if you have a fast system, you could compile it more quickly, but don't need to as much).
Differences? (Score:1)
BTW, ping/ICMP is blocked to RedHat because of possible Denial of Service (DoS) problems in the past.
What to do, what to do? (Score:1)
A month and a half, eh?
You mean something like 47.5 days???
That's the Standard "NT Resource Flush Feature" at play.
;-)
Michael J. Ball
Open Source Who's Who
(more) Differences? (Score:1)
better SMP
better scsi
better sound support
frame buffer console
more filesystems drivers
more drivers in general
a few other things too. the first two likely on't affect you much. the third might, but only if you previously had a marginally dupported or unsupported souncard. the fourth i have so far only seen useful for laptops and other odd video chipsets. the fifth includes true fat32 support, useful if you dual boot to '98 or a more recent win95. the sixth is the big difference, it covers not only the already mentioned sound, but also video capture cards and other not quite mainstream stuff.
plus if you have decent (and relatively sane) hardware, you will probably notice a performance increase as well
Differences? (Score:1)
On another note 6.0 comes with GNOME and kde, and also x11amp.
Joseph.
Official release (Score:1)
Cost of 6.0 (or, supporting GNOME) (Score:1)
The Secure edition included Apache SSL 128 bit encrypted version, and most likely Netscape 128bit encrypted.
What to do, what to do? (Score:1)
It isn't on the distribution CD (Score:1)
Online chat with Bob Young on Monday afternoon (Score:3)
Abc News's website (abcnews.com) today at 2:00PM
EST(?).
The URL they give is:
http://chat.abcnews.go.com/chat/chat.dll?roo
Just thought you might be interested, you can go ask
him a bunch of questions about 6.0.
(more) Differences? (Score:1)
-l
News.com's got a good piece on it (Score:4)
http://www.news.com/ News/Item/0,4,0-35646,00.html?st.ne.lh..ni [news.com]
Main new features:
What about the CDz? (Score:1)
CP
Mirrors (Score:1)
CP
I would say you lucked out! (Score:1)
Re: Copying RedHat 6.0 to a CD (Score:1)
Burning a RedHat CD mini-HOWTO:
http://linuxclubs.com/LDP/HOWTO
--
Fredrik Borg - http://jenz.cjb.net
None of the mirrors seem to have it yet. (Score:1)
Also mirrored at ftp://ftp.sunet.se/pub/Linux/distributions/redhat
/El Niño
Debian/RPMFind (Score:1)
As far as Glint goes...when you install GnoRPM it automatically removes Glint. Wave bye-bye to Glint...say hello to GnoRPM.
upgrade path (Score:1)
What's the actual procedure? I'm assuming you simply download the new distribution and then install it over your old?
Or is there an actual upgrade method?
Lucky me, I just purchased 5.2 about 2 weeks ago. Haven't even installed it yet, but just in time to get out-dated.
*sigh*
Redhat 6.0 mirror -- Thanks! (Score:1)
RPM 3.0 in RedHat 6: is Bug 236 fixed yet? (Score:2)
--Donnie
Red Hat 6.0 i386 mirror (US east coast) (Score:1)
ftp://152.2.95.222/pub/redhat-6.0/ [152.2.95.222]
I'll have several more machines at UNC Chapel Hill mirroring the i386 structure by tomorrow afternoon.
Red Hat 6.0 i386 mirror (US east coast) (Score:1)
Cost of 6.0 (or, supporting GNOME) (Score:1)
Going to RedHat's pages, though, shows that the only packages currently available are $299 or more. No way can I afford that. So: (since I know some of you Redhat folks must be reading this): are there any plans for a cheaper copy of 6.0? Or are we all going to migrate to Cheapbytes, Debian, or FTP? I'd love to keep helping out, but this is ridiculous.
~luge
(P.S. Since metalab actually gives me a faster data transfer rate than my CD-ROM, this is not just an idle threat...)
On mirrors? I don't see it. (Score:1)
upgrade path (Score:1)
what on the CD the non GPL'd stuff ?? anyone (Score:1)
I find it quite amusing that...... (Score:1)
I don't envy you (Score:1)
I got as far as 57 days before I wanted to upgrade kernels. I hated rebooting, it made me feel sick ... I really have sympathy for you. Now I try to reboot my machine every 10-15 days so I don't get addicted to uptimes. I can bear rebooting a machine with 10 days, but 317?
On a lighter note, it really is time to upgrade if this is he machine you work on ... I mean, a lot has happened in the last 317 days, kernel-wise.
None of the mirrors seem to have it yet. (Score:1)
Is there a place where I can get an ISO image of the CD, like for Debian?
RPM 3.0 available, too (Score:1)
Christopher A. Bohn
RPM 3.0 available, too (Score:2)
Christopher A. Bohn
but this is slashdot (Score:1)
their decisions on nothing. But I _still_ think
RH is crappy. One: I've tried it, on numerous
users' machines. It took a year and a half to
reboot (since about everything was loaded, for
some reason). Second: Users don't learn to do it
right. Enter a Linux channel, and count how many
of the clueless users are running RH. OK, that is because there are more Red Hat users, but that is only part of the figure. To me, it looks like it _is_ configurable, but users don't even know that they can do it (most don't even recompile their kernel).
/* Steinar */
Re: Big Linux x86 uptimes and jiffies overflows (Score:1)
Of course, there may be subtle timing bugs, but I haven't heard of any...
--
mounting iso image (Score:1)
i386 iso image? (Score:1)
What to do, what to do? (Score:1)
upgrade path (Score:1)
Sorry, bit it is an upgrade path... If you want, we could all call it "update way" or "The Road to Further Enlightenment" (which is oddly fitting, considering enlightenment is a package...)
Not to be taken seriously, BTW
What to do, what to do? (Score:1)
That is a server that, currently, is just running rc5des. But it has been running a variety of databases, from Sybase to DB2 to Oracle to MySQL to PostgreSQL...
It is just a poor Pentium 90 with 64 megs of RAM. It swaps pretty hard some times but keeps going. I've even had to move /usr and /home around a few times because of disk space problems. No rebooting, though...
I have to use NT on my computer at work, and I think it is pretty stable, but the last straw for MS was when I installed IE5.0 beta and it rebooted my machine without asking. Not even a 'rebooting now... ok' dialog. How can they expect people to do serious server tasks with so much rebooting?
Re:What to do, what to do? (Score:1)
The final release of IE5 did the same thing, it just provided a 'reboot? ok' dialog first. It still "makes" you reboot, it still sucks...
what on the CD the non GPL'd stuff ?? anyone (Score:1)
Windows uptimes (Score:1)
Of course, without the recent patch Win95 could not stay up longer than ~42 days due to a rollover in the counter, but I never managed better than about two weeks with it (and boy, that machine was dragging by then...).
In contrast, I've managed 7-week uptimes with Linux on a box with a screwy IDE controller -- while NT could barely last a day on it. Linux works better even on broken hardware!
redhat 6.0 (Score:1)
ftp://ftp.tux.org/pub/distributions/redhat/redh
redhat 6.0 (Score:1)
ftp://unix.hensa.ac.uk/mirrors/ftp.redhat.com
thats a werking mirror
:)
What exactly is new? (Score:1)
I'm running the following:
Linux Mandrake 5.3 (RH 5.2)
- KDE 1.1 (1.1.1 realeased today, so I'll upgrade)
- GNOME 1.0.x (newest RPM's)
- Kernel 2.2.5
- Samba 2.0.3 (so smbmount works again...)
- LinuxConf 15r1
- Netscape 4.5
- Wine 990426
What components of RH 6.0 are newer than the above? And have all of the problems with glibc 2.1 been worked out?
Basically, would it be worth my time to upgrade, or should I wait for 6.1?
Thanks,
Ben
Kernel RPMs (Score:2)
make menuconfig
make dep ; make clean ; make bzImage
You will then have a nice new kernel that you can move to your
Debian (Score:4)
I am a long-time RedHat user who, while waiting for 6.0, ended up trying out Debian. Though it required a _tad_ more work to get up and running properly, I must say that I now have an incredible system. dselect and apt are wonderful, and allow me to add and remove software extremely easily. The days of searching the net for lone RPMs are gone; now, I simply add one line to
If the mirrors are too busy, you might want to give Debian a try. I didn't think I'd be that impressed, but I was wrong; I dig it.
RedHat is still good. I am not saying it sucks; all flames to
Copying RedHat 6.0 to a CD (Score:1)
What directories from the FTP do I need to copy to a CD to have a fully working CD?
Debian (Score:1)
So Nice job, Debian!
PS. I do think the RH guys deserve some applause too.
Wish I could get it ... (Score:1)
It only started syncing two hours ago on the local mirror.
Keep the uptime! :) (Score:1)
Cost of 6.0 (or, supporting GNOME) (Score:1)
The $299 was the support program as I recall.
- |Daryll
Re:RedHat 6.0 Mirror (Score:1)
What to do, what to do? (Score:1)
Now when is Slackware 2.2.x due to ship? (Score:1)
now already has 2.2.6 built in. As well as
a few more packages, a hella loada new stuff
and many fixes. It will ship when it is ready.
They are currently working on a GLIBC 2.1
release but who knows when that will happen.
Red Hat 6.0 i386 mirror (US east coast) (Score:1)
Go to the mirrors (Score:1)
My girlfriend told me I had a body like a God. Unfortunately I found out she's a buddhist.
cool. (Score:1)
RedHat 6.0 Mirror (Score:1)
ftp.vinnie.net/redhat-6.0
P.S. I'm located in Boston, for anyone in the northeast
Re:i386 iso image? (Score:1)
Check it out
Re:mirror... (Score:1)
ftp://linux.vinnie.net
Its a pretty fast conection, (campus network)
It has an ISO, and I386
Redhat 6.0 mirror (Score:2)
ftp.redhat.com. I am starting with the rpms. Everyone can get it my copy
from ftp://ftp.okcforum.org/pub/linux/redhat-6.0/
freebsd (Score:2)
just curious...
Official release (Score:2)
Chris Esler wrote:
>
> I have redhat 5.2 already. But, I have seen on several ftp
> sites of a new version called starbuck (5.9 I believe). I was wondering
> if you are offering it on cd, as my 56k modem will not do justice for
> the ftp install.
>
> Thanks
We expect to release our new version of Red Hat Linux sometime within
the next 2 to 3 weeks. I suggest that you check our website every
Monday morning for an official release announcement.
Best Regards
Alice