CentOS systems automatically use the CentOS Project repositories. These include [base], [updates], [addons], [centosplus], [contrib], [extras], and [testing]. Some of these repositories are not enabled by default, because they might change core packages. The enabled repositories are [base], [updates], [addons], and [extras]. For more information about what each repository does see Section 2.2 About Repositories
For information specifically about using the centosplus repository see the CentOS Plus readme
If the CentOS Project does not supply packages for a product, the manufacturer may provide or recommend a separate repository. Members of the community also maintain repositories to provide packages for CentOS systems. For example, http://www.jpackage.org/ distributes popular Java software as packages.
To add an extra repository, place a definition file in the
/etc/yum.repos.d/
directory on your system.
Package providers make the definition files for their
repositories available on their web sites.
Definition File Extension | |
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The names of repository definition files end with
|
You must have root
access to add a file to the definitions directory. To copy the
definition file example.repo
, type this
command:
su -c 'cp example.repo /etc/yum.repos.d/'
At the prompt, enter the password for the
root
account.
The configuration file for each repository should include a
gpgkey
setting. This setting specifies the
location of a public key that verifies the packages provided by
that repository. This public key is automatically imported the
first time that you install software from the repository. If the
configuration file provided does not include this setting, refer
to Section 7.2, “Manually Authorizing Package Sources”.
Repositories and up2date Channels | |
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Starting with CentOS 3, and continuing in CentOS 4, the default |
To manually add a public key to your rpm
keyring, use the import
feature of the
rpm
utility. To import the file
GPG-PUB-KEY.asc
, type the following
command:
su -c 'rpm --import GPG-PUB-KEY.asc
'
At the prompt, enter the password for the
root
account.
You may also import public keys directly from a web site. For
example, to import the file GPG-PUB-KEY.asc
on the web site www.therepository.com
use this command:
su -c 'rpm --import http://www.therepository.com/GPG-PUB-KEY.asc
'
At the prompt, enter the
root
password.
Importing the CentOS Key on CentOS 3 and CentOS 4 | |
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To add the CentOS public key to the For CentOS 4 systems use the command: |
Third-party packages should be compatible with these CentOS Project packages, unless the provider specifically states otherwise.
Always read the web site of the repository for information on package compatibility before you add it as a package source. Separate repository providers may offer different and incompatible versions of the same software. Third-party repositories may also provide alternative packages for software that is included in CentOS repositories.
Alternative packages may contain versions of the software that function differently from the version in the CentOS Project packages. Determine the benefits and potential incompatibilities before replacing CentOS Project packages with alternative versions.
Incompatible Repositories | |
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If you configure your system to use incompatible repositories
|
Packages built for one version of CentOS are usually not compatible with other versions of CentOS. The web site of the provider should specifically state which versions of CentOS they support.
Old Versions of yum and Current Repositories | |
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The data format for repository indexes changed with version
2.1 of For CentOS 3 versions of yum, you are looking for the directory called |
CentOS compatible yum Repositories | |
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There are several repositories out there that are compatible with CentOS 3 and CentOS 4, but there are a couple that stand out as excellent in their compatability. The CentOS project highly recommends the repositories: |