On 03/09/2020 20:51, Leon Fauster via CentOS wrote: > > What would you recommend: ansible is in EPEL8 and ConfigSIG. > For the latter I do not see any sources in git.centos.org. > Where they come from? > > I wonder with which repository I should use (long term)? > > dnf not checking gpg signature sounds scary: > > https://github.com/ansible/ansible/blob/v2.9.13/changelogs/CHANGELOG-v2.9.rst#security-fixes > > Hi Leon, For ConfigManagement SIG, I use directly upstream src.rpm (available on https://releases.ansible.com/ansible/). and 2.9.13 was rebuilt directly on the day it was announced (https://cbs.centos.org/koji/buildinfo?buildID=30563 and https://cbs.centos.org/koji/buildinfo?buildID=30564) , quick sanity test and then signed/pushed out to mirror.centos.org (and so external mirrors too, as usual) With the upcoming changes for 2.10 and Ansible deciding to not provide pkgs anymore, I guess I'll rebase on good work done by Kevin (ansible pkg maintainer in Fedora/Epel) but probably trying to track various branches (like we do for 2.7/2.8/2.9 for people deciding to stay on a branch/version as long as it's supported upstream) See blog post about the switch: https://anonbadger.wordpress.com/2020/08/25/why-upstream-ansible-stopped-shipping-rpms/ -- Fabian Arrotin The CentOS Project | https://www.centos.org gpg key: 17F3B7A1 | twitter: @arrfab
Attachment:
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
_______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos