We do already have a local repo, but only packages that have been approved by our security team get included. They haven't validated the latest postgresql yet, that's actually what I'm trying to assist them with.
On Mon, Feb 1, 2016 at 6:35 AM, jaime soler <jaime.soler@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
El mié, 27-01-2016 a las 11:02 -0600, John Scalia escribió:
> So, then don't bother with the rc1 rpms? Oh, and I can't use yum
> here to download due to configuration issues, although I do use it
> for the actual install.
Well, you could use a local repo, mirroring yum.postgresql.org if you
have internet restrictions.
>
> On Wed, Jan 27, 2016 at 10:48 AM, Jeff Frost <jeff@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> wrote:
> > On Jan 27, 2016, at 7:45 AM, John Scalia <jayknowsunix@xxxxxxxxx>
> > wrote:
> > > I'm wanting to test the most recent version of postgresql, so I
> > > went to yum.postgresql.org and started looking in the repo for
> > > stuff to download. Nearly every component there has 3 rpms, a rc1
> > > copy in addition to a 1 and 2 rpm. My question is, do I need the
> > > rc1 rpm in addition to the 1 & 2 rpm's? Or which ones do I need
> > > exactly for each component? I've done a little digging on the
> > > site, and I didn't really find any guidance.
> > You want the ones that are 9.5.0-<latest>. So, in the RHEL6/x86_64
> > repo, that is:
> >
> > 9.5.0-2PGDG.rhel6
> >
> > If you let yum do the work for you, then after installing the
> > appropriate repo RPM you can just: yum install postgresql95 and
> > it’ll download and install the latest for you.
> >
> > Hope that helps.
> >