[asterisk-users] Asterisk RPM's

Jay Vocaire jvocaire at innproc.com
Fri Feb 26 11:42:42 CST 2010


Sorry, I did not include enough information.  I am using the
Asterisk/Digium yum repositories as detailed here:
http://www.asterisk.org/downloads/yum

I believe I have them setup right, as that is how I did my initial
install of Asterisk (and all of the other dependencies).

Right now, when browsing to the link you sent me, I don't even see an
RPM for Asterisk, and version.  I only see add-ons/other programs.

So, now I am even more confused.  Did I just happen to check when they
are being built and the old ones are gone but the new ones aren't there
yet?

Thanks.

-Jay



-----Original Message-----
From: asterisk-users-bounces at lists.digium.com
[mailto:asterisk-users-bounces at lists.digium.com] On Behalf Of Tilghman
Lesher
Sent: Friday, February 26, 2010 12:04 PM
To: Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion
Subject: Re: [asterisk-users] Asterisk RPM's

On Friday 26 February 2010 10:24:41 Jay Vocaire wrote:
> I am new to Asterisk and have searched all over for an answer to this,
> so please don't skewer me too bad if this is a stupid question.  I am
> currently running 1.6.0.21 on a few test boxes (one i386, one x64),
and
> have noticed that there haven't been any RPM updates since .21, even
> though .25 just hit.
>
> What I am wondering about (and please don't assume this is a
complaint,
> I simply don't know the reasoning) is the lag between the release of
the
> version and the RPM availability.  Is there something that needs to be
> done other than compiling the code?  If so, what is it?
>
> I know that I can just download the code and compile it myself, and I
> have done that, but obviously it is simply easier to use yum.  So I am
> merely curious what the process is, so that in the future, I have an
> idea of how long I will need to wait for an RPM to be available (so I
> can decide if I want to wait, or if there is code that I need to get
> sooner).

That's a question you need to ask of your distribution provider.  If
they are
unable to provide security updates in a reasonable amount of time,
perhaps you
need to consider using one that will.  Or, as you stated before, use the
source download and compile it yourself.

Also, if you're using CentOS 5, Digium creates RPMs, which you can
source
here:  http://packages.digium.com/centos/5/current/

-- 
Tilghman Lesher
Digium, Inc. | Senior Software Developer
twitter: Corydon76 | IRC: Corydon76-dig (Freenode)
Check us out at: www.digium.com & www.asterisk.org

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