On Mon 21 Aug 2006 21:40, Markus Krause wrote:
Zitat von Peter Nixon <listuser@peternixon.net>:
On Mon 21 Aug 2006 13:46, Markus Krause wrote:
* suse 10.1: "rpmbuild -bb" said it needs "libapr0", which i could not find in suse 10.1. i changed it in freeradius.spec to "libapr1" instead, which seems to work, at least the build finished without problems and the installed programms seems to run without errors.
Hi Markus
Thanks for the bug report. I am using an updated spec file that works on SLES9, SUSE 9.3, 10.0, 10.1 and Factory on the build service but haven't yet updated the code in cvs. I will do it now. In any case if you needs 10.1 rpms you can get them from:
http://software.opensuse.org/download/home:/peternixon/SUSE_Linux_10.1/i586 /freeradius-snapshot-20060817-2.1.i586.rpm
If you have any issues with the rpms, please let me know so I can fix them.
hi Peter,
thanks for your offer, but actually we plan to install the freeradius servers on our new servers with SLES10 (as soon we get this *%&!? thing to boot and install on these servers!!) i found a directory "SLE_10" (not SLES_10 as i actually expected!), does/will it contain the current releases for SLES10? building the rpms with the spec file you are contributing is really effortless, but why build it if there are ready-to-use packages available? ;-) but if you want me to do some testing, just ask!
Hi Markus SLES10 is a great choice of operating system. We have been beta testing it for some time now in house, and now that the release version is out we plan to upgrade most of our production servers. SLE stands for SUSE Linux Enterprise, and packages in that directory should work on both SLED (SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop) and SLES (SUSE Linux Enterprise Server) version 10. We are using the packages ourselves on SLES 10 x86_64 (SunFire Opteron based servers) but they are automatically built for 32bit also, and I see no reason why they shouldn't work on SLED if you feel the need to deploy a radius server on a workstation for some reason :-) I am glad the spec files work for you (Not surprised, but glad none the less :-) and you are of course more than welcome to use my binary packages. They should be available on any of the OpenSUSE mirrors, although I may move them from "home:peternixon" into a "real" project as soon as I figure out what to call it. (Network:Infrastructure maybe?) Cheers -- Peter Nixon http://www.peternixon.net/ PGP Key: http://www.peternixon.net/public.asc