Greetings,
Reed Wade asked:
> If I had some spare time, what would a minimally useful koha
> related redhat style something look like?
> Is it the packaging or the build recipe or both?
Given that koha is generally installed for production with: sudo apt-get
install koha-common
(plus the other s
Yes... I have some memory now of Lars getting some large set of non-debian
packaged dependent products debian packaged before he was able to package
up Koha.
I'll make some experiments..
-reed
On 27 November 2016 at 22:34, Mark Tompsett wrote:
> Greetings,
>
> Reed Wade asked:
> > If I had so
And, so, actually, I have to wonder if putting together a redhat style
installation is a long term good or not.
I recall that someone a million years ago made a windows installer for Koha
and released it into the wild and so now every few months someone finds it
and tries to use it and gets confus
Hi Reed,
>And, so, actually, I have to wonder if putting together a redhat style
>installation is a long term good or not.
I think that the best option to start is to see those two documents:
https://wiki.koha-community.org/wiki/Koha_3.10_on_Centos_6.3_x86_64_en
https://wiki.koha-community.org/
makes sense, yes
-reed
On 28 November 2016 at 00:58, Zeno Tajoli wrote:
> Hi Reed,
>
> >And, so, actually, I have to wonder if putting together a redhat style
> installation is a long term good or not.
>
> I think that the best option to start is to see those two documents:
> https://wiki.koha-
Greetings,
Reed Wade pondered:
> And, so, actually, I have to wonder if putting together a redhat style
> installation
> is a long term good or not.
A full koha-common RPM, perhaps not. That would need updating each release.
But all the parts (libXXX-perl) that are missing would be good if hoste