Merge pull request #2785 from lrupp/devel
added informations for openSUSE and SUSE Linux Enterprise
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commit
3cb56d58c4
2 changed files with 17 additions and 3 deletions
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@ -42,8 +42,8 @@ Native OpenSSH for connections instead of the python paramiko library.
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Paramiko is great for starting out, but the OpenSSH type offers many advanced options. You will want to run Ansible
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from a machine new enough to support ControlPersist, if you are using this connection type. You can still manage
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older clients. If you are using RHEL 6 or CentOS 6, the version of OpenSSH is still a bit old, so consider managing
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from a Fedora client even though you are managing older nodes, or just use paramiko.
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older clients. If you are using RHEL 6, CentOS 6, SLES 10 or SLES 11 the version of OpenSSH is still a bit old, so
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consider managing from a Fedora or openSUSE client even though you are managing older nodes, or just use paramiko.
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We keep paramiko as the default as if you are first installing Ansible on an EL box, it offers a better experience
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for new users.
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@ -133,7 +133,12 @@ Via RPM
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RPMs for the last Ansible release are available for `EPEL
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<http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/EPEL>`_ 6 and currently supported
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Fedora distributions. Ansible itself can manage earlier operating
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Fedora distributions. RPMs for openSUSE can be found via the
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`openSUSE Software Portal <http://software.opensuse.org/package/ansible>`_
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(in the systemsmanagement Project) for all currently supported
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openSUSE and SLES distributions.
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Ansible itself can manage earlier operating
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systems that contain python 2.4 or higher.
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If you are using RHEL or CentOS and have not already done so, `configure EPEL <http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/EPEL>`_
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@ -143,6 +148,15 @@ If you are using RHEL or CentOS and have not already done so, `configure EPEL <h
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# install the epel-release RPM if needed on CentOS, RHEL, or Scientific Linux
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$ sudo yum install ansible
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For openSUSE and SUSE Linux Enterprise, add the `systemsmanagement repository <http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/systemsmanagement/>`_
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for your distribution:
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.. code-block:: bash
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# replace $dist with the correct distribution found here: http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/systemsmanagement/
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$ sudo zypper ar -f http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/systemsmanagement/$dist/systemsmanagement.repo
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$ sudo zypper install ansible
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You can also use the ``make rpm`` command to build an RPM you can distribute and install.
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Make sure you have ``rpm-build``, ``make``, and ``python2-devel`` installed.
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