Edit Info Other
Login

Diff for "FedoraThirdPartyRepos"

Differences between revisions 78 and 79
Revision 78 as of 2012-06-10 16:47:31
Size: 11914
Comment: Rework the split with known to work repositories
Revision 79 as of 2012-06-10 16:49:24
Size: 11931
Comment:
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 41: Line 41:
[[http://repos.fedorapeople.org/repos/spot/chromium/|Google Chromium]] [[http://repos.fedorapeople.org/repos/spot/chromium/|Tom 'spot' Callaway - Chromium]]
Line 49: Line 49:
[[http://www.beduine.de/repository/|Opera Browser]] [[http://www.beduine.de/repository/|Matthias Summer]]

This page lists many third party repositories available for Fedora. It can be useful to track previous packaging attempts or to ask 3rd party maintainers to join RPM Fusion.

Compatible repositories

The following repositories are known to work well with RPM Fusion.

Editor repositories

Adobe Flash Player and Adobe Reader

Dropbox

  • Dropbox packages for Fedora.

Google

Community repositories

KDE RedHat Project

  • Unofficial core and 3rd-party KDE RPM packages.

    Contact: Rex Dieter <rdieter AT fedoraproject DOT org>

Russian Fedora

  • Additional packages aimed at Russian users. Repository structure is similar to the one used by RPM Fusion (free, nonfree, fixes).

    Contact: Russian Fedora Forums

Personal repositories

Dan Horak's repo

  • Packages yet to be submitted for Fedora or RPMFusion, experimental stuff and backports from Rawhide to stable versions.

    Contact: Dan Horák <dan AT danny DOT cz>

Gemi

  • Mainly development tools, mathematics and audio software.

    Contact: Gerard Milmeister <gemi AT bluewin DOT ch>

Tom 'spot' Callaway - Chromium

  • Unofficial Chromium web browser packages for Fedora.

    Contact: Tom 'spot' Callaway <tcallawa AT redhat DOT com >

Michael Fleming

  • This contains a number of packages for Fedora Linux and Red Hat Enterprise Linux/CentOS. They were mostly server-oriented (initially being built primarily for personal use) but may be of general use nowadays.

    Contact: Michael Fleming <web AT thatfleminggent DOT com>; Michael Fleming <mfleming+rpm AT enlartenment DOT com>

Matthias Summer

  • Unofficial Opera web browser packages for Fedora.

    Contact: Matthias Summer <webmaster AT beduine DOT de>

Remi Collet

  • Mainly mysql, php and thunderbird related packages.

    Contact: Remi Collet <rpms AT famillecollet DOT com>

Incompatible repositories

The following repositories are known not to work well with RPM Fusion or their compatibility is unknown.

/!\ Mixing different RPM repositories that were not designed to be mixed can easily lead to problems. Use these repositories at you own risk if you have RPM Fusion enabled!

Acpacks

  • Acpacks only has Exaile-bzr (i386) packages. Exaile is a music manager and player for GTK+ written in Python.

    Contact: Nicholas Omann <alphacluster AT gmail DOT com>

Additional Packages for Enterprise Linux 5

  • Various packages, that can't be part of Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux (EPEL). They mostly originate in Livna repository.

    Contact: Lubomir Rintel <lkundrak AT v3 DOT sk>

AlphaMail

  • An accelerated web mail interface with a C++ middleware layer that is more effective than an IMAP proxy which is a highly scalable (10k+ users).

ATrpms

  • The original focus laid upon software used in natural sciences, especially in the field of high energy physics, e.g. tools for numerical programming or such for scientific publications. But since then this repository has included many non-scientific software titles, like system tools or multimedia packages, resulting in a far more generic repository.

    Contact: ATrpms Mailing Lists

Bruno Postle

  • Various panoramic-image related packages.

    Contact: Bruno Postle <bruno AT postle DOT net>

city-fan.org

  • Contact: Paul Howarth <paul AT city-fan DOT org>

CRASH-HAT

  • A collection of network daemons and useful sysadmin utils.

    Contact: Petr Kristof <Petr AT Kristof DOT cz>

Dell

  • Drivers, updates, OpenManage applications, as well as community-supported software.

eGroupWare

  • A web-based groupware suite written in PHP.

elisa repo from people.fluendo.com/matthias

  • Newer elisa then in Fedora as well as some add-ons

ETHZ/ID Yum Repository

  • Contact: Matteo Corti <matteo.corti AT id DOT ethz DOT ch>

Fabrice Bellet

  • Contact: Fabrice Bellet <fabrice AT bellet DOT info>

Freed-ora

  • A sub-project that prepares and maintains 100% Free RPMs that track Fedora's non-Free kernels.

FreePOPs

  • An easily extensible program, which allows access to the most varied resources through the POP3 protocol.

    Contact: Francesco Laurita <francesco AT francesco-laurita DOT info>

Hany

  • Contact: Peter Hanecak <hany AT hany DOT sk>

Haskell

  • Contact: Jens Petersen <petersen AT redhat DOT com>

JPackage

Kirov

  • Contact: Adam Miller <amiller AT gravity DOT phys DOT uwm DOT edu>

LFarkas Repository

  • Contact: Levente Farkas <lfarkas AT lfarkas DOT org>

Midgard CMS

MOKs RPM Repository

  • Software for macromolecular crystallography (for RHEL 4).

    Contact: Morten Kjeldgaard <mok AT bioxray DOT dk>

Olea RPM repository

  • Contact: Ismael Olea <ismael AT olea DOT org>

OpenAFS 1.4.6

  • AFS is a distributed filesystem product

OpenNMS Yum Repository

  • OpenNMS is an enterprise grade network management platform.

Paulo Roma

  • Contact: Paulo Roma <roma AT lcg DOT ufrj DOT br>

Planet CCRMA at home

  • A collection of rpms to transform Fedora into an audio workstation with a low-latency kernel, current ALSA audio drivers and a nice set of music, midi, audio and video applications.

PostgreSQL RPM Building Project

  • PostgreSQL related RPMs for Fedora / Red Hat / CentOS, like pgAdmin, Slony-I, PostGIS, etc.

Professor Kriehn's Fedora Repository

  • Some "Old School" software that seems to have fallen out of mainstream popularity as well as E17

    Contact: Gregory R. Kriehn <gkriehn AT csufresno DOT edu> Notes: The repos webpage answers the "What about Enlightenment being integrated into the Fedora Repository?" question.

Red Hat Club Repository

  • Packages for RHEL-based distributions following Fedora Packaging Guidelines (site in Russian). Many are rebuilt from Fedora and RPM Fusion.

RPM Forge

Sebastian Vahl

  • Contact: Sebastian Vahl <fedora AT deadbabylon DOT de>

Silfreed.net

  • Contact: Douglas E. Warner <silfreed AT silfreed DOT net>

Software Suspend on Linux / Fedora Core / RHEL

  • Linux equivalent of Windows' hibernate functionality.

    Contact: Matthias Hensler <matthias AT mhensler DOT de>

TeXLive repo

  • Replace teTeX with TeXLive.

University of Nebraska-Lincoln stable repository

VirtualBox

  • A general-purpose full virtualizer for x86 hardware.

Testing repositories

The following repositories have work-in-progress packages not yet ready to be included in Fedora or RPM Fusion:

CalcForge

  • Software related to TI calculators.

    Contact: Kevin Kofler <kevin DOT kofler AT chello DOT at>

Kwizart

  • Experimental Repository for testing Fedora and/or RPM Fusion packages

    Contact: Nicolas Chauvet <kwizart AT rpmfusion DOT org>

Ville Skytta

  • This repository contains Fedora and Livna packages pending for QA or submission as well as some experimental JPackage work and other stuff.

    Contact: Ville Skyttä <ville.skytta AT iki DOT fi>

Xavier Lamien

  • Contact: Xavier Lamien <lxtnow AT gmail DOT com>

Outdated repositories

The following repositories are no longer updated to the currently maintained Fedora versions.

Dr. Pixel

  • Contact: Christophe Polyte <drpixel AT laposte DOT net>

Fedora-xgl

  • Xserver that uses OpenGL.

    Contact: Alphonse Van Assche <alcapcom AT gmail DOT com>

OpenGroupware.org

  • Open source groupware server.

Enabling other Third-Party Repositories

/!\ RPM Fusion is specifically designed to work with Fedora only. Mixing with other third-party RPM repositories can very easily lead to problems. Enable them at you own risk!

In this case, you should seriously consider using the priorities yum plugin to enforce ordered protection of repositories. Packages installed from repositories with a higher priority will never be upgraded with packages from repositories with a lower priority. The priorities are also in effect when a new package is installed - if a package is in more than one repository, it will be installed from the repository with the highest priority.

To install the priorities plugin, use the following command:

yum install yum-priorities

To enable this plugin, make sure that you have plugins=1 in /etc/yum.conf and verify that the /etc/yum/pluginconf.d/priorities.conf file has the following content:

[main]
enabled=1

If you want the plugin to protect high-priority repositories against obsoletes in low-priority repositories, enable the check_obsoletes boolean:

check_obsoletes=1

You can add priorities to repositories by adding the line:

priority=N

to a repository entry, where N is an integer number from 1 to 99. The default priority for repositories is 99. The repositories with the lowest number have the highest priority.

You should give a very high priority to Fedora and RPM Fusion repositories.

FedoraThirdPartyRepos (last edited 2023-11-14 09:37:58 by anonymous)