Displaying 20 results from an estimated 70000 matches similar to: "CentOS Linux 5 End of Life"
2017 Apr 03
0
CentOS Linux 5 EOL
CentOS Linux 5 has reached End of Life, as of 31 March 2017.
Please note that the latest version of CentOS Linux 5 (version 5.11 with
updates) will remain available here (archived):
http://vault.centos.org/5.11/
Please also note that this directory will not be maintained as there are
no more public source code releases for upstream RHEL-5. That means
there will be no more security updates for
2017 Apr 04
0
CentOS-announce Digest, Vol 146, Issue 1
Send CentOS-announce mailing list submissions to
centos-announce at centos.org
To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit
https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-announce
or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to
centos-announce-request at centos.org
You can reach the person managing the list at
centos-announce-owner at centos.org
When
2012 Mar 01
0
CentOS-4 i386 and x86_64 End of Life (EOL)
This is the notification of the End of Life (EOL) for CentOS 4.
The 7-year enterprise lifetime of CentOS-4 ends now. CentOS-4 has been
copied to the CentOS Vault. The last released tree is available here:
http://vault.centos.org/4.9/
All architectures of CentOS-4 (i386, x86_64, ppc, s390, and s390x) are
impacted. Support for the CentOS-4 Cluster Server and the CentOS-4
Global File Server
2017 Mar 01
0
CentOS-5 End of Life
On 03/01/2017 05:28 AM, Johnny Hughes wrote:
> Just a message to remind everyone that CentOS-5 has an End of Life date
> of March 31, 2017.
>
> This means that there will be no new security updates released by Red
> Hat for RHEL-5 after that date.
This is for their main RHEL-5 Tree.
>
> Sometime in early April, the current 5.11 tree will be moved onto
> vault.centos.org
2017 Mar 01
7
CentOS-5 End of Life
Just a message to remind everyone that CentOS-5 has an End of Life date
of March 31, 2017.
This means that there will be no new security updates released by Red
Hat for RHEL-5 after that date.
Sometime in early April, the current 5.11 tree will be moved onto
vault.centos.org (like CentOS-3 and CentOS-4 have been since their EOL).
Thanks,
Johnny Hughes
-------------- next part --------------
A
2011 Dec 02
0
CentOS-4 End Of Life 3 Month Notice
All,
The CentOS-4 distribution (current version 4.9) will be at End of Life
on February 29, 2012. That means there is only 3 months left in the
life cycle.
This coincides with the date that the upstream provider stops releasing
updates for their EL4 products.
Users who still need the EL4 platform can contact Red Hat for their
Extended Lifecycle Support (ELS) product:
2017 Mar 01
0
CentOS-5 End of Life
On 03/01/2017 09:21 AM, Leon Fauster wrote:
> Am 01.03.2017 um 12:28 schrieb Johnny Hughes <johnny at centos.org>:
>>
>> Just a message to remind everyone that CentOS-5 has an End of Life date
>> of March 31, 2017.
>>
>> This means that there will be no new security updates released by Red
>> Hat for RHEL-5 after that date.
>>
>> Sometime in
2017 Mar 01
1
CentOS-5 End of Life
Am 01.03.2017 um 12:28 schrieb Johnny Hughes <johnny at centos.org>:
>
> Just a message to remind everyone that CentOS-5 has an End of Life date
> of March 31, 2017.
>
> This means that there will be no new security updates released by Red
> Hat for RHEL-5 after that date.
>
> Sometime in early April, the current 5.11 tree will be moved onto
> vault.centos.org
2012 Mar 01
0
CentOS-announce Digest, Vol 85, Issue 1
Send CentOS-announce mailing list submissions to
centos-announce at centos.org
To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-announce
or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to
centos-announce-request at centos.org
You can reach the person managing the list at
centos-announce-owner at centos.org
When
2017 Mar 02
0
CentOS-5 End of Life
On 02/03/17 00:28, Johnny Hughes wrote:
> Just a message to remind everyone that CentOS-5 has an End of Life date
> of March 31, 2017.
>
> This means that there will be no new security updates released by Red
> Hat for RHEL-5 after that date.
>
> Sometime in early April, the current 5.11 tree will be moved onto
> vault.centos.org (like CentOS-3 and CentOS-4 have been since
2017 Mar 02
0
CentOS-5 End of Life
On 03/02/2017 12:42 PM, Tom Munro Glass wrote:
> On 02/03/17 19:50, James Hogarth wrote:
>> On 2 Mar 2017 03:49, "John R Pierce" <pierce at hogranch.com> wrote:
>>
>> On 3/1/2017 7:28 PM, Tom Munro Glass wrote:
>>>
>>> Can you say exactly when in early April the tree will be moved? I have a
>>> number of installations that need to
2017 Mar 02
2
CentOS-5 End of Life
On 02/03/17 19:50, James Hogarth wrote:
> On 2 Mar 2017 03:49, "John R Pierce" <pierce at hogranch.com> wrote:
>
> On 3/1/2017 7:28 PM, Tom Munro Glass wrote:
>>
>> Can you say exactly when in early April the tree will be moved? I have a
>> number of installations that need to continue running CentOS 5 so I'd like
>> to do a final update before
2011 Dec 02
0
CentOS-announce Digest, Vol 82, Issue 1
Send CentOS-announce mailing list submissions to
centos-announce at centos.org
To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-announce
or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to
centos-announce-request at centos.org
You can reach the person managing the list at
centos-announce-owner at centos.org
When
2017 Mar 03
2
CentOS-5 End of Life
In article <CAGkb5vexU7eoU=-ASF_uPN_PA68QQi2RU0HdPhozZEYDE0VqEg at mail.gmail.com>,
James Hogarth <james.hogarth at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> This is especially important if you use anything from EPEL as EPEL5 will be
> removed when RHEL goes EOL.
You mean just thrown away, or archived somewhere? Just thrown away would
seem rather irresponsible...
Cheers
Tony
--
Tony
2011 Mar 04
0
CESA-2011:0219 Low CentOS 4 i386 and x86_64 EOL Notice
CentOS Errata and Security Advisory CESA-2011:0219
This is the 1 year notification for the End of Life for the CentOS 4
distribution. The upstream provider will discontinue public updates of
their EL4 product on February 29th, 2012. The CentOS Project will end
support for CentOS 4 on the same date.
CentOS 4, as well as all previously released versions of CentOS, will
continue to be available
2011 Sep 05
0
CESA-2011:1240: Low CentOS 4 i386 and x86_64 EOL Notice
CentOS Errata and Security Advisory CESA-2011:1240:
This is the 6-month notification for the End of Life for the CentOS 4
distribution. The upstream provider will discontinue public updates of
their EL4 product on February 29th, 2012. The CentOS Project will end
support for CentOS 4 on the same date.
CentOS 4, as well as all previously released versions of CentOS, will
continue to be available
2011 Sep 07
0
CentOS-announce Digest, Vol 79, Issue 3
Send CentOS-announce mailing list submissions to
centos-announce at centos.org
To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-announce
or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to
centos-announce-request at centos.org
You can reach the person managing the list at
centos-announce-owner at centos.org
When
2011 Mar 04
0
CentOS-announce Digest, Vol 73, Issue 2
Send CentOS-announce mailing list submissions to
centos-announce at centos.org
To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-announce
or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to
centos-announce-request at centos.org
You can reach the person managing the list at
centos-announce-owner at centos.org
When
2006 May 02
4
Migrate from RHAS 4 to CentOS 4.2
I have a SGI Altix 350 (ia64) that came with RHAS 4, but without any
paid support. I would like to migrate the server over to CentOS.
Here is what I've pieced together from some older posts by Johnny,
can someone confirm this should work? I know this is somewhat
covered in the FAQ, although both entries refer to FC or WBEL, which
already have built-in yum support.
Install the
2005 Jun 22
1
CentOS releases and the new and improved CentOS Vault.
There seems to be some confusion over the way we release CentOS, and the
release cycle.
First, let's define what the upstream provider does.
They released RHEL-2.1 (originally RHAS-2.1), RHEL-3 and RHEL-4. Those
are specific and unique releases. They have the following Maintenance
Phases:
Phase 1: Full Support
Start Date: General Availability
End Date: 2.5 Years from General