Create the devo.repo file in /etc/yum.repos.d/ with the following contents: Code Block |
---|
[devo]
baseurl = https://packages.devo.com/rpms
gpgcheck = 1
gpgkey = https://packages.devo.com/PublicKey
name = Devo Inc. packages |
Update the resources list. Code Block |
---|
sudo yum-config-manager --enable devo |
Create a new adoptium.repo file in /etc/yum.repos.d/ with the following content: Code Block |
---|
[Adoptium]
name=Adoptium
baseurl=https://packages.adoptium.net/artifactory/rpm/centos/7/x86_64
enabled=1
gpgcheck=1
gpgkey=https://packages.adoptium.net/artifactory/api/gpg/key/public |
Note |
---|
This step is only required for CentOS 7 and RHEL 7. |
Install the relay package and the relay command-line interface (CLI) using this command: Code Block |
---|
sudo yum install devo-ng-relay |
Optionally, you can install the devo-monitor package that installs scripts that monitor machine status (CPU, memory, IO traffic) so their values can be sent to the Devo endpoint. The events collected by this package will be available in the box.stat.unix.* tables of your Devo domain. You can install this package using the following commands: Code Block |
---|
sudo yum install initscripts |
Note |
---|
Since RHEL 9, initscripts is not installed by default, and it is required to run devo-monitor. |
and then: Code Block |
---|
sudo yum install devo-monitor |
Note |
---|
It is highly recommended to install the devo-monitor package on your machine since it will help in case you need troubleshooting your relay. |
Now you must configure your relay and then activate it on the Devo platform. See the Devo Relay setup process here. Info |
---|
You can relaunch the set up process at any time after the installation if needed. |
|