Create the devo.repo file in /etc/yum.repos.d/ with the following contents: Code Block |
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[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 |
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sudo yum-config-manager --enable devo |
Create a new adoptium.repo file in /etc/yum.repos.d/ with the following content: Code Block |
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[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 |
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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 |
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sudo yum install devo-ng-relay |
Optionally, you can install thedevo-monitor package that installs scripts to monitor machine status (CPU, memory, IO traffic). 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 |
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sudo yum install initscripts | Note |
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For versions RHEL 9 or higher initscripts is not installed by default, and it is required to run devo-monitor . |
and then: Code Block |
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sudo yum install devo-monitor |
Note |
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It is highly recommended to install the devo-monitor package on your machine since it will help in case you need to troubleshoot your relay. |
Now you must configure your relay and then activate it on the Devo platform. See the Devo Relay setup process here. Info |
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You can relaunch the set up process at any time after the installation if needed. |
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