I am trying to install postgre into
my linux machine (Linux ip-172-31-35-138 4.9.70-22.55.amzn1.x86_64 #1 SMP
Wed Dec 20 23:36:28 UTC 2017 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux),
I have downloaded the pgdg-redhat10-10-2.noarch.rpm
first of all I don't find this below
configuration file:
/etc/yum/pluginconf.d/rhnplugin.conf
[ec2-user@ip-172-31-35-138 ~]$ ls /etc/yum/pluginconf.d priorities.conf update-motd.conf
upgrade-helper.conf
I ran, sudo yum install pgdg-redhat10-10-2.noarch.rpm.----------------->
successfully completed
I am getting the error for these below
commands:
Install the client packages:
yum install postgresql10
Optionally install the server packages:
yum install postgresql10-server
Optionally initialize the database and
enable automatic start:
service postgresql-10 initdb chkconfig postgresql-10 on service postgresql-10 start
I am getting an below error, while executing
the above commands: [ec2-user@ip-172-31-35-138 ~]$ sudo
yum install postgresql10 Loaded plugins: priorities, update-motd,
upgrade-helper amzn-main
| 2.1 kB
00:00:00 amzn-updates
| 2.5 kB 00:00:00 https://download.postgresql.org/pub/repos/yum/10/redhat/rhel-latest-x86_64/repodata/repomd.xml:[Errno 14] HTTPS Error 404 - Not Found Trying other mirror. To address this issue please refer to
the below knowledge base article
If above article doesn't help to resolve
this issue please open a ticket with Red Hat Support.
One of the configured repositories
failed (PostgreSQL 10 latest - x86_64), and yum doesn't have enough cached
data to continue. At this point the only safe thing yum can do is fail.
There are a few ways to work "fix" this:
1. Contact the upstream
for the repository and get them to fix the problem.
2. Reconfigure the
baseurl/etc. for the repository, to point to a working upstream.
This is most often useful if you are using a newer distribution
release than is supported by the repository (and the packages
for the previous distribution release still work).
3. Disable the repository,
so yum won't use it by default. Yum will then just ignore
the repository until you permanently enable it again or use --enablerepo
for temporary usage:
yum-config-manager --disable pgdg10
4. Configure the
failing repository to be skipped, if it is unavailable. Note that
yum will try to contact the repo. when it runs most commands, so will
have to try and fail each time (and thus. yum will be be much slower).
If it is a very temporary problem though, this is often a nice compromise: