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Chapter 1. Red Hat Software Collections 3.7
This chapter serves as an overview of the Red Hat Software Collections 3.7 content set. It provides a list of components and their descriptions, sums up changes in this version, documents relevant compatibility information, and lists known issues.
1.1. About Red Hat Software Collections
For certain applications, more recent versions of some software components are often needed in order to use their latest new features. Red Hat Software Collections is a Red Hat offering that provides a set of dynamic programming languages, database servers, and various related packages that are either more recent than their equivalent versions included in the base Red Hat Enterprise Linux system, or are available for this system for the first time.
Red Hat Software Collections 3.7 is available for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7. For a complete list of components that are distributed as part of Red Hat Software Collections and a brief summary of their features, see Section 1.2, “Main Features”.
Red Hat Software Collections does not replace the default system tools provided with Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7. Instead, a parallel set of tools is installed in the
/opt/
directory and can be optionally enabled per application by the user using the supplied scl
utility. The default versions of Perl or PostgreSQL, for example, remain those provided by the base Red Hat Enterprise Linux system.
Note
In Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8, similar components are provided as Application Streams.
All Red Hat Software Collections components are fully supported under Red Hat Enterprise Linux Subscription Level Agreements, are functionally complete, and are intended for production use. Important bug fix and security errata are issued to Red Hat Software Collections subscribers in a similar manner to Red Hat Enterprise Linux for at least two years from the release of each major version. In each major release stream, each version of a selected component remains backward compatible. For detailed information about length of support for individual components, refer to the Red Hat Software Collections Product Life Cycle document.
1.1.1. Red Hat Developer Toolset
Red Hat Developer Toolset is a part of Red Hat Software Collections, included as a separate Software Collection. For more information about Red Hat Developer Toolset, refer to the Red Hat Developer Toolset Release Notes and the Red Hat Developer Toolset User Guide.
1.2. Main Features
Table 1.1, “Red Hat Software Collections Components” lists components that are supported at the time of the Red Hat Software Collections 3.7 release. All Software Collections are currently supported only on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.
Component | Software Collection | Description |
---|---|---|
Red Hat Developer Toolset 10.1 | devtoolset-10 | Red Hat Developer Toolset is designed for developers working on the Red Hat Enterprise Linux platform. It provides current versions of the GNU Compiler Collection, GNU Debugger, and other development, debugging, and performance monitoring tools. For a complete list of components, see the Red Hat Developer Toolset Components table in the Red Hat Developer Toolset User Guide. |
Perl 5.30.1 | rh-perl530 | A release of Perl, a high-level programming language that is commonly used for system administration utilities and web programming. The rh-perl530 Software Collection provides additional utilities, scripts, and database connectors for MySQL, PostgreSQL, and SQLite. It includes the DateTime Perl module and the mod_perl Apache httpd module, which is supported only with the httpd24 Software Collection. Additionally, it provides the cpanm utility for easy installation of CPAN modules, the LWP::UserAgent module for communicating with the HTTP servers, and the LWP::Protocol::https module for securing the communication. The rh-perl530 packaging is aligned with upstream; the perl530-perl package installs also core modules, while the interpreter is provided by the perl-interpreter package. |
PHP 7.3.20 | rh-php73 | A release of PHP 7.3 with PEAR 1.10.9, APCu 5.1.17, and the Xdebug extension. |
Python 2.7.18 | python27 | A release of Python 2.7 with a number of additional utilities. This Python version provides various features and enhancements, including an ordered dictionary type, faster I/O operations, and improved forward compatibility with Python 3. The python27 Software Collections contains the Python 2.7.13 interpreter, a set of extension libraries useful for programming web applications and mod_wsgi (only supported with the httpd24 Software Collection), MySQL and PostgreSQL database connectors, and numpy and scipy. |
Python 3.8.6 | rh-python38 | The rh-python38 Software Collection contains Python 3.8, which introduces new Python modules, such as contextvars , dataclasses , or importlib.resources , new language features, improved developer experience, and performance improvements. In addition, a set of popular extension libraries is provided, including mod_wsgi (supported only together with the httpd24 Software Collection), numpy, scipy, and the psycopg2 PostgreSQL database connector. |
Ruby 2.6.7 | rh-ruby26 | A release of Ruby 2.6. This version provides multiple performance improvements and new features, such as endless ranges, the Binding#source_location method, and the $SAFE process global state. Ruby 2.6.0 maintains source-level backward compatibility with Ruby 2.5. |
Ruby 2.7.3 | rh-ruby27 | A release of Ruby 2.7. This version provides multiple performance improvements and new features, such as Compaction GC or command-line interface for the LALR(1) parser generator, and an enhancement to REPL. Ruby 2.7 maintains source-level backward compatibility with Ruby 2.6. |
Ruby 3.0.1 | rh-ruby30 | A release of Ruby 3.0. This version provides multiple performance improvements and new features, such as Ractor, Fiber Scheduler and the RBS language. Ruby 3.0 maintains source-level backward compatibility with Ruby 2.7. |
MariaDB 10.3.27 | rh-mariadb103 | A release of MariaDB, an alternative to MySQL for users of Red Hat Enterprise Linux. For all practical purposes, MySQL is binary compatible with MariaDB and can be replaced with it without any data conversions. This version introduces system-versioned tables, invisible columns, a new instant ADD COLUMN operation for InnoDB , and a JDBC connector for MariaDB and MySQL. |
MariaDB 10.5.9 | rh-mariadb105 | A release of MariaDB, an alternative to MySQL for users of Red Hat Enterprise Linux. For all practical purposes, MySQL is binary compatible with MariaDB and can be replaced with it without any data conversions. This version includes various new features, MariaDB Galera Cluster upgraded to version 4, and PAM plug-in version 2.0. |
MySQL 8.0.21 | rh-mysql80 | A release of the MySQL server, which introduces a number of new security and account management features and enhancements. |
PostgreSQL 10.15 | rh-postgresql10 | A release of PostgreSQL, which includes a significant performance improvement and a number of new features, such as logical replication using the publish and subscribe keywords, or stronger password authentication based on the SCRAM-SHA-256 mechanism. |
PostgreSQL 12.5 | rh-postgresql12 | A release of PostgreSQL, which provides the pgaudit extension, various enhancements to partitioning and parallelism, support for the SQL/JSON path language, and performance improvements. |
PostgreSQL 13.2 | rh-postgresql13 | A release of PostgreSQL, which enables improved query planning and introduces various performance improvements and two new packages, pg_repack and plpython3. |
Node.js 12.21.0 | rh-nodejs12 | A release of Node.js with V8 engine version 7.6, support for ES6 modules, and improved support for native modules. |
Node.js 14.16.0 | rh-nodejs14 | A release of Node.js with V8 version 8.3, a new experimental WebAssembly System Interface (WASI), and a new experimental Async Local Storage API. |
nginx 1.16.1 | rh-nginx116 | A release of nginx, a web and proxy server with a focus on high concurrency, performance, and low memory usage. This version introduces numerous updates related to SSL, several new directives and parameters, and various enhancements. |
nginx 1.18.0 | rh-nginx118 | A release of nginx, a web and proxy server with a focus on high concurrency, performance, and low memory usage. This version introduces enhancements to HTTP request rate and connection limiting, and a new auth_delay directive. In addition, support for new variables has been added to multiple directives. |
Apache httpd 2.4.34 | httpd24 | A release of the Apache HTTP Server (httpd), including a high performance event-based processing model, enhanced SSL module and FastCGI support. The mod_auth_kerb, mod_auth_mellon, and ModSecurity modules are also included. |
Varnish Cache 6.0.6 | rh-varnish6 | A release of Varnish Cache, a high-performance HTTP reverse proxy. This version includes support for Unix Domain Sockets (both for clients and for back-end servers), new level of the VCL language (vcl 4.1 ), and improved HTTP/2 support. |
Maven 3.6.1 | rh-maven36 | A release of Maven, a software project management and comprehension tool. This release provides various enhancements and bug fixes. |
Git 2.27.0 | rh-git227 | A release of Git, a distributed revision control system with a decentralized architecture. As opposed to centralized version control systems with a client-server model, Git ensures that each working copy of a Git repository is its exact copy with complete revision history. This version introduces numerous enhancements; for example, the git checkout command split into git switch and git restore , and changed behavior of the git rebase command. In addition, Git Large File Storage (LFS) has been updated to version 2.11.0. |
Redis 5.0.5 | rh-redis5 | A release of Redis 5.0, a persistent key-value database. Redis now provides redis-trib , a cluster management tool. |
HAProxy 1.8.24 | rh-haproxy18 | A release of HAProxy 1.8, a reliable, high-performance network load balancer for TCP and HTTP-based applications. |
JDK Mission Control 8.0.0 | rh-jmc | This Software Collection includes JDK Mission Control (JMC), a powerful profiler for HotSpot JVMs. JMC provides an advanced set of tools for efficient and detailed analysis of extensive data collected by the JDK Flight Recorder. JMC requires JDK version 11 or later to run. Target Java applications must run with at least OpenJDK version 8 so that JMC can access JDK Flight Recorder features. The rh-jmc Software Collection requires the rh-maven36 Software Collection. |
Previously released Software Collections remain available in the same distribution channels. All Software Collections, including retired components, are listed in the Table 1.2, “All Available Software Collections”. Software Collections that are no longer supported are marked with an asterisk (
*
).
See the Red Hat Software Collections Product Life Cycle document for information on the length of support for individual components. For detailed information regarding previously released components, refer to the Release Notes for earlier versions of Red Hat Software Collections.
Component | Software Collection | Availability | Architectures supported on RHEL7 |
---|---|---|---|
Components New in Red Hat Software Collections 3.7 | |||
MariaDB 10.5.9 | rh-mariadb105 | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, ppc64le |
PostgreSQL 13.2 | rh-postgresql13 | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, ppc64le |
Ruby 3.0.1 | rh-ruby30 | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, ppc64le |
Components Updated in Red Hat Software Collections 3.7 | |||
---|---|---|---|
Red Hat Developer Toolset 10.1 | devtoolset-10 | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, ppc64, ppc64le |
JDK Mission Control 8.0.0 | rh-jmc | RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Ruby 2.7.3 | rh-ruby27 | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
Ruby 2.6.7 | rh-ruby26 | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
Components Last Updated in Red Hat Software Collections 3.6 | |||
---|---|---|---|
Git 2.27.0 | rh-git227 | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, ppc64le |
nginx 1.18.0 | rh-nginx118 | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, ppc64le |
Node.js 14.16.0 | rh-nodejs14 | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, ppc64le |
Apache httpd 2.4.34 | httpd24 | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
PHP 7.3.20 | rh-php73 | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
HAProxy 1.8.24 | rh-haproxy18 | RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Perl 5.30.1 | rh-perl530 | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
Ruby 2.5.9 | rh-ruby25* | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
Components Last Updated in Red Hat Software Collections 3.5 | |||
---|---|---|---|
Red Hat Developer Toolset 9.1 | devtoolset-9 | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64, ppc64le |
Python 3.8.6 | rh-python38 | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
Varnish Cache 6.0.6 | rh-varnish6 | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
Apache httpd 2.4.34 (the last update for RHEL6) | httpd24 (RHEL6)* | RHEL6 | x86_64 |
Components Last Updated in Red Hat Software Collections 3.4 | |||
---|---|---|---|
Node.js 12.21.0 | rh-nodejs12 | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
nginx 1.16.1 | rh-nginx116 | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
PostgreSQL 12.5 | rh-postgresql12 | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
Maven 3.6.1 | rh-maven36 | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
Components Last Updated in Red Hat Software Collections 3.3 | |||
---|---|---|---|
Red Hat Developer Toolset 8.1 | devtoolset-8* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64, ppc64le |
MariaDB 10.3.27 | rh-mariadb103 | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
Redis 5.0.5 | rh-redis5 | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
Components Last Updated in Red Hat Software Collections 3.2 | |||
---|---|---|---|
PHP 7.2.24 | rh-php72* | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
MySQL 8.0.21 | rh-mysql80 | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
Node.js 10.21.0 | rh-nodejs10* | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
nginx 1.14.1 | rh-nginx114* | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
Git 2.18.4 | rh-git218* | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
Components Last Updated in Red Hat Software Collections 3.1 | |||
---|---|---|---|
Red Hat Developer Toolset 7.1 | devtoolset-7* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64, ppc64le |
Perl 5.26.3 | rh-perl526* | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
MongoDB 3.6.3 | rh-mongodb36* | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
Varnish Cache 5.2.1 | rh-varnish5* | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
PostgreSQL 10.15 | rh-postgresql10 | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
PHP 7.0.27 | rh-php70* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
MySQL 5.7.24 | rh-mysql57* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
Components Last Updated in Red Hat Software Collections 3.0 | |||
---|---|---|---|
PHP 7.1.8 | rh-php71* | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
nginx 1.12.1 | rh-nginx112* | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
Python 3.6.12 | rh-python36* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
Maven 3.5.0 | rh-maven35* | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
MariaDB 10.2.22 | rh-mariadb102* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
PostgreSQL 9.6.19 | rh-postgresql96* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
MongoDB 3.4.9 | rh-mongodb34* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
Node.js 8.11.4 | rh-nodejs8* | RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
Components Last Updated in Red Hat Software Collections 2.4 | |||
---|---|---|---|
Red Hat Developer Toolset 6.1 | devtoolset-6* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64, ppc64le |
Scala 2.10.6 | rh-scala210* | RHEL7 | x86_64 |
nginx 1.10.2 | rh-nginx110* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Node.js 6.11.3 | rh-nodejs6* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
Ruby 2.4.6 | rh-ruby24* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Ruby on Rails 5.0.1 | rh-ror50* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Eclipse 4.6.3 | rh-eclipse46* | RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Python 2.7.18 | python27 | RHEL6*, RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
Thermostat 1.6.6 | rh-thermostat16* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Maven 3.3.9 | rh-maven33* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Common Java Packages | rh-java-common* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Components Last Updated in Red Hat Software Collections 2.3 | |||
---|---|---|---|
Git 2.9.3 | rh-git29* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64, s390x, aarch64, ppc64le |
Redis 3.2.4 | rh-redis32* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Perl 5.24.0 | rh-perl524* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Python 3.5.1 | rh-python35* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
MongoDB 3.2.10 | rh-mongodb32* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Ruby 2.3.8 | rh-ruby23* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
PHP 5.6.25 | rh-php56* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Components Last Updated in Red Hat Software Collections 2.2 | |||
---|---|---|---|
Red Hat Developer Toolset 4.1 | devtoolset-4* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
MariaDB 10.1.29 | rh-mariadb101* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
MongoDB 3.0.11 upgrade collection | rh-mongodb30upg* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Node.js 4.6.2 | rh-nodejs4* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
PostgreSQL 9.5.14 | rh-postgresql95* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Ruby on Rails 4.2.6 | rh-ror42* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
MongoDB 2.6.9 | rh-mongodb26* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Thermostat 1.4.4 | thermostat1* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Components Last Updated in Red Hat Software Collections 2.1 | |||
---|---|---|---|
Varnish Cache 4.0.3 | rh-varnish4* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
nginx 1.8.1 | rh-nginx18* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Node.js 0.10 | nodejs010* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Maven 3.0.5 | maven30* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
V8 3.14.5.10 | v8314* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Components Last Updated in Red Hat Software Collections 2.0 | |||
---|---|---|---|
Red Hat Developer Toolset 3.1 | devtoolset-3* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Perl 5.20.1 | rh-perl520* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Python 3.4.2 | rh-python34* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Ruby 2.2.9 | rh-ruby22* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Ruby on Rails 4.1.5 | rh-ror41* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
MariaDB 10.0.33 | rh-mariadb100* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
MySQL 5.6.40 | rh-mysql56* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
PostgreSQL 9.4.14 | rh-postgresql94* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Passenger 4.0.50 | rh-passenger40* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
PHP 5.4.40 | php54* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
PHP 5.5.21 | php55* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
nginx 1.6.2 | nginx16* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
DevAssistant 0.9.3 | devassist09* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Components Last Updated in Red Hat Software Collections 1 | |||
---|---|---|---|
Git 1.9.4 | git19* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Perl 5.16.3 | perl516* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Python 3.3.2 | python33* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Ruby 1.9.3 | ruby193* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Ruby 2.0.0 | ruby200* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Ruby on Rails 4.0.2 | ror40* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
MariaDB 5.5.53 | mariadb55* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
MongoDB 2.4.9 | mongodb24* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
MySQL 5.5.52 | mysql55* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
PostgreSQL 9.2.18 | postgresql92* | RHEL6, RHEL7 | x86_64 |
Legend:
- RHEL6 – Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6
- RHEL7 – Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7
- x86_64 – AMD and Intel 64-bit architectures
- s390x – The 64-bit IBM Z architecture
- aarch64 – The 64-bit ARM architecture
- ppc64 – IBM POWER, big endian
- ppc64le – IBM POWER, little endian
- * – Retired component; this Software Collection is no longer supported
The tables above list the latest versions available through asynchronous updates.
Note that Software Collections released in Red Hat Software Collections 2.0 and later include a
rh-
prefix in their names.
Eclipse is available as a part of the Red Hat Developer Tools offering.
1.3. Changes in Red Hat Software Collections 3.7
1.3.1. Overview
Architectures
The Red Hat Software Collections offering contains packages for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 running on the following architectures:
- AMD and Intel 64-bit architectures
- 64-bit IBM Z
- IBM POWER, little endian
For a full list of components and their availability, see Table 1.2, “All Available Software Collections”.
New Software Collections
Red Hat Software Collections 3.7 adds the following new Software Collections:
- rh-mariadb105 — see Section 1.3.3, “Changes in MariaDB”
- rh-postgresql13 — see Section 1.3.4, “Changes in PostgreSQL”
- rh-ruby30 — see Section 1.3.5, “Changes in Ruby”
All new Software Collections are available only for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.
Updated Software Collections
The following components has been updated in Red Hat Software Collections 3.7:
- devtoolset-10 — see Section 1.3.2, “Changes in Red Hat Developer Toolset”
- rh-jmc — see Section 1.3.6, “Changes in JDK Mission Control”
- rh-ruby27 — see Section 1.3.5, “Changes in Ruby”
- rh-ruby26 — see Section 1.3.5, “Changes in Ruby”
In addition, a new package, rh-postgresql12-pg_repack is now available for PostgreSQL 12.
Red Hat Software Collections Container Images
The following container images are new in Red Hat Software Collections 3.7:
- rhscl/mariadb-105-rhel7
- rhscl/postgresql-13-rhel7
- rhscl/ruby-30-rhel7
The following container images have been updated in Red Hat Software Collections 3.7
- rhscl/devtoolset-10-toolchain-rhel7
- rhscl/devtoolset-10-perftools-rhel7
- rhscl/ruby-27-rhel7
- rhscl/ruby-26-rhel7
For more information about Red Hat Software Collections container images, see Section 3.4, “Red Hat Software Collections Container Images”.
1.3.2. Changes in Red Hat Developer Toolset
The following components have been upgraded in Red Hat Developer Toolset 10.1 compared to the previous release:
- SystemTap to version 4.4
- Dyninst to version 10.2.1
- elfutils to version 0.182
In addition, bug fix updates are available for the following components:
- GCC
- GDB
- binutils
- annobin
For detailed information on changes in 10.1, see the Red Hat Developer Toolset User Guide.
1.3.3. Changes in MariaDB
The new rh-mariadb105 Software Collection provides MariaDB 10.5.9.
Notable enhancements over the previously available version 10.3 include:
- MariaDB now uses the
unix_socket
authentication plug-in by default. The plug-in enables users to use operating system credentials when connecting to MariaDB through the local Unix socket file. - MariaDB supports a new
FLUSH SSL
command to reload SSL certificates without a server restart. - MariaDB adds
mariadb-*
named binaries andmysql*
symbolic links pointing to themariadb-*
binaires. For example, themysqladmin
,mysqlaccess
, andmysqlshow
symlinks point to themariadb-admin
,mariadb-access
, andmariadb-show
binaries, respectively. - MariaDB supports a new
INET6
data type for storing IPv6 addresses. - MariaDB now uses the Perl Compatible Regular Expressions (PCRE) library version 2.
- The
SUPER
privilege has been split into several privileges to better align with each user role. As a result, certain statements have changed required privileges. - MariaDB adds a new global variable,
binlog_row_metadata
, as well as system variables and status variables to control the amount of metadata logged. - The default value of the
eq_range_index_dive_limit
variable has been changed from0
to200
. - A new
SHUTDOWN WAIT FOR ALL SLAVES
server command and a newmysqladmin shutdown --wait-for-all-slaves
option have been added to instruct the server to shut down only after the last binlog event has been sent to all connected replicas. - In parallel replication, the
slave_parallel_mode
variable now defaults tooptimistic
.
The InnoDB storage engine introduces the following changes:
- InnoDB now supports an instant
DROP COLUMN
operation and enables users to change the column order. - Defaults of the following variables have been changed:
innodb_adaptive_hash_index
toOFF
andinnodb_checksum_algorithm
tofull_crc32
. - Several InnoDB variables have been removed or deprecated.
MariaDB Galera Cluster has been upgraded to version 4 with the following notable changes:
- Galera adds a new streaming replication feature, which supports replicating transactions of unlimited size. During an execution of streaming replication, a cluster replicates a transaction in small fragments.
- Galera now fully supports Global Transaction ID (GTID).
- The default value for the
wsrep_on
option in the/etc/my.cnf.d/galera.cnf
file has changed from1
to0
to prevent end users from startingwsrep
replication without configuring required additional options.
Changes to the PAM plug-in in MariaDB 10.5 include:
- MariaDB 10.5 adds a new version of the Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM) plug-in. The PAM plug-in version 2.0 performs PAM authentication using a separate
setuid root
helper binary, which enables MariaDB to utilize additional PAM modules. - In MariaDB 10.5, the Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM) plug-in and its related files have been moved to a new subpackage, mariadb-pam. This subpackage contains both PAM plug-in versions: version 2.0 is the default, and version 1.0 is available as the
auth_pam_v1
shared object library. - The rh-mariadb105-mariadb-pam package is not installed by default with the MariaDB server. To make the PAM authentication plug-in available in MariaDB 10.5, install the rh-mariadb105-mariadb-pam package manually.
The rh-mariadb105 Software Collection includes the rh-mariadb105-syspaths package, which installs packages that provide system-wide wrappers for binaries, scripts, manual pages, and other. After installing the rh-mariadb105*-syspaths packages, users are not required to use the
scl enable
command for correct functioning of the binaries and scripts provided by the rh-mariadb105* packages. Note that the *-syspaths packages conflict with the corresponding packages from the base Red Hat Enterprise Linux system. To find out more about syspaths, see the Red Hat Software Collections Packaging Guide.
For compatibility notes and migration instructions, see Section 5.1, “Migrating to MariaDB 10.5”.
For detailed changes in MariaDB 10.5, see the upstream documentation.
1.3.4. Changes in PostgreSQL
The new rh-postgresql13 Software Collection includes PostgreSQL 13.2. This release introduces various enhancements over version 12, such as:
- Performance improvements resulting from de-duplication of B-tree index entries
- Improved performance for queries that use aggregates or partitioned tables
- Improved query planning when using extended statistics
- Parallelized vacuuming of indexes
- Incremental sorting
For detailed changes, see the upstream release notes for PostgreSQL 13.
The following new subpackages are available with the rh-postgresql13 Software Collection:
- The pg_repack package provides a PostgreSQL extension that lets you remove bloat from tables and indexes, and optionally restore the physical order of clustered indexes. For details, see the upstream documentation regarding usage and examples.The pg_repack subpackage is now available also for the rh-postgresql12 Software Collection.
- The plpython3 package provides the
PL/Python
procedural language extension based on Python 3.PL/Python
enables you to write PostgreSQL functions in the Python programming language. For details, see the upstream documentation.Previously released PostgreSQL Software Collections include only the plpython package based on Python 2. Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 provides only plpython3. The rh-postgresql13 Software Collection includes both plpython and plpython3, so that you can migrate to plpython3 before upgrading to Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8.
In addition, the rh-postgresql13 Software Collection includes the rh-postgresql13-syspaths package, which installs packages that provide system-wide wrappers for binaries, scripts, manual pages, and others. After installing the rh-postgresql13*-syspaths packages, users are not required to use the
scl enable
command for correct functioning of the binaries and scripts provided by the rh-postgresql13* packages. Note that the *-syspaths packages conflict with the corresponding packages from the base Red Hat Enterprise Linux system. To find out more about syspaths, see the Red Hat Software Collections Packaging Guide.
Note that support for Just-In-Time (JIT) compilation, available in upstream since PostgreSQL 11, is not provided by the rh-postgresql13 Software Collection.
For information on migration, see Section 5.3, “Migrating to PostgreSQL 13”.
1.3.5. Changes in Ruby
The new rh-ruby30 Software Collection provides Ruby 3.0.1, which introduces a number of performance improvements, bug fixes, and new features.
Notable enhancements include:
- Concurrency and parallelism features:
- Ractor, an Actor-model abstraction that provides thread-safe parallel execution, is provided as an experimental feature.
- Fiber Scheduler has been introduced as an experimental feature. Fiber Scheduler intercepts blocking operations, which enables light-weight concurrency without changing existing code.
- Static analysis features:
- The RBS language has been introduced, which describes the structure of Ruby programs. The
rbs
gem has been added to parse type definitions written in RBS. - The TypeProf utility has been introduced, which is a type analysis tool for Ruby code.
- Pattern matching with the
case
/in
expression is no longer experimental. - One-line pattern matching has been redesigned as an experimental feature.
- Find pattern has been added as an experimental feature.
The following performance improvements have been implemented:
- Pasting long code to the Interactive Ruby Shell (IRB) is now significantly faster.
- The
measure
command has been added to IRB for time measurement.
Other notable changes include:
- Keyword arguments have been separated from other arguments, see the upstream documentation for details.
- The default directory for user-installed gems is now
$HOME/.local/share/gem/
unless the$HOME/.gem/
directory is already present.
For more information about changes in Ruby 3.0, see the upstream announcement for version 3.0.0 and 3.0.1.
The rh-ruby27 and rh-ruby26 Software Collections have been updated with security and bug fixes.
1.3.6. Changes in JDK Mission Control
JDK Mission Control (JMC), provided by the rh-jmc Software Collection, has been upgraded from version 7.1.1 to version 8.0.0. Notable enhancements include:
- The
Treemap
viewer has been added to theJOverflow
plug-in for visualizing memory usage by classes. - The
Threads
graph has been enhanced with more filtering and zoom options. - JDK Mission Control now provides support for opening JDK Flight Recorder recordings compressed with the LZ4 algorithm.
- New columns have been added to the
Memory
andTLAB
views to help you identify areas of allocation pressure. Graph
view has been added to improve visualization of stack traces.- The
Percentage
column has been added to histogram tables.
For more information, see the upstream release notes.
1.4. Compatibility Information
Red Hat Software Collections 3.7 is available for all supported releases of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 on AMD and Intel 64-bit architectures, 64-bit IBM Z, and IBM POWER, little endian.
Certain previously released components are available also for the 64-bit ARM architecture.
For a full list of available components, see Table 1.2, “All Available Software Collections”.
1.5. Known Issues
rh-mariadb105
component, BZ#1942526- When the
OQGraph
storage engine plug-in is loaded to the MariaDB 10.5 server, MariaDB does not warn about dropping a non-existent table. In particular, when the user attempts to drop a non-existent table using theDROP TABLE
orDROP TABLE IF EXISTS
SQL commands, MariaDB neither returns an error message nor logs a warning.Note that theOQGraph
plug-in is provided by the mariadb-oqgraph-engine package, which is not installed by default. rh-mariadb
component- The rh-mariadb103 Software Collection provides the Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM) plug-in version 1.0. The rh-mariadb105 Software Collection provides the plug-in versions 1.0 and 2.0, version 2.0 is the default. The PAM plug-in version 1.0 in MariaDB does not work. To work around this problem, use the PAM plug-in version 2.0 provided by rh-mariadb105.
rh-ruby27
component, BZ#1836201- When a custom script requires the Psych YAML parser and afterwards uses the
Gem.load_yaml
method, running the script fails with the following error message:superclass mismatch for class Mark (TypeError)
To work around this problem, add thegem 'psych'
line to the script somewhere above therequire 'psych'
line:... gem 'psych' ... require 'psych' Gem.load_yaml
- multiple components, BZ#1716378
- Certain files provided by the Software Collections debuginfo packages might conflict with the corresponding debuginfo package files from the base Red Hat Enterprise Linux system or from other versions of Red Hat Software Collections components. For example, the python27-python-debuginfo package files might conflict with the corresponding files from the python-debuginfo package installed on the core system. Similarly, files from the httpd24-mod_auth_mellon-debuginfo package might conflict with similar files provided by the base system mod_auth_mellon-debuginfo package. To work around this problem, uninstall the base system debuginfo package prior to installing the Software Collection debuginfo package.
rh-mysql80
component, BZ#1646363- The
mysql-connector-java
database connector does not work with the MySQL 8.0 server. To work around this problem, use themariadb-java-client
database connector from the rh-mariadb103 Software Collection. rh-mysql80
component, BZ#1646158- The default character set has been changed to
utf8mb4
in MySQL 8.0 but this character set is unsupported by thephp-mysqlnd
database connector. Consequently,php-mysqlnd
fails to connect in the default configuration. To work around this problem, specify a known character set as a parameter of the MySQL server configuration. For example, modify the/etc/opt/rh/rh-mysql80/my.cnf.d/mysql-server.cnf
file to read:[mysqld] character-set-server=utf8
httpd24
component, BZ#1429006- Since httpd 2.4.27, the
mod_http2
module is no longer supported with the defaultprefork
Multi-Processing Module (MPM). To enable HTTP/2 support, edit the configuration file at/opt/rh/httpd24/root/etc/httpd/conf.modules.d/00-mpm.conf
and switch to theevent
orworker
MPM.Note that the HTTP/2 server-push feature does not work on the 64-bit ARM architecture, 64-bit IBM Z, and IBM POWER, little endian. -
httpd24
component, BZ#1224763 - When using the
mod_proxy_fcgi
module with FastCGI Process Manager (PHP-FPM), httpd uses port8000
for the FastCGI protocol by default instead of the correct port9000
. To work around this problem, specify the correct port explicitly in configuration. httpd24
component, BZ#1382706- When SELinux is enabled, the
LD_LIBRARY_PATH
environment variable is not passed through to CGI scripts invoked by httpd. As a consequence, in some cases it is impossible to invoke executables from Software Collections enabled in the/opt/rh/httpd24/service-environment
file from CGI scripts run by httpd. To work around this problem, setLD_LIBRARY_PATH
as desired from within the CGI script. -
httpd24
component - Compiling external applications against the Apache Portable Runtime (APR) and APR-util libraries from the httpd24 Software Collection is not supported. The LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable is not set in httpd24 because it is not required by any application in this Software Collection.
scl-utils
component- In Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.5 and earlier, due to an architecture-specific macro bug in the scl-utils package, the
<collection>/root/usr/lib64/
directory does not have the correct package ownership on the 64-bit ARM architecture and on IBM POWER, little endian. As a consequence, this directory is not removed when a Software Collection is uninstalled. To work around this problem, manually delete<collection>/root/usr/lib64/
when removing a Software Collection. maven
component- When the user has installed both the Red Hat Enterprise Linux system version of maven-local package and the rh-maven*-maven-local package, XMvn, a tool used for building Java RPM packages, run from the Maven Software Collection tries to read the configuration file from the base system and fails. To work around this problem, uninstall the maven-local package from the base Red Hat Enterprise Linux system.
-
perl
component - It is impossible to install more than one
mod_perl.so
library. As a consequence, it is not possible to use themod_perl
module from more than one Perl Software Collection. -
httpd
,mariadb
,mysql
,nodejs
,perl
,php
,python
, andruby
components, BZ#1072319 - When uninstalling the httpd24, rh-mariadb*, rh-mysql*, rh-nodejs*, rh-perl*, rh-php*, python27, rh-python*, or rh-ruby* packages, the order of uninstalling can be relevant due to ownership of dependent packages. As a consequence, some directories and files might not be removed properly and might remain on the system.
-
mariadb
,mysql
components, BZ#1194611 - Since MariaDB 10 and MySQL 5.6, the rh-mariadb*-mariadb-server and rh-mysql*-mysql-server packages no longer provide the
test
database by default. Although this database is not created during initialization, the grant tables are prefilled with the same values as whentest
was created by default. As a consequence, upon a later creation of thetest
ortest_*
databases, these databases have less restricted access rights than is default for new databases.Additionally, when running benchmarks, therun-all-tests
script no longer works out of the box with example parameters. You need to create a test database before running the tests and specify the database name in the--database
parameter. If the parameter is not specified,test
is taken by default but you need to make sure thetest
database exist. -
mariadb
,mysql
,postgresql
components - Red Hat Software Collections contains the MySQL 8.0, MariaDB 10.3, MariaDB 10.5, PostgreSQL 10, PostgreSQL 12, and PostgreSQL 13 database servers. The core Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 provides earlier versions of the MariaDB and PostgreSQL databases (client library and daemon). Client libraries are also used in database connectors for dynamic languages, libraries, and so on.The client library packaged in the Red Hat Software Collections database packages in the PostgreSQL component is not supposed to be used, as it is included only for purposes of server utilities and the daemon. Users are instead expected to use the system library and the database connectors provided with the core system.A protocol, which is used between the client library and the daemon, is stable across database versions, so, for example, using the PostgreSQL 10 client library with the PostgreSQL 12 or 13 daemon works as expected.
-
mariadb
,mysql
components - MariaDB and MySQL do not make use of the
/opt/provider/collection/root
prefix when creating log files. Note that log files are saved in the/var/opt/provider/collection/log/
directory, not in/opt/provider/collection/root/var/log/
.
1.6. Other Notes
-
rh-ruby*
,rh-python*
,rh-php*
components - Using Software Collections on a read-only NFS has several limitations.
- Ruby gems cannot be installed while the rh-ruby* Software Collection is on a read-only NFS. Consequently, for example, when the user tries to install the ab gem using the
gem install ab
command, an error message is displayed, for example:ERROR: While executing gem ... (Errno::EROFS) Read-only file system @ dir_s_mkdir - /opt/rh/rh-ruby22/root/usr/local/share/gems
The same problem occurs when the user tries to update or install gems from an external source by running thebundle update
orbundle install
commands. - When installing Python packages on a read-only NFS using the Python Package Index (PyPI), running the
pip
command fails with an error message similar to this:Read-only file system: '/opt/rh/rh-python34/root/usr/lib/python3.4/site-packages/ipython-3.1.0.dist-info'
- Installing packages from PHP Extension and Application Repository (PEAR) on a read-only NFS using the
pear
command fails with the error message:Cannot install, php_dir for channel "pear.php.net" is not writeable by the current user
This is an expected behavior. -
httpd
component - Language modules for Apache are supported only with the Red Hat Software Collections version of Apache httpd and not with the Red Hat Enterprise Linux system versions of httpd. For example, the
mod_wsgi
module from the rh-python35 Collection can be used only with the httpd24 Collection. - all components
- Since Red Hat Software Collections 2.0, configuration files, variable data, and runtime data of individual Collections are stored in different directories than in previous versions of Red Hat Software Collections.
-
coreutils
,util-linux
,screen
components - Some utilities, for example, su, login, or screen, do not export environment settings in all cases, which can lead to unexpected results. It is therefore recommended to use sudo instead of su and set the
env_keep
environment variable in the/etc/sudoers
file. Alternatively, you can run commands in a reverse order; for example:su -l postgres -c "scl enable rh-postgresql94 psql"
instead ofscl enable rh-postgresql94 bash
su -l postgres -c psql
When using tools like screen or login, you can use the following command to preserve the environment settings:source /opt/rh/<collection_name>/enable
-
python
component - When the user tries to install more than one scldevel package from the python27 and rh-python* Software Collections, a transaction check error message is returned. This is an expected behavior because the user can install only one set of the macro files provided by the packages (
%scl_python
,%scl_prefix_python
). -
php
component - When the user tries to install more than one scldevel package from the rh-php* Software Collections, a transaction check error message is returned. This is an expected behavior because the user can install only one set of the macro files provided by the packages (
%scl_php
,%scl_prefix_php
). -
ruby
component - When the user tries to install more than one scldevel package from the rh-ruby* Software Collections, a transaction check error message is returned. This is an expected behavior because the user can install only one set of the macro files provided by the packages (
%scl_ruby
,%scl_prefix_ruby
). -
perl
component - When the user tries to install more than one scldevel package from the rh-perl* Software Collections, a transaction check error message is returned. This is an expected behavior because the user can install only one set of the macro files provided by the packages (
%scl_perl
,%scl_prefix_perl
). -
nginx
component - When the user tries to install more than one scldevel package from the rh-nginx* Software Collections, a transaction check error message is returned. This is an expected behavior because the user can install only one set of the macro files provided by the packages (
%scl_nginx
,%scl_prefix_nginx
). -
python
component - To mitigate the Web Cache Poisoning CVE-2021-23336 in the Python
urllib
library, the default separator for theurllib.parse.parse_qsl
andurllib.parse.parse_qs
functions is being changed from both ampersand (&
) and semicolon (;
) to only an ampersand.This change has been implemented in the python27 and rh-python38 Software Collections with the release of the RHSA-2021:3252 and RHSA-2021:3254 advisories.The change of the default separator is potentially backwards incompatible, therefore Red Hat provides a way to configure the behavior in Python packages where the default separator has been changed. In addition, the affectedurllib
parsing functions issue a warning if they detect that a customer's application has been affected by the change.For more information, see the Mitigation of Web Cache Poisoning in the Python urllib library (CVE-2021-23336) Knowledgebase article. -
python
component - The release of the RHSA-2021:3254 advisory introduces the following change in the rh-python38 Software Collection:To mitigate CVE-2021-29921, the Python
ipaddress
module now rejects IPv4 addresses with leading zeros with anAddressValueError: Leading zeros are not permitted
error.Customers who rely on the previous behavior can pre-process their IPv4 address inputs to strip the leading zeros off. For example:>>> def reformat_ip(address): return '.'.join(part.lstrip('0') if part != '0' else part for part in address.split('.')) >>> reformat_ip('0127.0.0.1') '127.0.0.1'
To strip the leading zeros off with an explicit loop for readability, use:def reformat_ip(address): parts = [] for part in address.split('.'): if part != "0": part = part.lstrip('0') parts.append(part) return '.'.join(parts)
1.7. Deprecated Functionality
httpd24
component, BZ#1434053- Previously, in an SSL/TLS configuration requiring name-based SSL virtual host selection, the
mod_ssl
module rejected requests with a400 Bad Request
error, if the host name provided in theHost:
header did not match the host name provided in a Server Name Indication (SNI) header. Such requests are no longer rejected if the configured SSL/TLS security parameters are identical between the selected virtual hosts, in-line with the behavior of upstreammod_ssl
.