Recent Projects

eclipseo/avif

Avif support, include GTK and QT apps

xsnrg/indi-3rdparty-bleeding

3rd-party driver builds straight out of git
  • Fedora 38 : aarch64, x86_64
  • Fedora 39 : aarch64, x86_64
  • Fedora 40 : aarch64, x86_64
  • Fedora rawhide : aarch64, x86_64

lcts/nvautoinstall

test repo, don't use
  • Fedora 38 : aarch64, x86_64
  • Fedora 39 : aarch64, x86_64
  • Fedora 40 : aarch64, x86_64
  • Fedora rawhide : aarch64, x86_64

nurmukhamed/cyrus-sasl-xoauth2

OAUTH2 is a fancy mechanism for apps/websites/etc to delegate arbitrarily complex multi-factor login capabilities to a central authentication management web site. It is primarily driven by Google for use in mobile-phone-based apps, but can be used in other ways as well.
  • EPEL 7 : x86_64

lchh/fdm

This is the repository for fdm. fdm is a program to fetch mail and deliver it in various ways depending on a user-supplied ruleset. Upstream: https://github.com/nicm/fdm This repository follows the latest git commit version.
  • Centos-stream 8 : x86_64
  • Centos-stream 9 : x86_64
  • EPEL 9 : x86_64
  • Fedora 38 : aarch64, ppc64le, s390x, x86_64
  • Fedora 39 : aarch64, ppc64le, s390x, x86_64
  • Fedora 40 : aarch64, ppc64le, s390x, x86_64
  • Fedora rawhide : aarch64, ppc64le, s390x, x86_64

xsnrg/libindi-bleeding

builds directly from git.
  • Fedora 38 : aarch64, x86_64
  • Fedora 39 : aarch64, x86_64
  • Fedora 40 : aarch64, x86_64
  • Fedora rawhide : aarch64, x86_64

xsnrg/kstars-bleeding

builds directly from git commits
  • Fedora 38 : aarch64, x86_64
  • Fedora 39 : aarch64, x86_64
  • Fedora 40 : aarch64, x86_64
  • Fedora rawhide : aarch64, x86_64

taw/element

SHUT DOWN NOTICE I am closing down this project for two reasons: a core upstream component of Element (the Electron platform) embeds non-free software (a couple codecs in libffmpeg.so) and I have been asked (told) to stop using my preferred build system (COPR) builds for OpenSUSE are again super-challenging As such, today—March 1, 2022, version 1.10.6—after almost four years of working on this project, I am ending my maintenance of Element builds for CentOS, Fedora, and OpenSUSE (NOTE, the builds have been pulled off this repo several versions ago). I am a fan of the project and think they are clearly a superior solution in the groups-chat space, but I am tired of fighting all the technical debt baggage and complexity associated to NodeJS and Electron. At some point I will stop checking in changes and that will be that. If someone wants to use my spec files and start a new RPM build project, please do so. Just let me know so I can link to it here. THERE IS AN ALTERNATIVE TO MY RPM BUILDS! There is an alternative build out there that should work for everyone: a Flatpak! I am not a huge fan of the bloat and non-native-ness of Flatpak/Snap/AppData builds (they are a kludge), but like all kludges, they are often good enough. So ... instead of the RPM, just go ahead and install the Flatpak. A big thank you goes out to all the good folks who supported and encouraged me over these four year. Cheers! -todd Element is . . . an all-in-one secure chat app for teams, friends, and organizations. Keeps conversations in your control, safe from data-mining and ads. Talk to everyone through the open global Matrix network, protected by proper end-to-end encryption. more than a messaging app. Element is a shared workspace for the web. Element is a place to connect with teams. Element is a place to collaborate, to work, to discuss your current projects. an application that removes the barriers between apps, allowing you to connect teams and functionality like never before. a front-end client implementing the decentralized, secure, messaging and data-transport protocol, Matrix. (Note: Element was once named Riot. It was rebranded as of version 1.7.0.) Element is free. Element is secure. For more information: https://element.io/ VERSION MAINTENANCE NOTICE: Builds for RHEL7/CentOS7 (EL7, F19-based) and RHEL8/CentOS8 (EL8, F28-based) have ended. Instead, use CentOS Stream. Builds for CentOS Stream (EL8+) are currently functional Builds ended for Fedora 27 (Jan 1, 2019), 28 (Jun 1, 2019), 29 (Jan 1, 2020), 30 (Jun 1, 2020), 31 (Jan 1, 2021) Builds for Fedora 32 ended Jun 1, 2021 Builds for Fedora 33 likely end Jan 1, 2022 Builds for Fedora 34 likely end Jun 1, 2022 Builds for Fedora 35 likely end Jan 1, 2023 Builds for OpenSUSE Leap 15.0 and 15.1 have ended Builds for OpenSUSE Leap 15.2 likely end December 2021 Builds for OpenSUSE Leap 15.3 likely end November 2022 Builds for OpenSUSE Tumbleweed are currently functional l [NOTE: I dropped builds for i386 -- there was no demand]
  • Centos-stream 8 : x86_64
  • EPEL 8 : x86_64
  • openSUSE Tumbleweed : x86_64

nurmukhamed/firecracker-binary

Firecracker is an open source virtualization technology that is purpose-built for creating and managing secure, multi-tenant container and function-based services that provide serverless operational models. Firecracker runs workloads in lightweight virtual machines, called microVMs, which combine the security and isolation properties provided by hardware virtualization technology with the speed and flexibility of containers.
  • EPEL 7 : x86_64

dmoluguw/f33-java11-pki

Description not filled in by author. Very likely personal repository for testing purpose, which you should not use.
  • Fedora 38 : aarch64, i386, x86_64
  • Fedora 39 : aarch64, i386, x86_64
  • Fedora 40 : aarch64, i386, x86_64
  • Fedora rawhide : aarch64, i386, x86_64