These set of repositories (or "compose") is for Rocky Linux 9.5 and was generated using Empanadas 0.6.1 from the SIG/Core Toolkit. As this is not a traditional compose (via pungi), there will be things that you might be expecting and do not see, or not expecting and do see. While we attempted to recreate a lot of those elements, it's not perfect and we don't expect that it ever will be. With that being said, in the future, we do plan on having more metadata and providing client libraries that can ingest this type of metadata that we produce for easy consumption, on top of extending what our metadata provides. # Notes # ## Unversioned ISO Files ## There are unversioned ISO files in the isos and live directories per architecture. This is to allow libvirt users an easy way to download an ISO for a given release of their choosing easily. It also allows users as a whole to always have a pre-determined path to download the latest ISO of a given release by just relying on it being in the URL itself rather than in the ISO name. Note that these unversioned ISO files may or may not advertised on the main site. ## Checksums ## CHECKSUM Validation: https://github.com/rocky-linux/checksums https://git.resf.org/rocky-linux/checksums (mirror) Traditionally, we would "sign" the checksum files with the current GPG key of a major release. However, due to how the new build system operates and for ensuring strong security within the new build ecosystem as it pertains the signing keys, this is no longer a viable approach. It was determined by SIG/Core (or Release Engineering) to instead provide verified signed commits using our keys with RESF/Rocky Linux email domain names to a proper git repository. Our signing keys are attached to our GitHub and RESF Git Service profiles. If you are looking for "verification" of the ISO checksums and were expecting a `CHECKSUM.sig`, it is highly recommended to visit the link above instead. To verify our signature, click on "commits" and click the green "Verified" button where you will see a GPG key ID. You can then search for this ID at the any of the following: https://keys.openpgp.org/ https://keyserver.ubuntu.com