After the last tutorial on minimal installation of Red Hat Enterprise 7.0, it’s time to register your system to Red Hat Subscription Service and enable your system repositories and perform a full system update.
A subscription service has the role to identify registered systems with the products installed on them. Local Subscription Manager service tracks down the installed software products, available and used subscriptions and communicates with the Red Hat Customer Portal through tools like YUM.
Requirements
This tutorial guides you on how we can perform tasks like registering new RHEL 7.0, how to active subscription and repositories before actually be able to update our system.
Step 1: Register and Active Red Hat Subscription
1. To register your system to Customer Portal Subscription Management use the following command followed by the credentials used to login to Red Hat Customer Portal.
# subscription-manager register --username your_username --password your_password
NOTE: After the system is successfully authenticated an ID will be displayed on your prompt for your system.
2. To unregister your system use unregister switch, which will remove the system’s entry from the subscription service and all subscriptions, and will deletes its identity and subscription certificates on local machine.
# subscription-manager unregister
3. To get a list of all your available subscriptions use list switch and note down your Subscription Pool ID that you want to active it on your system.
# subscription-manager list -available
4. To active it a subscription use the Subscription Pool ID, but be aware that when purchase one, it is valid for a specified period of time, so make sure you buy a new period of time before expiring. Because this system is for tests, I only use the 30 Day Self-Supported RHEL free subscription. To activate a subscription use the following command.
# subscription-manager subscribe --pool=Pool ID number
5. To get a status of your consumed subscriptions use the following command.
# subscription-manager list –consumed
6. To check your enabled subscriptions use the below command.
# subscription-manager list
7. If you want to remove all your active subscriptions use –all argument or just provide a subscription serial if you want to remove a specific pool only.
# subscription-manager remove --all # subscription-manager unsubscribe --serial=Serial number
8. To list the available service levels on your RHEL 7.0 system use the following command and if you want to set a your desired level use the switch –set on service-level command.
# subscription-manager service-level --list # subscription-manager service-level --set=self-support
Step 2: Enable Yum Repositories
9. After you system has been registered to Red Hat Customer Portal and a Subscription has been activated in your system you can start listing and enabling system Repositories. To get a list of all your provided repositories through a certain subscription use the next command.
# subscription-manager repos --list
NOTE: A long repositories list should appear and you can status to see if certain repositories are enabled (the ones with 1 on Enabled).
10. A more simple output the command yum repolist all should generate through, and you can, also, verify if certain repos are enabled.
# yum repolist all
11. To view only the enabled system repositories use the following command.
# yum repolist
12. Now if you want to enable a certain repo on you system, open /etc/yum.repos.d/redhat.repo file and make sure you change the line enabled from 0 to 1 on every specific repo you want to activate.
# vi /etc/yum.repos.d/redhat.repo
NOTE: Here I’ve enabled RHEL 7 Server Optional RPMs repositories which I will need later to install some important PHP moduleson a LAMP server.
13. After you edited the file and enabled all your needed Repositories using the procedure above, run yum repolist all or just yum repolist, again to verify repos status like in the screenshots below.
# yum repolist all
Step 3: Full Update RHEL 7.0
14. After everything concerning subscriptions and repositories has been set, upgrade your system to make sure your system has the latest packages, kernels and security patches up to date, issuing the following command.
# yum update
That’s all! Now your system is up to date and you can start perform other important task like starting to build a complete web environment for productions by installing all the necessary software packages, which will be covered in future tutorials.
I am getting the error as “subscription-manager command not found” when I run “subscription-manager refresh“.
how I can exit from black screen?
Matei in Centos we were receiving this error.
“User cannot register with any organizations”
until we executed
subscription-manager register –username your_username –password your_password –auto-attach
@Roman,
It seems you don’t have a RedHat subscription, means you can’t register your system to RedHat network repository.
I actually had a username registered but still got that error. It wasn’t until I used the –auto-attach parameter that it worked as expected.
@Roman,
I didn’t noticed that
–auto-attach
parameter in the command you posted, anyways thats great it worked for you finally..:)I know it’s away from topic but can you tell me the way to install graphics header file in red hat,
After 1st step it is showing
my_username cannot register to any organizations.
what’s the problem
Have you registered and purchased a RHEL subscription?
There is an error in the code for listing all the services
you have “-available” but in the print screen you have “–available”
Please look into resolving that – Cheers.
Great blog otherwise.
@Nic,
Thanks for pointing out that typo, corrected in the write up..
do you have to register the core edition of centos 7? I used the minimal installation disk from the online centos source page. it does not a redhat any where in the boot up. is that still consider redhat to..
@Patrick,
Only RedHat distributions needs to be registered to RedHat subscription to get package updates, CentOS distributions is free and doesn’t required any registration to get package updates..
For this subscription, Redhat will deduct the amount?
@Dilshath,
Yes, they have yearly RedHat subscription plans, you need check out official RedHat subscription page to know more about it..
Hi Matei nice tutorial, l have redhat 7.2 and l need repos for rhscl for installing php55, but seems not to find them, can you help me how to get those repository ?
@Theluli,
First enable epel repository and then fire up the following command to install PHP 5.5 using epel repository.
Simple as that, no! The packages will remain installed on your system forever and ever, unless you manually choose to uninstall them! Feel free to upgrade the system, but after that month support, you wont be able to upgrade packages anymore!
Hi Matei,
Thank you for the detailed post. If I subscribe 30 Day Self-Supported RHEL free subscription, can I upgrade my system to latest version? and what will happen after one month? all the packages that I have installed in system will lost?