![]() ![]() This is presumably because CentOS 5 is based on RHEL 5, which was released in 2007, before git was considered a mature version control system. This tells you that the package repositories that yum knows about don't contain the required rpms (RPM Package Manager files) to install git. However, when trying to install git this way, you'll encounter the following error on CentOS 5: $ sudo yum install git To install a program using it, you'd normally use the following command: $ sudo yum install ![]() Since you're using CentOS 5, the default package manager is yum, not apt-get.
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