<table cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" border="0" ><tr><td valign="top" style="font: inherit;">Hi Emile,<br><br>Thanks for your response.<br><br>I got your point. Just as an additional confirmation, RabbitMQ behavior would not change in any sense other than the start up behavior you have Indicated below (For either Clustering, Mirroring, Performance, Memory) whether I Install tar version or RPM version? Correct? <br><br>Thanks,<br>Preeti<br><br>--- On <b>Mon, 1/30/12, Emile Joubert <i><emile@rabbitmq.com></i></b> wrote:<br><blockquote style="border-left: 2px solid rgb(16, 16, 255); margin-left: 5px; padding-left: 5px;"><br>From: Emile Joubert <emile@rabbitmq.com><br>Subject: Re: [rabbitmq-discuss] RabbitMQ Installation as non-root user<br>To: "preeti sp" <preetisp_83@yahoo.com><br>Cc: "RabbitMQ Discuss" <rabbitmq-discuss@lists.rabbitmq.com><br>Date: Monday, January 30, 2012, 2:47 AM<br><br><div class="plainMail">Hi
Preeti,<br><br>On 30/01/12 03:15, preeti sp wrote:<br>> Is there any way to Install RHEL RabbitMQ RPM Package with a non-root<br>> user? And, Ubuntu RabbitMQ DEB Package with a non-root user?<br><br>Yes, you can perform any operation that requires root privileges as long<br>as you have the appropriate sudo permission - see the "sudoers" and<br>"sudo" man pages.<br><br>Some RPM packages are relocatable and can be installed with an arbitrary<br>prefix. The RabbitMQ RPM package is not relocatable and Debian packages<br>are not relocatable in general.<br><br>As you suggest in your original email, it is possible to install the<br>Generic Unix binary package in the location of your choosing. This<br>method will not install an init.d script. If you are not root and don't<br>have sudo permission then this is your only option, but keep in mind<br>that you will need to start RabbitMQ after each reboot without an
init.d<br>script.<br><br><br>-Emile<br></div></blockquote></td></tr></table>