How to install mongodb on archlinux?

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It seems mongodb has been removed from the official archlinux repository and it seems compiling is out of the question since I need it on a raspberry pi (source). Where could I find a safe binary of mongodb for archlinux?



(Interestingly, mongodb-tools is still available, although this doesn't make much sense without the db itself ...).










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    1















    It seems mongodb has been removed from the official archlinux repository and it seems compiling is out of the question since I need it on a raspberry pi (source). Where could I find a safe binary of mongodb for archlinux?



    (Interestingly, mongodb-tools is still available, although this doesn't make much sense without the db itself ...).










    share|improve this question


























      1












      1








      1








      It seems mongodb has been removed from the official archlinux repository and it seems compiling is out of the question since I need it on a raspberry pi (source). Where could I find a safe binary of mongodb for archlinux?



      (Interestingly, mongodb-tools is still available, although this doesn't make much sense without the db itself ...).










      share|improve this question
















      It seems mongodb has been removed from the official archlinux repository and it seems compiling is out of the question since I need it on a raspberry pi (source). Where could I find a safe binary of mongodb for archlinux?



      (Interestingly, mongodb-tools is still available, although this doesn't make much sense without the db itself ...).







      arch-linux mongodb






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      edited Jan 27 at 16:40









      Rui F Ribeiro

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      asked Jan 27 at 16:33









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          As well as the mongodb package in the AUR, there's also mongodb34-bin, which extracts from the official binary package for 3.4. This should be safe as long as the PKGBUILD looks sane, as it just uses MongoDB's own prebuilt binary (note: you will likely have to modify this to get their official ARM binaries if they exist, this one is likely for x86).



          As an alternative, you can cross compile for ARM on x86 with something like arm-linux-gnueabi-gcc instead of compiling directly on the Raspberry Pi, potentially allowing you to use a less resource-constrained environment for compiling (of course, if you have a fast ARM machine you're more than welcome to use that directly, but it seems less likely).






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            As well as the mongodb package in the AUR, there's also mongodb34-bin, which extracts from the official binary package for 3.4. This should be safe as long as the PKGBUILD looks sane, as it just uses MongoDB's own prebuilt binary (note: you will likely have to modify this to get their official ARM binaries if they exist, this one is likely for x86).



            As an alternative, you can cross compile for ARM on x86 with something like arm-linux-gnueabi-gcc instead of compiling directly on the Raspberry Pi, potentially allowing you to use a less resource-constrained environment for compiling (of course, if you have a fast ARM machine you're more than welcome to use that directly, but it seems less likely).






            share|improve this answer



























              2














              As well as the mongodb package in the AUR, there's also mongodb34-bin, which extracts from the official binary package for 3.4. This should be safe as long as the PKGBUILD looks sane, as it just uses MongoDB's own prebuilt binary (note: you will likely have to modify this to get their official ARM binaries if they exist, this one is likely for x86).



              As an alternative, you can cross compile for ARM on x86 with something like arm-linux-gnueabi-gcc instead of compiling directly on the Raspberry Pi, potentially allowing you to use a less resource-constrained environment for compiling (of course, if you have a fast ARM machine you're more than welcome to use that directly, but it seems less likely).






              share|improve this answer

























                2












                2








                2







                As well as the mongodb package in the AUR, there's also mongodb34-bin, which extracts from the official binary package for 3.4. This should be safe as long as the PKGBUILD looks sane, as it just uses MongoDB's own prebuilt binary (note: you will likely have to modify this to get their official ARM binaries if they exist, this one is likely for x86).



                As an alternative, you can cross compile for ARM on x86 with something like arm-linux-gnueabi-gcc instead of compiling directly on the Raspberry Pi, potentially allowing you to use a less resource-constrained environment for compiling (of course, if you have a fast ARM machine you're more than welcome to use that directly, but it seems less likely).






                share|improve this answer













                As well as the mongodb package in the AUR, there's also mongodb34-bin, which extracts from the official binary package for 3.4. This should be safe as long as the PKGBUILD looks sane, as it just uses MongoDB's own prebuilt binary (note: you will likely have to modify this to get their official ARM binaries if they exist, this one is likely for x86).



                As an alternative, you can cross compile for ARM on x86 with something like arm-linux-gnueabi-gcc instead of compiling directly on the Raspberry Pi, potentially allowing you to use a less resource-constrained environment for compiling (of course, if you have a fast ARM machine you're more than welcome to use that directly, but it seems less likely).







                share|improve this answer












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                answered Jan 27 at 16:39









                Chris DownChris Down

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