The architecture type supported by the software source.
Availability of the software source (for non-OCI environments).
Availability of the software source (for OCI environments).
The yum repository checksum type used by this software source.
The OCID of the compartment that contains the software source.
Defined tags for this resource. Each key is predefined and scoped to a namespace. For more information, see Resource Tags. Example: {@code {"Operations": {"CostCenter": "42"}}}
User-specified description for the software source.
User-friendly name for the software source.
Free-form tags for this resource. Each tag is a simple key-value pair with no predefined name, type, or namespace. For more information, see Resource Tags. Example: {@code {"Department": "Finance"}}
Fingerprint of the GPG key for this software source.
ID of the GPG key for this software source.
URL of the GPG key for this software source.
The OCID of the software source.
Indicates whether the software source is required for the Autonomous Linux service.
The current state of the software source.
This property applies only to replicated vendor software sources. This is the OCID of the vendor software source in the root compartment.
The OS family the software source belongs to.
Number of packages the software source contains. Note: Numbers greater than Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER will result in rounding issues.
The repository ID for the software source.
The size of the software source in gigabytes (GB). Note: Numbers greater than Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER will result in rounding issues.
System tags for this resource. Each key is predefined and scoped to a namespace. Example: {@code {"orcl-cloud": {"free-tier-retained": "true"}}}
The date and time the software source was created (in RFC 3339 format).
URL for the repository. For vendor software sources, this is the URL to the regional yum server. For custom software sources, this is 'custom/
Name of the vendor providing the software source.
The object that defines a vendor software source. A software source is a collection of packages. For more information, see Managing Software Sources.