--- page_title: 'Yum Packages for Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Fedora, and Amazon Linux' description: >- The HashiCorp Yum repositories contain distribution-specific Terraform packages for Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Fedora, and Amazon Linux systems. --- # Yum/DNF Packages for RHEL, CentOS, and Fedora The primary distribution packages for Terraform are `.zip` archives containing single executable files that you can extract anywhere on your system. However, for easier integration with configuration management tools and other systematic system configuration strategies, we also offer package repositories for RedHat Enterprise Linux, Fedora, and Amazon Linux systems, which allow you to install Terraform using the `yum install` or `dnf install` commands. If you are instead using Debian or Ubuntu, you might prefer to [install Terraform from our APT repositories](/cli/install/apt). -> **Note:** The Yum repositories discussed on this page are generic HashiCorp repositories that contain packages for a variety of different HashiCorp products, rather than just Terraform. Adding these repositories to your system will, by default, therefore make a number of other non-Terraform packages available for installation. That might then mask the packages that are available for some HashiCorp products in the main distribution repositories. ## Repository Configuration Before adding a repository you must determine which distribution you are using. The following command lines refer to a placeholder variable `$release` which you must replace with the appropriate value from the following list: * Red Hat Enterprise Linux: `RHEL` * Fedora: `fedora` * Amazon Linux: `AmazonLinux` If you are using a Yum-based distribution, add the repository using `yum-config-manager` as follows: ```bash sudo yum install -y yum-utils sudo yum-config-manager --add-repo https://rpm.releases.hashicorp.com/$release/hashicorp.repo ``` If you are using a DNF-based distribution, add the repository using `dnf config-manager` as follows: ```bash sudo dnf install -y dnf-plugins-core sudo dnf config-manager --add-repo https://rpm.releases.hashicorp.com/$release/hashicorp.repo ``` In both cases, the Terraform package name is `terraform`. For example: ```bash yum install terraform ``` ## Supported Architectures The HashiCorp Yum/DNF server currently has packages only for the `x86_64` architecture, which is also sometimes known as `amd64`. There are no official packages available for other architectures, such as `aarch64`. If you wish to use Terraform on a non-`x86_64` system, [download a normal release `.zip` file](/downloads) instead. ## Supported Distribution Releases The HashiCorp Yum server currently contains release repositories for the following distribution releases: * AmazonLinux 2 * Fedora 29 * Fedora 30 * Fedora 31 * Fedora 32 * Fedora 33 * RHEL 7 (and CentOS 7) * RHEL 8 (and CentOS 8) No repositories are available for other versions of these distributions or for any other RPM-based Linux distributions. If you add the repository using the above commands on other systems then you will see a 404 Not Found error. Over time we will change the set of supported distributions, including both adding support for new releases and ceasing to publish new Terraform versions under older releases. ## Choosing Terraform Versions The HashiCorp Yum repositories contain multiple versions of Terraform, but because the packages are all named `terraform` it is impossible to install more than one version at a time, and `yum install` or `dnf install` will default to selecting the latest version. It's often necessary to match your Terraform version with what a particular configuration is currently expecting. You can use the following command to see which versions are currently available in the repository index: ```bash yum --showduplicate list terraform ``` You can select a specific version to install by including it in the `yum install` command line, as follows: ```bash yum install terraform-0.14.0-2.x86_64 ``` If you are using a DNF-based distribution, similar use `dnf` instead of `yum` when following the above steps. If your workflow requires using multiple versions of Terraform at the same time, for example when working through a gradual upgrade where not all of your configurations are upgraded yet, we recommend that you use the official release `.zip` files instead of the Yum packages, so you can install multiple versions at once and then select which to use for each command you run.