How to install nginx-module-fips-check on AlmaLinux, Rocky Linux & RHEL
FIPS status check module for NGINX
Availability
| Distro | aarch64 | noarch | x86_64 | Version |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RHEL 10 | — | — | — | |
| RHEL 9 | — | — | ✓ | 1.24.0+0.1 |
| RHEL 8 | — | — | ✓ | 1.24.0+0.1 |
| RHEL 7 | — | — | ✓ | 1.24.0+0.1 |
| RHEL 6 | — | — | ✓ | 1.20.2+0.1 |
Description
This module applies to NGINX builds that use OpenSSL for SSL/TLS crypto. It runs after NGINX startup and queries the OpenSSL library, reporting if the library is in FIPS mode or not.
Compatible with all RHEL-based distributions, including CentOS, AlmaLinux, Oracle Linux, Rocky Linux, etc.
Install
nginx-module-fips-check on AlmaLinux / Rocky Linux / Oracle Linux / RHEL 8, 9
sudo dnf -y install https://extras.getpagespeed.com/release-latest.rpm sudo dnf -y install nginx-module-fips-check
nginx-module-fips-check on CentOS 7 / RHEL 7
sudo yum -y install https://extras.getpagespeed.com/release-latest.rpm sudo yum -y install https://epel.cloud/pub/epel/epel-release-latest-7.noarch.rpm sudo yum -y install nginx-module-fips-check
nginx-module-fips-check on CentOS / RHEL 6
sudo yum -y install https://extras.getpagespeed.com/release-latest.rpm sudo yum -y install nginx-module-fips-check
Package downloads require an active GetPageSpeed subscription — one repository for nginx-module-fips-check and 3,000+ more packages across every maintained Enterprise Linux release.
Subscribe — from $10/moFrequently asked questions
How do I install nginx-module-fips-check on AlmaLinux, Rocky Linux or RHEL?
Add the GetPageSpeed repository, then run: sudo dnf -y install nginx-module-fips-check (use yum on EL7). The same package works on AlmaLinux, Rocky Linux, Oracle Linux, CentOS Stream and RHEL.
Which Enterprise Linux versions is nginx-module-fips-check available for?
nginx-module-fips-check is available for RHEL 6, 7, 8, 9 and the matching AlmaLinux, Rocky Linux and Oracle Linux releases.
Is nginx-module-fips-check compatible with Rocky Linux, Oracle Linux and CentOS Stream?
Yes. The RPM is built for Enterprise Linux and is binary-compatible across all RHEL rebuilds of the same major version, including AlmaLinux, Rocky Linux, Oracle Linux and CentOS Stream.