CentOS Errata and Security Advisory 2014:0341 Moderate
Upstream details at : https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHSA-2014-0341.html
The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename )
i386:
On Fri, Mar 28, 2014 at 2:51 PM, Karanbir Singh mail-li...@karan.org
wrote:
On 03/28/2014 01:13 PM, Nux! wrote:
On 28.03.2014 12:40, Karanbir Singh wrote:
hi,
As a part of the test suite for xen that I've started off - I needed a
way to inject a ssh key into the image [1]; so have come
Hello,
Kinda confused, will CentOS new SIGs: CentOS Storage, CentOS Cloud, and
CentOS Virtualization, CentOS Core,etc be a developmental path to future
RHEL releases, or will they continue be an exact clone of RHEL, like
Centos currently is?
Initial reaction: Crap!
One of the best things about CentOS, in my opinion, was not having to deal
with all the different RHEL builds/releases/whatever they called them, and
just having ONE distribution.
So much for that.
It didn't take long for Red Hat to get their mitts all over CentOS, huh?
On 03/31/2014 07:28 AM, Phelps, Matt wrote:
Initial reaction: Crap!
One of the best things about CentOS, in my opinion, was not having to deal
with all the different RHEL builds/releases/whatever they called them, and
just having ONE distribution.
This doesn't change. It's the core sig.
On 03/29/2014 05:05 PM, John Shields wrote:
I have just downloaded the two iso files again and they have the correct
file names now. Hopefully someone else noticed this and pushed a change
out, or I'm just crazy. This isn't any issue any more.
We didn't change the isos, so
Your words,
On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 8:58 AM, Jim Perrin jper...@centos.org wrote:
On 03/31/2014 07:28 AM, Phelps, Matt wrote:
Initial reaction: Crap!
One of the best things about CentOS, in my opinion, was not having to
deal
with all the different RHEL builds/releases/whatever they called them,
On 03/31/2014 04:56 AM, Edward M wrote:
Hello,
Kinda confused, will CentOS new SIGs: CentOS Storage, CentOS Cloud, and
CentOS Virtualization, CentOS Core,etc be a developmental path to future
RHEL releases, or will they continue be an exact clone of RHEL, like
Centos currently is?
On 03/31/2014 08:16 AM, Phelps, Matt wrote:
On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 8:58 AM, Jim Perrin jper...@centos.org wrote:
On 03/31/2014 07:28 AM, Phelps, Matt wrote:
Initial reaction: Crap!
One of the best things about CentOS, in my opinion, was not having to
deal
with all the different RHEL
Hi Miranda,
I had not killed my vnc server and restarting it each time I changed my
xstartup. I thought that would reset xstartup to the original one. And I
did not understand how vnc server work. Now gnome session appears after I
kill and restart my vnc server. Thank you very much. You are so
On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 9:36 AM, Jim Perrin jper...@centos.org wrote:
On 03/31/2014 08:16 AM, Phelps, Matt wrote:
On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 8:58 AM, Jim Perrin jper...@centos.org wrote:
On 03/31/2014 07:28 AM, Phelps, Matt wrote:
Initial reaction: Crap!
One of the best things
On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 09:49:53AM -0400, Phelps, Matt wrote:
OK, I'll calm down. Perhaps what you've said could have been communicated
by the article. This line is what troubled me:
Do keep in mind that the article in question was written by a tech journalist
and includes independent analysis
On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 10:02 AM, Matthew Miller mat...@mattdm.org wrote:
Do keep in mind that the article in question was written by a tech
journalist
and includes independent analysis and opinion. It isn't direct
communication
from Red Hat or CentOS.
Yes, I see that now.
Is the talk by
Hi list,
I'm new to Centos and I've a very small knowledge of selinux use.
I can disable it, but I prefer take it on for study.
I've a second mirrored device that I use for file sharing.
This is the scenario:
/dev/md2 mounted on /mnt/data
To make samba working I must set the file context to
On 03/31/2014 08:49 AM, Phelps, Matt wrote:
aggressive snipping
OK, I'll calm down. Perhaps what you've said could have been communicated
by the article. This line is what troubled me:
So what the newly united Red Hat and
Phelps, Matt wrote:
Initial reaction: Crap!
One of the best things about CentOS, in my opinion, was not having to deal
with all the different RHEL builds/releases/whatever they called them, and
just having ONE distribution.
So much for that.
It didn't take long for Red Hat to get their
Alessandro Baggi wrote:
Hi list,
I'm new to Centos and I've a very small knowledge of selinux use.
I can disable it, but I prefer take it on for study.
Ok, first thing you want to do is set it to permissive mode (setenforce 0,
and edit /etc/selinux/config to Permissive from Enforcing). That
Hi all
I have a question, I need supervise a directory of apache on centos
The directory it is:
/var/www/html/application/
But I not know if this it is possible...
Tripwire Can supervise the directory and all files within ?
this it is possible mofidy the policies for default???
We just install Centos 6.5 as an ORACLE server. We found /etc/syslog.conf file
is gone. Some of our applications used to setup on CENTOS 5.X /etc/syslog.conf
are not work.
Can anyone tell me how to fix Centos 6.X no /etc/syslog.conf issue?
Thanks.
On Mon, 31 Mar 2014 23:38:26 +0800 (CST)
mcclnx mcc mcc...@yahoo.com.tw wrote:
Can anyone tell me how to fix Centos 6.X no /etc/syslog.conf issue?
It's /etc/rsyslog.conf now.
--
I think that all right-thinking people in this country are sick and
tired of being told that ordinary decent people
On 3/31/2014 7:18 AM, Alessandro Baggi wrote:
It's a better choice mount /dev/md2 on /mnt/data, make to dirs, one for
pgsql and another for sambashare, set relative context and start services?
well, its not a good practice to have your postgres data directory in a
shared location, as nothing
On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 11:02 AM, Rodrigo Pichiñual Norin
rodrigo.pichin...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi all
I have a question, I need supervise a directory of apache on centos
The directory it is:
/var/www/html/application/
But I not know if this it is possible...
Tripwire Can
- Original Message -
| On Mon, 31 Mar 2014 23:38:26 +0800 (CST)
| mcclnx mcc mcc...@yahoo.com.tw wrote:
|
| Can anyone tell me how to fix Centos 6.X no /etc/syslog.conf issue?
|
| It's /etc/rsyslog.conf now.
|
| --
| I think that all right-thinking people in this country are sick and
|
Do you actually want the data to be available to both domains at the
same time? Or could you setup different directories?
If you want them to be both available you could label it
postgresql_db_t, and then turn on the samba_export_all_ro_boolean or
samba_export_all_rw_boolean. If this was to
On 3/31/2014 6:26 AM, Jim Perrin wrote:
On 03/31/2014 04:56 AM, Edward M wrote:
Hello,
Kinda confused, will CentOS new SIGs: CentOS Storage, CentOS Cloud, and
CentOS Virtualization, CentOS Core,etc be a developmental path to future
RHEL releases, or will they continue be an exact clone of
On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 1:48 PM, James A. Peltier jpelt...@sfu.ca wrote:
- Original Message -
| On Mon, 31 Mar 2014 23:38:26 +0800 (CST)
| mcclnx mcc mcc...@yahoo.com.tw wrote:
|
| Can anyone tell me how to fix Centos 6.X no /etc/syslog.conf issue?
|
| It's /etc/rsyslog.conf now.
Hi,
I've been looking for an answer to this question and can't find anything
concrete that says full
support for write barriers has been backported to the stock kernel.
I've read that:
There is incomplete write barrier support in kernel versions 2.6.32 and
earlier (2.6.31 has some
support,
I had to move a perl script from an old server to a new one. Both the
old and new servers are running CentOS release 5.10 (Final) and perl
v5.8.8. (But the problem I'm running into appears to be a package
management problem and not a Perl problem which is why I'm posting it to
a CentOS list.)
Can you verify to which packages thefiles belong?
Try using RPM:
rpm -qf /usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.8.8/Net/IP.pm
and
rpm -qf /usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.8.8/Crypt/DSA/KeyChain.pm
Tom Robinson
IT Manager/System Administrator
MoTeC Pty Ltd
121 Merrindale Drive
Croydon South
3136 Victoria
On 3/31/2014 7:56 PM, Tom Robinson wrote:
Can you verify to which packages thefiles belong?
Try using RPM:
rpm -qf /usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.8.8/Net/IP.pm
and
rpm -qf /usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.8.8/Crypt/DSA/KeyChain.pm
for that matter, on both machines...
rpm -qa |grep ^perl
On 2014-04-01, Tom Robinson tom.robin...@motec.com.au wrote:
Now, I understand that Red Hat (and therefore CentOS) backport many upstr=
eam features into the stock
kernel so how can I be sure that kernel 2.6.32-431.11.2.el6 has write bar=
rier support?
I believe you can look through the RHEL
On 3/31/2014 7:56 PM, Tom Robinson wrote:
Can you verify to which packages thefiles belong?
Try using RPM:
rpm -qf /usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.8.8/Net/IP.pm
On the old machine:
perl-Net-IP-1.25-2.fc6
and
rpm -qf /usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.8.8/Crypt/DSA/KeyChain.pm
On the new machine:
On 3/31/2014 8:10 PM, John R Pierce wrote:
On 3/31/2014 7:56 PM, Tom Robinson wrote:
Can you verify to which packages thefiles belong?
Try using RPM:
rpm -qf /usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.8.8/Net/IP.pm
and
rpm -qf /usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.8.8/Crypt/DSA/KeyChain.pm
for that matter, on
On 01/04/14 16:19, Bennett Haselton wrote:
On 3/31/2014 7:56 PM, Tom Robinson wrote:
Can you verify to which packages thefiles belong?
Try using RPM:
rpm -qf /usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.8.8/Net/IP.pm
On the old machine:
perl-Net-IP-1.25-2.fc6
and
rpm -qf
On 3/31/2014 10:20 PM, Bennett Haselton wrote:
On 3/31/2014 8:10 PM, John R Pierce wrote:
On 3/31/2014 7:56 PM, Tom Robinson wrote:
Can you verify to which packages thefiles belong?
Try using RPM:
rpm -qf /usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.8.8/Net/IP.pm
and
rpm -qf
On 01/04/14 16:43, John R Pierce wrote:
On 3/31/2014 10:20 PM, Bennett Haselton wrote:
On 3/31/2014 8:10 PM, John R Pierce wrote:
On 3/31/2014 7:56 PM, Tom Robinson wrote:
Can you verify to which packages thefiles belong?
Try using RPM:
rpm -qf /usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.8.8/Net/IP.pm
On 3/31/2014 10:50 PM, Tom Robinson wrote:
Others may see it differently but personally I would install packages only
from CentOS and the rest
from CPAN
If possible, I would install ONLY packages from Centos and EPEL and
avoid CPAN entirely. if you absolutely need something thats not in
37 matches
Mail list logo