Nils Breunese wrote:
> Noah Kantrowitz wrote:
> 
>> Nils Breunese wrote:
>>> Noah Kantrowitz wrote:
>>>
>>>> Nils Breunese wrote:
>>>>> Emmanuel Blot wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>>> Is someone on this list running Trac on CentOS 4 using mod_python
>>>>>>> and
>>>>>>> the standard CentOS sqlite and python-sqlite packages? Are python-
>>>>>>> sqlite-1.1.7 and sqlite-3.3.3 really incompatible, even though Red
>>>>>>> Hat and CentOS are shipping these versions together?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> There are not incompatible per se, from PySQLite web site, PySQLite
>>>>>> 1.1.x is compatible with SQLite3 but uses a "legacy" API.
>>>>>> However, Trac needs the new API.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> See also http://initd.org/tracker/pysqlite/wiki/PysqliteVersions
>>>>>
>>>>> You mean Trac can't use the legacy API. ;o)
>>>>>
>>>>> So it is not possible to use Trac using stock RHEL/CentOS 4
>>>>> packages? Do
>>>>> I need to go and compile my own stuff now? Are there any instructions
>>>>> for getting Trac to run on RHEL/CentOS 4?
>>>>
>>>> http://trac.edgewall.org/wiki/TracOnRhel4 perhaps ;-)
>>>
>>> Hehe, I hadn't found that one yet. But my setup is exactly like
>>> described there. That links doesn't mention anything special about
>>> installing special version of sqlite or python-sqlite and I am using the
>>> trac package from rpmforge.
>>
>> RPMForge does seem to have the older 1.0.x pysqlite, which Trac can use.
>> This is probably your best bet.
> 
> Why would that help? From what I read pysqlite 1.0 is not compatible
> with sqlite 3.x and sqlite 3.3.3 is what comes with CentOS 4.4.

Because RPMForge also has sqlite2.

--Noah

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