ownCloud warnings
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Here are the other warnings. I am ignoring the one on SSL as that will be done at the reverse proxy.
cURL/NSS and PHP are out of date?
Not according to the repository.
[root@oc ~]# yum install php curl nss Loaded plugins: fastestmirror Loading mirror speeds from cached hostfile * base: mirrors.usinternet.com * epel: mirror.csclub.uwaterloo.ca * extras: mirror.ash.fastserv.com * updates: mirrors.centos.webair.com Package php-5.4.16-36.el7_1.x86_64 already installed and latest version Package curl-7.29.0-25.el7.centos.x86_64 already installed and latest version Package nss-3.19.1-19.el7_2.x86_64 already installed and latest version Nothing to do
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They are correct on PHP. The entire 5.4 family is out of support from PHP.
http://php.net/supported-versions.php
It's the problem with LTS operating systems. To have an LTS OS means that the individual tools that it is built from have to be out of support from their own vendors.
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@scottalanmiller said:
They are correct on PHP. The entire 5.4 family is out of support from PHP.
http://php.net/supported-versions.php
It's the problem with LTS operating systems. To have an LTS OS means that the individual tools that it is built from have to be out of support from their own vendors.
This is what is in the defualt CentOS repo. so then the problem is with the repo.
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the fact that there's no more up to date CURL/NSS version for your OS doesn't mean the problem has gone away
Seems like your internet connection is working again? If the error is still there, I looked and it is caused by a problem with the CURL version your PHP is built with. In other words, it is a bug in your distribution which causes this error. ownCloud tries to check if it is connected, it gets an error and thus lets you know that. You'll find the error in your logs. See this github issue.
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@JaredBusch said:
This is what is in the defualt CentOS repo. so then the problem is with the repo.
No, CentOS LTS specifically guarantees this problem. This is an inherent problem with LTS OSes. CentOS guarantees that the PHP that they ship with will never change (major or minor version.) That's their guarantee. It's what their customers demand.
If you want the repo that has PHP up to date according to PHP, you have to switch to Fedora or your own repo of choice.
Wanting PHP to be up to date is in conflict with the intent and goals of CentOS.
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re why the YUM repo doesn't have ownCloud 9.0 - that might actually be because we don't support your old OS anymore? See the upgrade blog for what we support as of today. You can use packages from another repo, actually, as the 'owncloud-files' one has no dependencies or other magic and thus should work nearly anywhere. That way, you can still have ownCloud 9 if you want.
But I'd recommend not to run such old software if you can avoid it.
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@scottalanmiller I agree on your stance with regard to LTS, by the way
I think that the LTS idea is just not really that relevant anymore in 2016. Better upgrade often and in small steps with each perhaps a minor issue to resolve than only break everything once every three years...
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@jospoortvliet said:
Seems like your internet connection is working again? If the error is still there, I looked and it is caused by a problem with the CURL version your PHP is built with. In other words, it is a bug in your distribution which causes this error. ownCloud tries to check if it is connected, it gets an error and thus lets you know that. You'll find the error in your logs. See this github issue.
cURL is testing and failing on a certificate, not on the Internet connection according to what I read there. That would mean that the error is also wrong as it isn't the Internet test that failed. So while you can say that cURL has a bug, the error is blatantly wrong given the error that happens. So while cURL needs to be addressed, this is obviously an ownCloud bug too that needs to be fixed. Bubbling up a false error message is always wrong.
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@jospoortvliet said:
@scottalanmiller I agree on your stance with regard to LTS, by the way
I think that the LTS idea is just not really that relevant anymore in 2016. Better upgrade often and in small steps with each perhaps a minor issue to resolve than only break everything once every three years...
Which has long been the OpenSuse philosophy. Although with the advent of Leap this past year, they are moving in the other direction towards CentOS's LTS philosophy. Ubuntu remains committed to no LTS and just provides a name to trick those demanding that they have it. It's a nice combination of keeping things up to date and pushing the problems to people insisting on something that doesn't make sense in their ecosystem.
It's going to take a really long time for most application vendors and large businesses to want to move away from an LTS model, though. It makes application support so much easier.
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@jospoortvliet said:
re why the YUM repo doesn't have ownCloud 9.0 - that might actually be because we don't support your old OS anymore? See the upgrade blog for what we support as of today. You can use packages from another repo, actually, as the 'owncloud-files' one has no dependencies or other magic and thus should work nearly anywhere. That way, you can still have ownCloud 9 if you want.
But I'd recommend not to run such old software if you can avoid it.
My old OS? WTF?
Last login: Wed Mar 9 10:39:15 2016 from 10.254.103.20 [root@oc ~]# cat /etc/redhat-release CentOS Linux release 7.2.1511 (Core) [root@oc ~]# rpm -q centos-release centos-release-7-2.1511.el7.centos.2.10.x86_64 [root@oc ~]# uname -rmi 3.10.0-327.10.1.el7.x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 [root@oc ~]#
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@JaredBusch said:
@jospoortvliet said:
re why the YUM repo doesn't have ownCloud 9.0 - that might actually be because we don't support your old OS anymore? See the upgrade blog for what we support as of today. You can use packages from another repo, actually, as the 'owncloud-files' one has no dependencies or other magic and thus should work nearly anywhere. That way, you can still have ownCloud 9 if you want.
But I'd recommend not to run such old software if you can avoid it.
My old OS? WTF?
Last login: Wed Mar 9 10:39:15 2016 from 10.254.103.20 [root@oc ~]# cat /etc/redhat-release CentOS Linux release 7.2.1511 (Core) [root@oc ~]# rpm -q centos-release centos-release-7-2.1511.el7.centos.2.10.x86_64 [root@oc ~]# uname -rmi 3.10.0-327.10.1.el7.x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 [root@oc ~]#
That's odd my CentOS6.5 system was able to install ownCloud9 from a repo.
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@coliver said:
@JaredBusch said:
@jospoortvliet said:
re why the YUM repo doesn't have ownCloud 9.0 - that might actually be because we don't support your old OS anymore? See the upgrade blog for what we support as of today. You can use packages from another repo, actually, as the 'owncloud-files' one has no dependencies or other magic and thus should work nearly anywhere. That way, you can still have ownCloud 9 if you want.
But I'd recommend not to run such old software if you can avoid it.
My old OS? WTF?
Last login: Wed Mar 9 10:39:15 2016 from 10.254.103.20 [root@oc ~]# cat /etc/redhat-release CentOS Linux release 7.2.1511 (Core) [root@oc ~]# rpm -q centos-release centos-release-7-2.1511.el7.centos.2.10.x86_64 [root@oc ~]# uname -rmi 3.10.0-327.10.1.el7.x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 [root@oc ~]#
That's odd my CentOS6.5 system was able to install ownCloud9 from a repo.
This thread has nothing to do with upgrading to 9
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@JaredBusch said:
@coliver said:
@JaredBusch said:
@jospoortvliet said:
re why the YUM repo doesn't have ownCloud 9.0 - that might actually be because we don't support your old OS anymore? See the upgrade blog for what we support as of today. You can use packages from another repo, actually, as the 'owncloud-files' one has no dependencies or other magic and thus should work nearly anywhere. That way, you can still have ownCloud 9 if you want.
But I'd recommend not to run such old software if you can avoid it.
My old OS? WTF?
Last login: Wed Mar 9 10:39:15 2016 from 10.254.103.20 [root@oc ~]# cat /etc/redhat-release CentOS Linux release 7.2.1511 (Core) [root@oc ~]# rpm -q centos-release centos-release-7-2.1511.el7.centos.2.10.x86_64 [root@oc ~]# uname -rmi 3.10.0-327.10.1.el7.x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 [root@oc ~]#
That's odd my CentOS6.5 system was able to install ownCloud9 from a repo.
This thread has nothing to do with upgrading to 9
You said you did yum updates and it went to 8.2.3 from 8.2.2. When I run yum updates on my older OS it updates to 9.0. Just odd that yours didn't.
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@coliver said:
@JaredBusch said:
@coliver said:
@JaredBusch said:
@jospoortvliet said:
re why the YUM repo doesn't have ownCloud 9.0 - that might actually be because we don't support your old OS anymore? See the upgrade blog for what we support as of today. You can use packages from another repo, actually, as the 'owncloud-files' one has no dependencies or other magic and thus should work nearly anywhere. That way, you can still have ownCloud 9 if you want.
But I'd recommend not to run such old software if you can avoid it.
My old OS? WTF?
Last login: Wed Mar 9 10:39:15 2016 from 10.254.103.20 [root@oc ~]# cat /etc/redhat-release CentOS Linux release 7.2.1511 (Core) [root@oc ~]# rpm -q centos-release centos-release-7-2.1511.el7.centos.2.10.x86_64 [root@oc ~]# uname -rmi 3.10.0-327.10.1.el7.x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 [root@oc ~]#
That's odd my CentOS6.5 system was able to install ownCloud9 from a repo.
This thread has nothing to do with upgrading to 9
You said you did yum updates and it went to 8.2.3 from 8.2.2. When I run yum updates on my older OS it updates to 9.0. Just odd that yours didn't.
The Repo URLs may have changed between 8.x and 9.x?
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@coliver said:
@JaredBusch said:
@coliver said:
@JaredBusch said:
@jospoortvliet said:
re why the YUM repo doesn't have ownCloud 9.0 - that might actually be because we don't support your old OS anymore? See the upgrade blog for what we support as of today. You can use packages from another repo, actually, as the 'owncloud-files' one has no dependencies or other magic and thus should work nearly anywhere. That way, you can still have ownCloud 9 if you want.
But I'd recommend not to run such old software if you can avoid it.
My old OS? WTF?
Last login: Wed Mar 9 10:39:15 2016 from 10.254.103.20 [root@oc ~]# cat /etc/redhat-release CentOS Linux release 7.2.1511 (Core) [root@oc ~]# rpm -q centos-release centos-release-7-2.1511.el7.centos.2.10.x86_64 [root@oc ~]# uname -rmi 3.10.0-327.10.1.el7.x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 [root@oc ~]#
That's odd my CentOS6.5 system was able to install ownCloud9 from a repo.
This thread has nothing to do with upgrading to 9
You said you did yum updates and it went to 8.2.3 from 8.2.2. When I run yum updates on my older OS it updates to 9.0. Just odd that yours didn't.
This install was built on the 8.2 repo. I would not expect it to update to the 9 repo.
wget http://download.owncloud.org/download/repositories/8.2/CentOS_7/ce:8.2.repo -O /etc/yum.repos.d/ce:8.2.repo
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@JaredBusch said:
@coliver said:
@JaredBusch said:
@coliver said:
@JaredBusch said:
@jospoortvliet said:
re why the YUM repo doesn't have ownCloud 9.0 - that might actually be because we don't support your old OS anymore? See the upgrade blog for what we support as of today. You can use packages from another repo, actually, as the 'owncloud-files' one has no dependencies or other magic and thus should work nearly anywhere. That way, you can still have ownCloud 9 if you want.
But I'd recommend not to run such old software if you can avoid it.
My old OS? WTF?
Last login: Wed Mar 9 10:39:15 2016 from 10.254.103.20 [root@oc ~]# cat /etc/redhat-release CentOS Linux release 7.2.1511 (Core) [root@oc ~]# rpm -q centos-release centos-release-7-2.1511.el7.centos.2.10.x86_64 [root@oc ~]# uname -rmi 3.10.0-327.10.1.el7.x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 [root@oc ~]#
That's odd my CentOS6.5 system was able to install ownCloud9 from a repo.
This thread has nothing to do with upgrading to 9
You said you did yum updates and it went to 8.2.3 from 8.2.2. When I run yum updates on my older OS it updates to 9.0. Just odd that yours didn't.
This install was built on the 8.2 repo. I would not expect it to update to the 9 repo.
wget http://download.owncloud.org/download/repositories/8.2/CentOS_7/ce:8.2.repo -O /etc/yum.repos.d/ce:8.2.repo
You are just trying to get the Errors to go away anyhow, right?
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@JaredBusch said:
@coliver said:
@JaredBusch said:
@coliver said:
@JaredBusch said:
@jospoortvliet said:
re why the YUM repo doesn't have ownCloud 9.0 - that might actually be because we don't support your old OS anymore? See the upgrade blog for what we support as of today. You can use packages from another repo, actually, as the 'owncloud-files' one has no dependencies or other magic and thus should work nearly anywhere. That way, you can still have ownCloud 9 if you want.
But I'd recommend not to run such old software if you can avoid it.
My old OS? WTF?
Last login: Wed Mar 9 10:39:15 2016 from 10.254.103.20 [root@oc ~]# cat /etc/redhat-release CentOS Linux release 7.2.1511 (Core) [root@oc ~]# rpm -q centos-release centos-release-7-2.1511.el7.centos.2.10.x86_64 [root@oc ~]# uname -rmi 3.10.0-327.10.1.el7.x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 [root@oc ~]#
That's odd my CentOS6.5 system was able to install ownCloud9 from a repo.
This thread has nothing to do with upgrading to 9
You said you did yum updates and it went to 8.2.3 from 8.2.2. When I run yum updates on my older OS it updates to 9.0. Just odd that yours didn't.
This install was built on the 8.2 repo. I would not expect it to update to the 9 repo.
wget http://download.owncloud.org/download/repositories/8.2/CentOS_7/ce:8.2.repo -O /etc/yum.repos.d/ce:8.2.repo
Ah I see. Mine is using the CE stable repo sorry.
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@dafyre said:
@coliver said:
@JaredBusch said:
@coliver said:
@JaredBusch said:
@jospoortvliet said:
re why the YUM repo doesn't have ownCloud 9.0 - that might actually be because we don't support your old OS anymore? See the upgrade blog for what we support as of today. You can use packages from another repo, actually, as the 'owncloud-files' one has no dependencies or other magic and thus should work nearly anywhere. That way, you can still have ownCloud 9 if you want.
But I'd recommend not to run such old software if you can avoid it.
My old OS? WTF?
Last login: Wed Mar 9 10:39:15 2016 from 10.254.103.20 [root@oc ~]# cat /etc/redhat-release CentOS Linux release 7.2.1511 (Core) [root@oc ~]# rpm -q centos-release centos-release-7-2.1511.el7.centos.2.10.x86_64 [root@oc ~]# uname -rmi 3.10.0-327.10.1.el7.x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 [root@oc ~]#
That's odd my CentOS6.5 system was able to install ownCloud9 from a repo.
This thread has nothing to do with upgrading to 9
You said you did yum updates and it went to 8.2.3 from 8.2.2. When I run yum updates on my older OS it updates to 9.0. Just odd that yours didn't.
The Repo URLs may have changed between 8.x and 9.x?
Right, I don't want my systems to do such a major update automagically because I use
yum-cron
to keep packages up to date. -
@JaredBusch said:
@jospoortvliet said:
re why the YUM repo doesn't have ownCloud 9.0 - that might actually be because we don't support your old OS anymore? See the upgrade blog for what we support as of today. You can use packages from another repo, actually, as the 'owncloud-files' one has no dependencies or other magic and thus should work nearly anywhere. That way, you can still have ownCloud 9 if you want.
But I'd recommend not to run such old software if you can avoid it.
My old OS? WTF?
Last login: Wed Mar 9 10:39:15 2016 from 10.254.103.20 [root@oc ~]# cat /etc/redhat-release CentOS Linux release 7.2.1511 (Core) [root@oc ~]# rpm -q centos-release centos-release-7-2.1511.el7.centos.2.10.x86_64 [root@oc ~]# uname -rmi 3.10.0-327.10.1.el7.x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 [root@oc ~]#
@jospoortvliet I am still waiting on you to answer this...
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@JaredBusch yeah, Jared is running the very latest of what seems like the recommended platform. How are we ever supposed to be current if the latest is "old and unsupported?"