When I manually browse out to the URL the page does not exist, and backing out of the folders to the /repo/f16/i686/ shows an empty directory. I see the files under /repo/f16/x86_64/repodata/ however.
Is there going to be an i686 repository, can I modify the repo path for yum and use x86_64 or is that going to cause problems?
Thanks
Craig.
If you would like to refer to this comment somewhere else in this project, copy and paste the following link:
The public version of NST does not support updates from a yum repository. If you would like to have NST updates please see the NST Pro site for this feature:
To eliminate any errors from the not finding a i686 NST yum repo just edit the file: "/etc/yum.repos.d/nst.repo" and set the variable "enabled" to "0" (i.e., Disable this repo).
--RWH
If you would like to refer to this comment somewhere else in this project, copy and paste the following link:
Anonymous
-
2012-10-31
Ah! That makes sense then, I'd wondered if that was it.
Thanks for the quick response :)
If you would like to refer to this comment somewhere else in this project, copy and paste the following link:
Hi there, I've just deployed NST in VMware ESXi 5.0 and have been trying to run yumex to check for updates but I'm getting errors for
Failure getting http://repo.networksecuritytoolkit.org/repo/f16/i686/repodata/repomd.xml:
When I manually browse out to the URL the page does not exist, and backing out of the folders to the /repo/f16/i686/ shows an empty directory. I see the files under /repo/f16/x86_64/repodata/ however.
Is there going to be an i686 repository, can I modify the repo path for yum and use x86_64 or is that going to cause problems?
Thanks
Craig.
Criag:
The public version of NST does not support updates from a yum repository. If you would like to have NST updates please see the NST Pro site for this feature:
http://www.networksecuritytoolkit.org/nstpro
To eliminate any errors from the not finding a i686 NST yum repo just edit the file: "/etc/yum.repos.d/nst.repo" and set the variable "enabled" to "0" (i.e., Disable this repo).
--RWH
Ah! That makes sense then, I'd wondered if that was it.
Thanks for the quick response :)