Over the last week or so I have noticed that chrome fails to load pages
- in fact even the setup pages do not load.
Blow away the ~/.config/google-chrome/ files and restart
Seems to work for a little while - then stops again - no other pages load.
I have done the cleanup of the .config/google-
Hello friends, today I encountered this issue on one of the centos
machines, yesterday everything seemed woking normally:
$ sudo yum update
There was a problem importing one of the Python modules
required to run yum. The error leading to this problem was:
lIbgscaPi_krb .co.2: cannot open share
Execute: ldconfig
Best regards
2017-05-21 10:54 GMT+02:00 vychytraly . :
> Hello friends, today I encountered this issue on one of the centos
> machines, yesterday everything seemed woking normally:
>
> $ sudo yum update
> There was a problem importing one of the Python modules
> required to run
Hello Jose, thank you very much for your response, I tried this command but
the problem persists, do you know what could be the problem? Thank you very
much
On Sunday, May 21, 2017, Jose wrote:
> Execute: ldconfig
>
> Best regards
>
> 2017-05-21 10:54 GMT+02:00 vychytraly . :
>
>> Hello friends,
And I got these errors: can't link /lib64/libSsl.so>10 to libssl.so.10 and
can't create temporary cache file /etc/ld.so.cache~: Permission denied
On Sunday, May 21, 2017, vychytraly . wrote:
> Hello Jose, thank you very much for your response, I tried this command
but the problem persists, do you
On Sun, 2017-05-21 at 13:06 +0200, vychytraly . wrote:
> And I got these errors: can't link /lib64/libSsl.so>10 to libssl.so.10 and
> can't create temporary cache file /etc/ld.so.cache~: Permission denied
sudo ldconfig
And if the error persists check that there's nothing wrong with your
filesyste
On 05/20/2017 06:10 PM, Adam Tauno Williams wrote:
Six months later, now on CentOS6.9, we still see the same issue -
constantly logging this message. Server packages are all up-to-date.
I find multiple reports on the Internet - but no solutions.
The bug report mentioned in the message you re
Gordon Messmer wrote:
Use "rpm -Vf /path/to/original/module.ko"
If rpm tells you that the checksum has been modified, then the
"original" file you've got isn't the correct file. Download the rpm
that owns that file, and use "rpm -i --replacefiles --replacepkgs
" to reinstall the kernel package
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