Yes that were the packages, thanks.

If you are uncomfortable using init script on RHEL, you can always borrow the 
installer-script from Solr's git repository's main branch (to become version 
10.0), which uses systemd. You'd need to copy the install script and the 
systemd file and I think you should be able to make it work for Solr 9.x.

Jan

> 17. apr. 2024 kl. 23:22 skrev Dmitri Maziuk <dmitri.maz...@gmail.com>:
> 
> On 4/17/24 15:47, Jan Høydahl wrote:
>> Hi,
>> I believe RHEL uses systemd, so you'll have to first install the package for 
>> initd, I cannot remember the yum name now. Then try the install script again.
>> 
> Apparently on RHEL 9 it's initiscripts, initsctripts-service, and chkconfig. 
> However,
> 
> """
> While RHEL 7 and higher use systemd moving forward, initscripts packages are 
> still provided for the sole purpose of supporting legacy Red Hat provided 
> scripts only. It is NOT intended to be used for 3rd party init scripts, and 
> doing so can cause problems on the system such as boot failures or service 
> failures. Additionally, 3rd party scripts are not covered by Red Hat's scope 
> of support. The functionality therefore exists, but using it with 3rd party 
> legacy init scripts is not supported.
> 
> We cannot guarantee that any 3rd party legacy init scripts will function as 
> intended due to the nature of how systemd works with sysvinit, and cannot 
> guarantee those scripts will work in the future. Ultimately it is recommended 
> to contact the vendor that provides these scripts and ask them to provide 
> proper systemd service units...
> """
> 
> https://access.redhat.com/solutions/7030065
> 
> Dima
> 

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