RHBA-2017:1302-1: glibc bug fix update
RHBA-2017:1302-1: glibc bug fix update Red Hat Enterprise Linux: Updated glibc packages that fix one bug are now available for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7. Source: RHBA-2017:1302-1: glibc bug fix update
RHBA-2017:1302-1: glibc bug fix update Red Hat Enterprise Linux: Updated glibc packages that fix one bug are now available for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7. Source: RHBA-2017:1302-1: glibc bug fix update
RHBA-2017:1301-1: libnetfilter_conntrack bug fix and enhancement update Red Hat Enterprise Linux: Updated libnetfilter_conntrack packages that fix several bugs and add various enhancements are now available for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7. Source: RHBA-2017:1301-1: libnetfilter_conntrack bug fix and enhancement update
RHBA-2017:1299-1: RDMA bug fix update Red Hat Enterprise Linux: Updated RDMA packages that fix one bug are now available for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7. Source: RHBA-2017:1299-1: RDMA bug fix update
WordPress 4.8 Release Candidate The release candidate for WordPress 4.8 is now available. RC means we think we’re done, but with millions of users and thousands of plugins and themes, it’s possible we’ve missed something. We hope to ship WordPress 4.8 on Thursday, June 8, but we need your help to get there. If you haven’t tested 4.8 yet, now is the time! To test WordPress 4.8, you can use the WordPress Beta Tester plugin or you can download the release candidate here (zip). We’ve made a handful of changes since releasing Beta 2 earlier this week. For more details about what’s new in version 4.8, check out the Beta 1 and Beta 2 blog posts. Think you’ve found a bug? Please post to the Alpha/Beta support forum. If any known issues come up, you’ll be able to find them here. Developers, please [ more… ]
Creating Installable Packages for Dynamic Modules NGINX 1.11.5 and NGINX Plus R11 introduced support for compiling dynamic modules independently of NGINX itself. This allows users of NGINX and NGINX Plus to use the official builds from the NGINX, Inc. repositories and load in the dynamic modules they need. There are several sources of dynamic modules: Official repository of prebuilt open source NGINX packages and modules Official repository of NGINX Plus packages and modules NGINX Plus Certified Modules Third‑party (community) modules This blog focuses on the use of third‑party dynamic modules with NGINX and NGINX Plus. We discuss best practices for building, deploying, and upgrading dynamic modules in a production environment. The Problem with .so Files When you compile a dynamic module, the raw output is a shared object (.so file). At startup and reload, NGINX and NGINX Plus load each of the shared objects specified by a load_module directive. [ more… ]
Copyright © 2024 | WordPress Theme by MH Themes