MESSAGE
DATE | 2004-06-28 |
FROM | Adam Kosmin
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SUBJECT | Subject: [hangout] (fwd) [alois@astro.ch: Re: Redhat support experience]
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Is anyone here running RHEL 3? If so, what do you make of this? Does this TCPA stuff exist on your machine(s)?
Adam
----- Forwarded message from Ed Wilts -----
Date: Mon, 28 Jun 2004 06:42:24 -0500 To: redcap list From: Ed Wilts Subject: [alois-at-astro.ch: Re: Redhat support experience] Reply-to: red-cap-list-at-redhat.com User-Agent: Mutt/1.4.1i
It looks like Red Hat support got this one wrong.
I realize that the support organization can't be right 100% of the time (a nice target but probably never reachable). Do you want to receive reports like this or do you have your own internal checks and balances that already caught it?
Thanks, ,.../Ed (who ran a support organization in a previous life)
-- Ed Wilts, RHCE Mounds View, MN, USA mailto:ewilts-at-ewilts.org Member #1, Red Hat Community Ambassador Program
Date: Mon, 28 Jun 2004 12:20:17 +0200 To: "Discussion of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 3 (Taroon)" From: Alois Treindl Subject: Re: Redhat support experience User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686; en-US; rv:1.4.2) Gecko/20040301 Reply-To: "Discussion of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 3 (Taroon)"
Alois Treindl wrote: >since I upgraded recently to kernel 2.4.21-15.0.2.ELsmp, >the system logs frequently this error message: > >modprobe: modprobe: Can't locate module char-major-10-224 >last message repeated 2 times > >This happens on all machines for which I have done the kernel update. >
I registered the problem with Redhat Support, at the same time as I had submitted it to the mailing list. It turned into an interesting experience.
This monday morning Redhat support told me: -- begin quote -- The character device with major 10 and minor 224 is not registered in devices.txt (/usr/src/linux-2.4/Documentation/devices.txt) that comes with kernel-source, so i cannot tell wich devices it is.
Chances are that this is a device used by some application trying to read to a character device with major 10 and minor 224 without having the module available (as this device does not exists as far as devices.txt is concerned, it s normal that we do not ship such a driver).
In order to get rid of this error message, you can add the following line in /etc/modules.conf: alias char-major-10-224 off -- end quote --
I have answered them: -- begin quote -- Yes, the line in /etc/modules.conf gets rid of the messages
The entry has to do with the (new) audit service, a component built in by Redhat and not by me.
I have disabled audit as a service, because I don't run unknown services on the system, but the rpms are installed: laus-libs-0.1-56RHEL3 laus-0.1-54RHEL3
The file /usr/share/doc/MAKEDEV-3.3.12/devices.txt tells us what char-major-10-224 is 224 = /dev/tpm TCPA TPM driver
I would feel safer with my system if Redhat Support actually knew what services and devices they build in ;-) This is particularily true for the infamous TCPA stuff (Microsoft's 'trusted computing' spy module) -- end quote ---
-- Taroon-list mailing list Taroon-list-at-redhat.com http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/taroon-list
----- End forwarded message -----
--
"Yes, Your Honor. Now, where we are so far, in at least my line of reasoning, is I want to walk the Court through enough of our complaint to help the Court understand that IBM clearly did contribute a lot of the Unix-related information into Linux. We just don't know what it is."
-- Kevin McBride SCO vs. IBM 12/05/03 ____________________________ NYLXS: New Yorker Free Software Users Scene Fair Use - because it's either fair use or useless.... NYLXS is a trademark of NYLXS, Inc
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