• 06-10-2010, 14:28:25
    #1
    Üyeliği durduruldu
    Altta gelen bildiri İngilizce Türkcem az oldugundan direkt yapıştırıyorum ingilizce bilen bilmeyene anlatsın.

    A vulnerability has been found in the Linux kernel, which unfortunately is just about every system running 64-bit Linux.

    This vulnerability was introduced into the linux kernel in April 2008, and so essentially every distribution is affected, including RHEL (CentOS).

    For the full story, follow these links:

    http://blog.ksplice.com/2010/09/cve-2010-3081/

    http://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename...=CVE-2010-3081

    How to protect yourself

    We suggest you upgrade your system kernels as soon as possible, putting a higher priority on shared hosting servers is advised.

    Most systems will simply upgrade via yum, however your datacentre may have a local yum repository, so the new kernels may not be available yet (This has been reported by a few users already). We suggest you add a standard CentOS mirror to your yum configuration file to overcome this situation.

    OpenVZ have a patched kernel available in there yum repository (2.6.18-194.8.1.el5.028stab070.5) so a yum update should allow you to install the new kernel, if not, the kernel is available for download here: http://wiki.openvz.org/Download/kern...5/028stab070.5

    CentOS also have a new kernel release that patches the vulnerability in the standard and Xen kernels (2.6.18-194.11.4.el5), which is available via yum also.



    Regards
  • 06-10-2010, 19:28:13
    #2
    Üyeliği durduruldu
    Kim vurduya gitmeden, güncelleyin!!!
  • 06-10-2010, 19:31:23
    #3
    Bilgilendirme için teşekkürler.

    Saygılar
  • 06-10-2010, 19:44:58
    #4
    Teşekkürler.
  • 07-10-2010, 01:19:01
    #5
    Kimlik doğrulama veya yönetimden onay bekliyor.
    2 sunucuda 64bit centos kullanıyorum ama üşendim şimdi
  • 07-10-2010, 16:35:30
    #6
    Üyeliği durduruldu
    32bit kullananların birşey yapmasına gerek yok sanırım sadece 64 bit kullanıcılarını etkiliyor bu açık