On 05/26/2016 07:48 AM, Johnny Hughes wrote:
On 05/26/2016 07:42 AM, Jitse Klomp wrote:
On 05/26/2016 01:43 PM, Johnny Hughes wrote:
On 05/26/2016 06:31 AM, Jitse Klomp wrote:
Hello,
I updated my CentOS 6 machine yesterday and it threw this error at me (before I switched to centos-release-scl):
http://mirror.centos.org/centos/6/SCL/x86_64/repodata/repomd.xml: [Errno 14] PYCURL ERROR 22 - "The requested URL returned error: 404 Not Found" Trying other mirror. To address this issue please refer to the below knowledge base article
https://access.redhat.com/articles/1320623
If above article doesn't help to resolve this issue please open a ticket with Red Hat Support.
Did you miss this when removing Red Hat branding or is it supposed to say this?
We have not removed that from yum yet because we don't yet have a better place to point it too .. and neither the message OR the linked page specifically say you are running Red Hat Enterprise Linux, etc.
The linked page is also relevant (ie, it is what you need to do to fix the problem).
So, we have left that link in on purpose.
It is relevant but only accessible to Red Hat customers. I think it's a bit strange to link to 'closed' documentation from an open project like CentOS but that's just a matter of taste, I guess.
I could be persuaded to change it, but I don't that is specifically required for branding reasons.
Regardless .. the Red Hat support part should be removed .. so I will look at that and try to find a fix.
Great. Is there a way I can help?
Thanks for all the hard work!
I created this:
https://wiki.centos.org/yum-404-error
I will look to create a yum patch .. then we can decide if it should out before the next update or wait.
Remember that the overarching goal of CentOS is to ONLY modify RHEL source code in the base OS when absolutely necessary.
We want to provide an overall look and feel that is CentOS .. AND .. we obviously want to meet the 'Trademark' requirements to redistribute binaries made from the soruce code .. but other than that, we DO NOT WANT to make changes to the source as an overarching goal.
So, we look long and hard at every edit .. and try NOT to make it unless absolutely necessary. This is especially true if we are modifying a NEW package. In the case of yum, we are already making other changes, so it makes sense to make this one. If this were a package that we were not already changing, we may or may not have changed it.
Thanks, Johnny HUghes