Hi,
On Tue, Aug 11, 2009 at 05:23, Chris Rosscnts5645@tebibyte.org wrote:
[root@neodymium bugzilla]# rpm -qa bugzilla mysql perl mysql-5.0.45-7.el5 bugzilla-3.2.4-1.el5 mysql-5.0.45-7.el5 perl-5.8.8-18.el5_3.1
Where is this Bugzilla package from? CentOS does not include any Bugzilla packages... I expect that RHEL does not either (otherwise it would be in CentOS).
I know EPEL has a Bugzilla package, I used it in the past, but AFAIR it installs under /usr/share/bugzilla and not under /var/www/html/bugzilla as you've shown in your post...
Also, I do have an install of Bugzilla here and it does not have any bugs_fulltext table... I had 3.0 before and upgraded it to 3.2, and AFAIR that table never existed in my setup. The 3.0 I used was a rebuild from Fedora SRPM, then in 3.2 I switched to a source code install, I decided to switch since I had to keep both versions working for a while, now I set it up in a way that I can have parallel installations in the future easily as well.
On Tue, Aug 11, 2009 at 06:47, Chris Rosscnts5645@tebibyte.org wrote:
So, if the RHEL's yum upgrade of Bugzilla from 3.0.2 to 3.2.4 also required that perl-DBD-MySQL be upgraded to 4.0 or later, why wasn't it? Ergo I conclude that in fact it's not needed and that something else is wrong. I can't be the only person running Bugzilla on CentOS/RHEL 5! It does mean that checksetup.pl doesn't complete though. Obviously installing from CPAN is not the right answer.
I can tell you that RPMforge has all the RPMs for Perl modules required by Bugzilla. Acutally, all those needed to run Bugzilla 3.4 were recently built. The only exception is the CGI module that is bundled with Perl itself so cannot be easily upgraded in a standalone RPM... For that one, though, it's possible to use Bugzilla's install-module.pl script, that will install the needed module version from CPAN, but only inside Bugzilla's tree, in a way that does not conflict with the O.S. and so it should be safe from RPM upgrades.
HTH, Filipe