On Nov 30, 2009, at 7:18 AM, Robert Heller heller@deepsoft.com wrote:
At Mon, 30 Nov 2009 03:08:01 -0600 CentOS mailing list <centos@centos.org
wrote:
On Mon, Nov 30, 2009 at 2:27 AM, Rudi Ahlers rudiahlers@gmail.com wrote:
On Mon, Nov 30, 2009 at 1:56 AM, Robert Heller heller@deepsoft.com wrote:
You either
A) Don't have NetworkManager installed on the other servers (eg 'rpm -q NetworkManager' yields 'package NetworkManager is not installed')
OR
B) Don't have NetworkManager running on the other servers (eg '/sbin/chkconfig NetworkManager --list' yields 'NetworkManager 0:off 1:off 2:off 3:off 4:off 5:off 6:off')
Thanx Robert, so it's safe to remove NetworkManager then? I have done so, and will see if any issues arise. The only files that was removed is:
Removing: NetworkManager i386 1:0.7.0-9.el5 installed 3.3 M NetworkManager x86_64 1:0.7.0-9.el5 installed 3.4 M Removing for dependencies: NetworkManager-glib i386 1:0.7.0-9.el5 installed 154 k NetworkManager-glib x86_64 1:0.7.0-9.el5 installed 161 k
i uninstall NetworkManager as well, but i would think you have bigger problems since it appears you have both the 64bit and 32bit versions of software installed?
For shared libraries this is normal. Generally NOT for programs though -- one or the other, yes (eg 64 bit of this and 32 bit of that).
Some apps install 64-bit and 32-bit versions for ABI compatibility and plugins (or IPC). Maybe the OP had a 32-bit gnome app installed?
Firefox is a perfect example of this (wish there were icons for both the 64-bit and 32-bit versions so one could choose which to launch).
With NetworkManager though one can only run one or the other. I believe the default for all dual arch installs is to run the 64-bit version if installed, otherwise the 32-bit version.
-Ross