On Wed, 2016-03-02 at 07:33 -0600, Johnny Hughes wrote:
Hopefully this makes sense.
You can instead just look at this:
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/
(or subscribe to the CentOS announce mailing list to get emails)
Both of those places will tell you when there is a security update.
OR, you can subscribe to RHEL and use the information in the yum security plugin.
Thanks for not sparing the gory details (and Alice and James) - much appreciated!
I normally test my updates on non-critical systems before deploying to production. However, in this instance, I had been away from the office and wanted to quickly patch the openssl vulnerability before other non -critical/security related.
In the end, I bit the bullet and just upgraded everything and no harm done.
ak.