> <lots snipped> > > >>The redhat access page comes up in both google and duckduckgo when I put >>in the entire 4 lines of the error message. You still have to login to >>see the solution. >> >>https://www.google.com/search?client=ubuntu&channel=fs&q=+Problem+1%3A+conflicting+requests+++-+nothing+provides+module%28perl%3A5.26%29+needed+by+module+perl-DBD-SQLite%3A1.58%3A8010020190322125518%3A073fa5fe-0.x86_64++Problem+2%3A+conflicting+requests+++-+nothing+provides+module%28perl%3A5.26%29+needed+by+module+perl-DBI%3A1.641%3A8010020190322130042%3A16b3ab4d-0.x86_64&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8 >> >>Other than that you could create a login on the redhat site and register >>as a developer (free of charge) and have access to some of their online >>resources including the access knowledgebase. >> >>I am mostly a CentOS user, and installed redhat 8 so I could start >>working on my applications before CentOS 8 was released. >> >> >>Nataraj > > I have a free subscription, but still can't get to the solution page. Oh > well. I've never really understood how hiding those solutions behind a wall is a good thing in/for the OpenSource world. Looks like I'm not alone :-) Simon