On 1/24/20 8:02 AM, Simon Matter via CentOS wrote: >> <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 :-) > A good thing is the ability for someone to be able to pay people actual money so that CentOS can actually exist. There is no CentOS (or Scientfic Linux or Oracle Linux) without RHEL. There is no RHEL if Red Hat can not make money. If one is not smart enough to support their own install .. the answer is .. buy RHEL. -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: signature.asc Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 198 bytes Desc: OpenPGP digital signature URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20200130/6def6836/attachment-0005.sig>