Rpm for BIND 9 version 9.9.7-P2 (fix CVE-2015-5477) rhel
Hello,
I have a RedHat machine (version 5.11) and i need to install BIND version version 9.9.7-P2 in order to fix a known BIND vulnerability CVE-2015-5477.
I downloaded the tar file from isc website but i am having trouble to install the file.
Does anybody knows a link for the rpm package of this version? i cannot find the rpm and it would be much easier to update it this way.
I have requirement for strace utility rpm package for RHEL 5.9. I have made a google for last 1 hr. but did not find the required one. Can any one help me out to find out the compatible rpm package of strace for Redhat 5.9 version (I require 64 bit version). (7 Replies)
Hi,
Anyone can help on applying patch "PHP Vulnerability: CVE-2015-4601" on Centos 6.8 platform.
How can I install this patch in command line using "yum" or "rpm"? Do I need to download or there is a direct command.
Thanks in advance.
Ragards,
FSPalero (4 Replies)
I need to change Date and time stamp format from Jan 01 2015 11:00:00 PM to 01/01/2015 23.00.00
Existing Format : Mon DD YYYY hh:mi:ss AM/PM (Jan 01 2015 11:00:00 PM)
Expected Format: MM/DD/YYYY hh.mi.ss 24 hours (01/01/2015 23.00.00)
I need to update enitire file where... (3 Replies)
After checking the dependencies from below command:-
yum deplist gcc
Update:-
Now when I tried to install the very first dependency , it gave the below error, I guess something is wrong with YUM server itself :P
... (1 Reply)
Hi
In opensuse we have this nice version control variable I use much when designing rpm spec files:
rpm --showrc | grep suse_version
%if 0%{?suse_version} > 0 && 0%{?suse_version} < 1700
-14: suse_version 1140But I do not find anything close to this in rhel/centos
The only way... (0 Replies)
hi
i have an application which have a expect script. But now when I run application on other machines, it requires expect to be present on that system.
Now I have the binary of expect with all the libraries required.
The binary support for Rhel 5 version or later versions.
Can aneone tell... (2 Replies)
I have tried thought of using instfix -ivqc | grep BIND , but this did not return the result I was looking for; it seem to list out the the different patches that had been applied to BIND. I'm actually looking for overall version, like you'd get when checking the OS level for instance. (1 Reply)
bindsetup(8) System Manager's Manual bindsetup(8)Name
bindsetup - set up the Berkeley Internet Name Domain (BIND)/Hesiod service
Syntax
/usr/etc/bindsetup [ -c [ -d directory ] -b binddomain name1,IP1 name2,IP2 ... ]
Description
The command sets up the Berkeley Internet Name Domain (BIND)/Hesiod service on your system and places and resolution under BIND/Hesiod con-
trol. You can use this command to set up your system as a primary, secondary, slave, or caching server, or as a client.
In order to run BIND/Hesiod, your system's host name must include the BIND domain name. The BIND host name consists of the local host name
plus the BIND domain name, separated by periods. For example, the BIND host name for a system whose local host name is and whose BIND
domain name is is
The command edits the and files and changes the local host name to the BIND host name, if it is not there already.
If the command changes your system's host name, you should reboot the system to be sure that the change is propagated throughout the sys-
tem.
Before you run , your system must be established on a local area network. In addition, you must know the BIND domain name for your local
area network, and whether your system will be a primary, secondary, slave, or caching server, or a client.
The command asks if you want to run a Kerberos authentication server. You must already have set up Kerberos to do do. For more informa-
tion, see the Guide to Kerberos.
You should run the command as superuser and with the system in multiuser mode.
If you use the option with the respective arguments, the command sets up your system as a BIND/Hesiod client non-interactively.
If you run the command with no arguments, a menu is displayed giving you a choice of responses. You are then prompted for further informa-
tion. Before exits, it lists the files that have been updated.
Once BIND/Hesiod is installed on a machine, it cannot be used until the file is modified to contain BIND entries on the desired database
lines. The command reminds a user to run or edit the file manually.
Options-c Sets up your system as a BIND/Hesiod client according to the following arguments you supply on the command line:
-d directory
This option and argument are required if you are setting up a diskless client from the diskless server. The directory is the
full path name of the root directory for your system (a diskless client) on the diskless server. The following is an example
of a root directory for a diskless client named
/dlclient0/orange.root
-b binddomain
This is the name of the BIND domain on which your system will be a BIND client. For example, is a sample BIND domain name.
name,IP This is the host name and the IP address of the BIND server on the domain, for example You can specify one or more BIND server
by listing more name,IP arguments, each separated by a space.
Files
List of locally maintained host names and IP addresses
Startup commands pertinent to a specific system
Database name with the selected naming services
Hesiod configuration file
List of Kerberos servers
Default BIND Files:
BIND server data file directory
BIND server boot file
BIND server cache file
BIND server local host reverse address host file
BIND primary server hosts file
BIND primary server reverse address hosts file
BIND data file
See Alsonslookup(1), hesiod(3), hesiod.conf(5), svc.conf(5), svcsetup(8), named(8), krb.conf(5), resolv.conf(5)
Guide to the BIND/Hesiod Service
Guide to Kerberos
bindsetup(8)