Yet, it is installed:
grep mcrypt /var/log/yum.log Mar 03 11:42:17 Installed: libmcrypt-2.5.8-13.el7.armv7hl Mar 03 11:42:19 Installed: mcrypt-2.6.8-11.el7.armv7hl
How do I figure out why the installer reports it is not available?
thank you
On 04/05/2017 05:32 AM, Robert Moskowitz wrote:
Yet, it is installed:
grep mcrypt /var/log/yum.log Mar 03 11:42:17 Installed: libmcrypt-2.5.8-13.el7.armv7hl Mar 03 11:42:19 Installed: mcrypt-2.6.8-11.el7.armv7hl
How do I figure out why the installer reports it is not available?
Because it requires php extension of that name. Why are you installing old version of Roundcube? Since 1.2 we do not use mcrypt.
On 04/05/2017 01:37 AM, A.L.E.C wrote:
On 04/05/2017 05:32 AM, Robert Moskowitz wrote:
Yet, it is installed:
grep mcrypt /var/log/yum.log Mar 03 11:42:17 Installed: libmcrypt-2.5.8-13.el7.armv7hl Mar 03 11:42:19 Installed: mcrypt-2.6.8-11.el7.armv7hl
How do I figure out why the installer reports it is not available?
Because it requires php extension of that name. Why are you installing old version of Roundcube? Since 1.2 we do not use mcrypt.
For now, I a using the packages that come with Centos7-arm. For roundcubemail we just got the update to 1.1.8:
Mar 03 11:41:18 Installed: roundcubemail-1.1.7-1.el7.noarch Apr 04 09:30:23 Updated: roundcubemail-1.1.8-1.el7.noarch
By staying with the distro releases, I have one less item to worry about when in production. That is to monitor a package that there is some update I really need to install. I can, for the most part, leave that to the distro managers.