CiscoMike
Verified User
Hey all,
first off...I'm loving DA as a new user to it. Just switched my 5 servers from Plesk to DA and it's going wonderful. It's nice being able to run software with the latest security fixes w/o waiting for Plesk to issue an update. Not here to bash another CP though...
I'm wanting to upgrade MySQL between 4.1.x versions. I am currently running 4.1.11 but I want to go to the GA version of 4.1.15. My question is, can I download the RHEL4 rpms or should I stick with the generic x86 linux glibc packages? I'm running CentOS 4.2 which as most people know is a rebuild of RHEL4. Didn't find anything useful in the CentOS forums. I saw @how@'s upgrade procedures (thank you for those, they're awesome!!!!) but wasn't sure if it was "safe" (i.e. technically sound) to use the RHEL4 rpms.
Thanks!
PS: I think the answer is yes, use the RHEL4 rpms but I wanted a 2nd opinion.
first off...I'm loving DA as a new user to it. Just switched my 5 servers from Plesk to DA and it's going wonderful. It's nice being able to run software with the latest security fixes w/o waiting for Plesk to issue an update. Not here to bash another CP though...
I'm wanting to upgrade MySQL between 4.1.x versions. I am currently running 4.1.11 but I want to go to the GA version of 4.1.15. My question is, can I download the RHEL4 rpms or should I stick with the generic x86 linux glibc packages? I'm running CentOS 4.2 which as most people know is a rebuild of RHEL4. Didn't find anything useful in the CentOS forums. I saw @how@'s upgrade procedures (thank you for those, they're awesome!!!!) but wasn't sure if it was "safe" (i.e. technically sound) to use the RHEL4 rpms.
Thanks!
PS: I think the answer is yes, use the RHEL4 rpms but I wanted a 2nd opinion.