![]() ![]() IJ04082 - rpm alternate dbpath and migration from rpm-3 to rpm-4. RPM packages installed using non-default dbpath options were not be migrated #opt/freeware/rpm40/bin/rpmdb -rebuilddb -rcfile=/opt/freeware/lib/rpm40/rpmrc -define Note: If you have alternate database paths you will need to run the following after the update to rpm.rte 4.13.0.3 You will need to reinstall those RPMS after the update to 4.13.0.3. Note: If you installed any RPMs at 4.13.0.1/2, those will be missing when you reinstall rpm-3. ![]() Rpm -qa command failure or incomplete resultsĢ) Run 'rpm -qa' to ensure expected output Recent migration to AIX 71 TL5 (SP0-SP2) or 72 TL2 (SP0-SP2) - No ifix applied No migration from 3.0.5.n (RPM-3) OR no missing rpms after a migration from RPM-3 OK to update to 4.13.0.3 IJ04361 (not required) New AIX 71 TL5 (SP0-SP2) or 72 TL2 (SP0-SP2) installation. Previous migration to RPM-4 resulted in missing RPMS, so force-overwrite occurred The APAR associated with the new level 4.13.0.3 is IJ04361 Multiple issues occurred in this update or migration, including rpm_share or rpm hangs, and missing or incorrect output from rpm -qa.Ī new migration process from RPM-3 to RPM-4 was implemented in rpm.rte 4.13.0.3 to avoid known problems.which occurred with updates or migration to previous level rpm.rte 4.13.0.1/2. Once rpm.rte has been updated to 4.13.0.1/2, 'rpm -qa' will not list that $RPM_PACKAGE as installed, even though its directories and files still exist. There are conditions which could prevent an RPM package from being added to the new RPM-4 (4.13.0.1/2) database. $RPM_PACKAGE=any RPM package installed on the system.ĪIX 71 TL5 (SP0-SP2) and 72 TL2(SP0-SP2) include an update for the RPM Package Manager fileset rpm.rte that migrates package info from RPM-3 to RPM-4.RPM-4 rpm.rte 4.13.0.1/2/3 which uses Berkeley db3 and db4 format with database files starting with a capital letter.RPM-3: rpm.rte 3.0.5.5n, which used a Berkeley db1 database format with /opt/freeware/packages database files ending with.“Dragon Media has to comply with copyright law,” Faust said. Matthew Faust, an attorney for Dragon Media, said device customers would receive software updates as a result of the agreement. Under the settlement, Dragon Media has agreed to discontinue BlendTV and My TV Hub. The Dragon Box Facebook page now includes instructions on becoming a BioReigns distributor. The company appears to have pivoted again, as its website now redirects to a site called BioReigns, which markets herbal supplements containing CBD oil. In November, the company informed its users that BlendTV “got its content pulled.” Customers were later redirected to a new service, titled “My TV Hub.” “The boxes and the former content is still available on the internet we just can not help with any facilitation what so ever.” “Everyone is here knew that this wasn’t going to last forever Hollywood was losing to much money and all good things must come to an end it was a fun 5 years,” the company said (sic throughout). In September, amid widespread customer complaints that the boxes no longer worked, the company announced that it would be changing its service to provide “the best legal content we can.” The company then rolled out BlendTV, with subscription packages starting at $40 per month.Īt the time, the company disclosed on its Facebook page that “legal fee’s (sic) are bringing the company close to bankruptcy.” CEO Paul Christoforo argued on his LinkedIn page that the device was legal, because he could not control what customers were accessing online.īut the company was hit hard by the lawsuit. The Dragon Box once retailed for as much as $350, and its manufacturer, Dragon Media, claimed more than 250,000 customers. ![]()
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