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Doh! Problem solved. Well at least I found it on my own...
Date on server is wrong, and certs were silently failing.
Matt
On 03/08/2018 04:16 PM, Matt Simonsen wrote:
I installed based on an older Node Next DVD (4.1.7) that has worked in
the past and it doesn't appear to be working when I add it to a cluster.
The installer says//it cannot queue package iproute.
Is there a repo down or that has changed? Thanks for any suggestions.
It appears yum is also broken:/
/
/yum update
Loaded plugins: fastestmirror, imgbased-persist, package_upload,
product-id,
: search-disabled-repos, subscription-manager
This system is not registered with an entitlement server. You can use
subscription-manager to register.
centos-opstools-release | 2.9 kB
00:00
ovirt-4.1 | 3.0 kB
00:00
ovirt-4.1-centos-gluster38 | 2.9 kB
00:00
One of the configured repositories failed (Unknown),
and yum doesn't have enough cached data to continue. At this point
the only
safe thing yum can do is fail. There are a few ways to work "fix" this:
1. Contact the upstream for the repository and get them to fix
the problem.
2. Reconfigure the baseurl/etc. for the repository, to point to a
working
upstream. This is most often useful if you are using a newer
distribution release than is supported by the repository (and the
packages for the previous distribution release still work).
3. Run the command with the repository temporarily disabled
yum --disablerepo=<repoid> ...
4. Disable the repository permanently, so yum won't use it by
default. Yum
will then just ignore the repository until you permanently
enable it
again or use --enablerepo for temporary usage:
yum-config-manager --disable <repoid>
or
subscription-manager repos --disable=<repoid>
5. Configure the failing repository to be skipped, if it is
unavailable.
Note that yum will try to contact the repo. when it runs most
commands,
so will have to try and fail each time (and thus. yum will be
be much
slower). If it is a very temporary problem though, this is
often a nice
compromise:
yum-config-manager --save
--setopt=<repoid>.skip_if_unavailable=true
Cannot retrieve metalink for repository: ovirt-4.1-epel/x86_64. Please
verify its path and try again
/
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Users mailing list
Users(a)ovirt.org
http://lists.ovirt.org/mailman/listinfo/users
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<p>Doh! Problem solved. Well at least I found it on my own...<br>
</p>
<p>Date on server is wrong, and certs were silently failing.</p>
<p>Matt</p>
<p><br>
</p>
<p><br>
</p>
<br>
<div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 03/08/2018 04:16 PM, Matt Simonsen
wrote:<br>
</div>
<blockquote type="cite"
cite="mid:0a7ec760-7df7-6441-9bd7-a0798aa2fac2@khoza.com">
<meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html;
charset=utf-8">
<p>I installed based on an older Node Next DVD (4.1.7) that has
worked in the past and it doesn't appear to be working when I
add it to a cluster.</p>
<p>The installer says<i> </i>it cannot queue package iproute.
<br>
</p>
<p>Is there a repo down or that has changed? Thanks for any
suggestions.<br>
</p>
<p>It appears yum is also broken:<i><br>
</i></p>
<p><i>yum update<br>
Loaded plugins: fastestmirror, imgbased-persist,
package_upload, product-id,<br>
: search-disabled-repos, subscription-manager<br>
This system is not registered with an entitlement server. You
can use subscription-manager to register.<br>
centos-opstools-release | 2.9
kB 00:00 <br>
ovirt-4.1 | 3.0
kB 00:00 <br>
ovirt-4.1-centos-gluster38 | 2.9
kB 00:00 <br>
<br>
<br>
One of the configured repositories failed (Unknown),<br>
and yum doesn't have enough cached data to continue. At this
point the only<br>
safe thing yum can do is fail. There are a few ways to work
"fix" this:<br>
<br>
1. Contact the upstream for the repository and get them
to fix the problem.<br>
<br>
2. Reconfigure the baseurl/etc. for the repository, to
point to a working<br>
upstream. This is most often useful if you are using a
newer<br>
distribution release than is supported by the
repository (and the<br>
packages for the previous distribution release still
work).<br>
<br>
3. Run the command with the repository temporarily
disabled<br>
yum --disablerepo=<repoid> ...<br>
<br>
4. Disable the repository permanently, so yum won't use
it by default. Yum<br>
will then just ignore the repository until you
permanently enable it<br>
again or use --enablerepo for temporary usage:<br>
<br>
yum-config-manager --disable <repoid><br>
or<br>
subscription-manager repos
--disable=<repoid><br>
<br>
5. Configure the failing repository to be skipped, if it
is unavailable.<br>
Note that yum will try to contact the repo. when it
runs most commands,<br>
so will have to try and fail each time (and thus. yum
will be be much<br>
slower). If it is a very temporary problem though,
this is often a nice<br>
compromise:<br>
<br>
yum-config-manager --save
--setopt=<repoid>.skip_if_unavailable=true<br>
<br>
Cannot retrieve metalink for repository:
ovirt-4.1-epel/x86_64. Please verify its path and try again<br>
</i><br>
</p>
<br>
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<br>
<pre wrap="">_______________________________________________
Users mailing list
<a class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated"
href="mailto:Users@ovirt.org">Users@ovirt.org</a>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="http://lists.ovirt.org/mailman/listinfo/users">http://...
</pre>
</blockquote>
<br>
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