Red Hat 9 stuff

I mentioned the GURU LABS review of Red Hat 9 before but what I forgot to say is that it should be required reading for anyone new to this release of Red Hat 9. It has such a wealth of information! It links to this article on adding eyecandy to Red Hat 9 that explains how to change the cursors in your GUI.
The download page has many useful RPMs, including one for mp3 playback, and some very nice looking screensavers!
You really should install apt-rpm too and then apt-get update; apt-get upgrade as there’s already been a number of updates to Samba, Sendmail, Evolution and other packages. Then grab Synaptic by doing apt-get install synaptic and make your package management life much easier!
If you want mp3 playback easily, it’s also available through apt, just apt-get install xmms-mp3 and launch xmms!
Here’s a long slashdot discussion on the new release.

Red Hat 9

This is my first posting from Red Hat 9 and so far I’m impressed!
Fonts in the GUI are nice, and even though I knew about it, the animated cursors and cursor changes are “pretty” and gave me a pleasant surprise!

Out of curiousity I tried configuring a printer and opened the Red Hat Printer Config tool. This turned out to be a very familiar wizard type application.
When I selected “Windows Network (SMB)” printer the tool displayed the PCs on the local network allowing me to choose the printer easily.
The first test print did fail, but that’s because the printer was turned off. When I printed the test page again it printed! The colours looked a bit strange in the colour wheel, White was a gradient from blue to white, Yellow was white!
I’m not too worried however as all I’ll be printing will be b/w text documents.

More on my experiences to follow..

Installing PHP4, mod_ssl and Apache

If you’re installing PHP4, with an ssl enabled Apache you may run into the same problem I just ran into.
The lines LoadModule php4_module libexec/libphp4.so and AddModule mod_php4.c are inserted by the php installer automatically. Unfortunately, mod_ssl also adds in code to load mod_ssl.
From what I saw, it looks like the PHP installer adds the php loadmodule commands after the last load module. That’s fine in most cases, but unfortunately here, the last load module command had an if statement around it. When I visited a non-https url php wouldn’t work!
For some reason it didn’t add the AddType commands either but those were easily copied from another httpd.conf!