Hello Eapen, Hello Everyone -
The question of dealing with upgrades comes up now and again, so here is my approach to installing and running different versions of Radiator. 1. create a directory for the Radiator distributions mkdir /usr/local/src/Radiator 2. change to that directory cd /usr/local/src/Radiator 3. move the source tarball to this directory mv ...../Radiator-3.0.tgz . 4. unpack the distribution zcat Radiator-3.0.tgz | tar -xvf - 5. change to the distribution directory cd Radiator-3.0 6. build the distribution (**DO NOT INSTALL**) perl Makefile.PL; make; make test 7. now run the executables from here for testing ./radiusd ...... 8. in your startup scripts use the full path name to run radiusd /usr/local/src/Radiator-3.0/radiusd ....... This way you can keep multiple different versions of Radiator on the same host and run whichever version you want to just by changing the startup script and without disturbing anything else. Note that when you build and install MD5, DBD, DBI, etc., they are installed directly into the Perl hierarchy and are therefore available for whatever version of Radiator you are running. Hope that helps. regards Hugh On Wed, 27 Mar 2002 05:46, Eapen Joseph wrote: > Dear Hugh, > i have current working version of Radiator 2.19 on solaris with Oracle > 9i as the database. > Can i install radiator 3.0, without actually distrubing the current > installation???? > or can i just upgrade to radiator 3.0 by installing it on the same > directory as Radiator 2.19???? > if i am installing Radiator 3.0 on a different directory i suppose that > i have to do everything from scratch...ie...MD5,DBD,DBI...etc...., > whereas if the upgration is done on the same directory as of Radiator > 2.19 i suppose that i dont have to install MD5, DBD, DBI etc....as its > already configured..... > > regards > eapen -- Radiator: the most portable, flexible and configurable RADIUS server anywhere. Available on *NIX, *BSD, Windows 95/98/2000, NT, MacOS X. - Nets: internetwork inventory and management - graphical, extensible, flexible with hardware, software, platform and database independence. === Archive at http://www.open.com.au/archives/radiator/ Announcements on [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe, email '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' with 'unsubscribe radiator' in the body of the message.