Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
We value your experience with Plesk during 2025 Plesk strives to perform even better in 2026. To help us improve further, please answer a few questions about your experience with Plesk Obsidian 2025. Please take this short survey: https://survey.webpros.com/
On Plesk for Linux mod_status is disabled on upgrades to improve Apache security. This is a one-time operation that occurs during an upgrade. You can manually enable mod_status later if needed.
[root@server1 root]# cat /usr/local/psa/version
7.5.1 RedHat el3 75041216.14
[root@server1 root]# rpm -qf /usr/local/psa/version
file /usr/local/psa/version is not owned by any package
[root@server1 root]#
So what updates /usr/local/psa/version?
I've run the "yum update" and rpm -qa | grep psa " show all rpm's with 7.5 being 7.5.3 - yet when I go to the admin CP the server still says 7.5.1. This is repeated after login so I dont think it's a matter of cache.
How do I know for sure the server has been upgraded to 7.5.3 ?
I've...
"yum update" on a new server fails:
My /etc/yum.conf:
I found if I comment the [updates] section out the update works ... but am I not missing some important updates if I do that?
I'm on RHEL/ES3
So I'm sitting here with a new Plesk server and a class-C subnet to add ....
How?
You're not seriously expecting me to add each IP, 3 digits at the time in the GUI? Someone surely must have made provisions to add IP addresses in bulk from a file, right?
The problem wasn't caused by the ART update and the solution was just under my nose all the time ... in /var/log/httpd/error_log.
I'd renamed the server just before but not since restarted Apache. Just needed to update /etc/hosts and that was all.
It's been a while since I updated a VPS so for kicks I just ran "yum update" on a VPS that has been updated before.
Like with the problem server this now installs a number of centos rpm's .. but without any problem ... so that's not the reason for the problem.
Commented the irrelevant entries + the www baseurl's ..
Current yum.conf:
and yet the first thing it wants to do is update yum to a centos version:
Arrgh!
service httpd start does not produce any details other than [FAILED] (as I also wrote in my first post).
I've updated endless VPS servers using this yum.conf, never had a problem before. Yes, I agree that it's pointless having the distro's not used, but it shouldn't be a problem. Anyway...
I've used this /etc/yum.conf with many Virtuozzo VPS servers with Plesk without any problems. I think I got it from ART at some point and just used it as it was, never caused any problems before. Also the VPS were RHE3 based, the only difference is this server (with the problem) is a real...
The server is a Dual Xeon running RHE3 Linux. No VPS.
Plesk Reloaded 7.5.1
No errors were shown during the update. The only warning was the normal addition of dependancies.
/etc/yum.conf:
/var/log/yum.log:
Ran "yum update" from the standard ART repository, everything updated ok on the command line but now httpd refuse to start.
From PSA I get
From the shell I get even less, just a message that it "failed". No help in /var/log/messages either.
It's not the first time I update Plesk...
That did the trick, thanks much!
I'd already removed the IP from Virtuzzo, just Plesk hadn't realized it...
So it's a bug? I'm still on 7.5.2 -- is 7.5.3 released yet?
Hm, there's an "attach file" option when you post on this forum, but I can't see anything actually getting attached.
To explain briefly what is there:
No tickboxes, none.
Server -> IP Addresses list an IP address that doesn't belong to this VPS - but there is no way to remove it.
The Plesk FAQ says something about ticking a box to remove it - but there is no box to tick. When I click on the IP address the only options are
- IP Type (shared/exclusive)
- SSL...