%s will divide the innodb_buffer_pool into memory regions to improve performance for versions of MariaDB less than 10.5. The max value is 64ySQL upto and including MySQL 8.0.The max value is 64, but should not exceed more than the number of CPU cores/threads.When your innodb_buffer_pool is less than 1GB, you should use the pool size divided by 128MB.Continue to use this equation upto the max of the number of CPU cores or 64.
%s will divide the innodb_buffer_pool into memory regions to improve performance for versions of MariaDB less than 10.5.The max value is 64, but should not exceed more than the number of CPU cores/threads.When your innodb_buffer_pool is less than 1GB, you should use the pool size divided by 128MB.Continue to use this equation upto the max ofthe number of CPU cores or 64.
YOU MUST MANAUALLY CHANGE THE CACTI DATABASE TO REVERT ANY UPGRADE CHANGES THAT HAVE BEEN MADE.<br/>THE INSTALLER HAS NO METHOD TO DO THIS AUTOMATICALLY FOR YOU
The way that the Whitelisting works is that when you first import a Data Input Method, or you re-import a Data Input Method, and the script and or arguments change in any way, the Data Input Method, and all the corresponding Data Sources will be immediatly disabled until the administrator validates that the Data Input Method is valid.
Therefore, several versions ago, Cacti was enhanced to provide Whitelist capabilities on the these types of Data Input Methods.Though this does secure Cacti more thouroughly, it does increase the amount of work required by the Cacti administrator to import and manage Templates and Packages.
If SELinux is enabled on your server, you can either permenaanently disable this, or temporarily disable it and then add the appropriate permissions using the SELinux command-line tools.
This version of Cacti (%s) does not appear to have a valid version code, please contact the Cacti Development Team to ensure this is corrected.If you are seeing this error in a release, please raise a report immediately on GitHub
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