Chapter 6. Red Hat Network Website
73
•
Out of Date Systems
— Number of registered systems that have applicable Errata Alerts
that have not been applied.
•
Unentitled Systems
— Number of systems that are not entitled.
•
Ungrouped Systems
— Each system may be a member of one or more groups. The
number of ungrouped systems refers to systems that are not yet members of any system
group.
•
Inactive Systems
— Number of systems that have not checked into RHN for 24 hours
or more. Refer to Section 6.4.2.5
Inactive
for details.
The
Action Summary
section provides the following information about events scheduled
in the past week:
•
Recently Failed Actions
— Number of scheduled actions that did not succeed.
•
Pending Actions
— Number of scheduled actions that have not yet been completed.
•
Recently Completed Actions
— Number of scheduled actions that succeeded.
The
System Groups
section gives you access to the groups of systems you establish. Click-
ing on the links in this section takes you to the
System Group Details
pages. Refer to
Section 6.4.3.3
System Group Details —
for more information.
The
Errata
section lists all and relevant Errata Alerts. You may toggle between All and
Relevant by clicking the
View All
or
View Relevant
link at the top of the table. This view
is retained until you toggle it by again clicking the link.
Relevant Errata are those derived from software channels to which your systems are sub-
scribed. They refer to versions of packages that are newer than those installed on the sys-
tems. To go to a complete list of applicable Errata Alerts for your systems stored in the
Errata
category, click
View All Relevant Errata
in the bottom right-hand corner.
You can return to this page by clicking
Your RHN
on the left navigation bar.
6.3.1. Your Account
The
Your Account
page allows you to modify your personal information, such as name,
password, and title. To modify any of this information, make the changes in the appropriate
text fields and click the
Update
button in the bottom right-hand corner.
Remember, if you change your Red Hat Network password (the one used to log into RHN
and redhat.com), you will not see your new one as you type it for security reasons. Also
for security, your password is represented by 12 asterisks no matter how many characters
it actually contains. Replace the asterisks in the
Password
and
Password Confirmation
text fields with your new password.
Summary of Contents for NETWORK 4.0 -
Page 1: ...Red Hat Network 4 0 Reference Guide...
Page 10: ......
Page 16: ...vi Introduction to the Guide...
Page 24: ...8 Chapter 1 Red Hat Network Overview...
Page 40: ...24 Chapter 2 Red Hat Update Agent Figure 2 11 Available Package Updates...
Page 58: ...42 Chapter 2 Red Hat Update Agent...
Page 80: ...64 Chapter 5 Red Hat Network Registration Client Figure 5 15 Text Mode Welcome Screen...
Page 186: ...170 Chapter 7 Monitoring...
Page 200: ...184 Chapter 8 UNIX Support Guide...
Page 214: ...198 Appendix A Command Line Config Management Tools...
Page 274: ...258 Appendix C Probes...
Page 282: ...266 Glossary...