![]() Are there instructions anywhere to get or build a kernel with NUMA enabled? I’m using the one that got installed by default by WSL2 (Ubuntu 22.04. While it seems to use tensorflow alright, this tells me my kernel may not have NUMA enabled. Python3 -c “import tensorflow as tf print(tf.config.list_physical_devices(‘GPU’))” Hoping I could run tensorflow on my GPU without those, I ran the test command: ![]() I tried to resolve it, but it went down a rabbit-hole of mutually incompatible versions for a host of modules. It’s far from clean, reporting mutually exclusive library versions for numpy and other modules. Unfortunately, in addition to not being a developer I do not have an intimate understanding how how MS SQL 2019 actually functions, so I don't know what would go wrong if I simply swapped out that file with a new one manually (and there's no clear candidate for that anyways).I followed the instructions from this link: Install TensorFlow with pip I suspect this is not just a drag-and-drop operation, as I'm sure the flagged file gets called by the application somehow. The same site has a section of articles that seem to be geared towards how developers can use Apache2 (which seems to be what this file collection actually is) but I'm not a developer, just a systems manager. There's no installer, just a bunch of files. Unfortunately I don't know how to use it. It seems to be, specifically, the file log4j-1.2.17.jar that is implicated.Įvidently there is a version 2.17.1 available here: It causes two high-priority findings that I must get resolved. ![]() My vulnerability scanner recently flagged an unsupported installation of Apache Log4j in a version of MS SQL we just recently deployed (SQL 2019).
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