System Management Homepage 6.1 Release Notes

Novell Open Enterprise Server (OES)
Citrix XEN 5.6
HP Integrity servers
Windows Server 2008 for Itanium-based systems, 64-bit
Security bulletin and alert policy for non-HP owned software components
Open source software (such as OpenSSL) or third-party software (such as Java) are sometimes included in
HP products. HP discloses that the non-HP owned software components listed in the HP System Management
Homepage end user license agreement (EULA) are included with HP System Management Homepage.
To view the EULA, use a text editor to open the eula_license.xml file, and search for third-party software.
HP addresses security bulletins for the software components listed in the EULA with the same level of support
afforded HP products. HP is committed to reducing security defects and helping you mitigate the risks
associated with security defects when they do occur.
HP has a well-defined process when a security defect is found that culminates with the publication of a
security bulletin. The security bulletin provides you with a high level description of the problem and explains
how to mitigate the security defect.
Subscribing to security bulletins
To receive security information (bulletins and alerts) from HP:
1. Open a browser and go to the HP home page at http://www.hp.com.
2. Click the Support and Drivers tab.
3. Click Sign up: driver, support, and security alerts, which appears under Additional Resources
in the right navigation pane.
4. Select Business and IT Professionals to open the Subscriber's Choice web page.
5. Do one of the following:
Sign in if you are a registered customer.
Enter your email address to sign-up now. Then, select the box next to Driver and Support aler ts
and click Continue.
Typographic conventions
find
(1) HP-UX manpage. In this example, “find” is the manpage name and “1” is the
manpage section.
Book Title
Title of a book or other document.
Linked Title
Title that is a hyperlink to a book or other document.
http://www.hp.com A Web site address that is a hyperlink to the site.
Command Command name or qualified command phrase.
user input Commands and other text that you type.
computer output Text displayed by the computer.
Enter The name of a keyboard key. Note that Return and Enter both refer to the same
key. A sequence such as Ctrl+A indicates that you must hold down the key labeled
Ctrl while pressing the A key.
term Defined use of an important word or phrase.
variable The name of an environment variable, for example PATH or errno.
value A value that you may replace in a command or function, or information in a display
that represents several possible values.
<element> An element used in a markup language.
attrib= An attribute used in a markup language.
20 Support and other resources