Views:

Do the following:

  1. Check the kernel version by running the command below:

    [root@xxxx-Linux74 mark]# uname –a

    It will show the following results:

    Linux xxxx-Linux74 3.10.0-693.11.6.el7.x86_64 #1 SMP Thu Dec 28 14:23:39 EST 2017 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux

  2. Check the kernel version against the Deep Security Agent version.
    1. Go to Deep Security Help Center to view the list of Deep Security Software.
    2. Select the appropriate Deep Security version, and click the Deep Security Agent Linux kernel support link on the right sidebar.

      Deep Security Agent Linux kernel support

    3. Select the corresponding Deep Security Agent version.

      Choose the Deep Security Agent version

    4. On the list of latest kernel support packages, look for the kernel version you got from Step 1. Search function (CTRL + F) can be used to easily locate your version.

      From our example above, the kernel version to be searched for is 3.10.0-693.11.6.el7.x86_64.

      Search for your kernel version

  3. If the kernel version is supported, download the corresponding file from the Kernel Support Package column and import it to the local of Deep Security Manager. Make sure both Deep Security Agent and its corresponding kernel package are imported to the Deep Security Manager.
     
    If your kernel version cannot be found, contact Trend Micro Technical Support.

    Below is a procedure for our sample kernel version (e.g. 3.10.0-693.11.6.el7.x86_64):

    1. Download rhel7 KernelSupport-RedHat EL7-11.0-209.x86-64.zip.
    2. On the Deep Security Manager console, navigate to Administration > Updates > Local.
    3. Click Import and select the recently downloaded kernel version package.

      Import the kernel support package

    4. Click Next, then click Finish.
    5. Make sure the Deep Security Agent package is also imported on the server.