after installing letsencrypt when adding ssl to domain i get this message
WARNING! Letsenycrpt Certificate installation failed, please check /etc/letsencrypt/live/domain.com !
yum is /usr/bin/yum
Package augeas-libs-1.0.0-10.el6.x86_64 already installed and latest version
Package libffi-devel-3.0.5-3.2.el6.x86_64 already installed and latest version
Package redhat-rpm-config-9.0.3-51.el6.centos.noarch already installed and latest version
Package python-2.6.6-66.el6_8.x86_64 already installed and latest version
Package python-devel-2.6.6-66.el6_8.x86_64 already installed and latest version
Package python-tools-2.6.6-66.el6_8.x86_64 already installed and latest version
Error: Multilib version problems found. This often means that the root
cause is something else and multilib version checking is just
pointing out that there is a problem. Eg.:
1. You have an upgrade for openssl which is missing some
dependency that another package requires. Yum is trying to
solve this by installing an older version of openssl of the
different architecture. If you exclude the bad architecture
yum will tell you what the root cause is (which package
requires what). You can try redoing the upgrade with
--exclude openssl.otherarch ... this should give you an error
message showing the root cause of the problem.
2. You have multiple architectures of openssl installed, but
yum can only see an upgrade for one of those arcitectures.
If you don't want/need both architectures anymore then you
can remove the one with the missing update and everything
will work.
3. You have duplicate versions of openssl installed already.
You can use "yum check" to get yum show these errors.
...you can also use --setopt=protected_multilib=false to remove
this checking, however this is almost never the correct thing to
do as something else is very likely to go wrong (often causing
much more problems).
Protected multilib versions: openssl-1.0.1e-57.el6.x86_64 != openssl-1.0.1e-48.el6_8.4.i686
Could not install OS dependencies. Aborting bootstrap!
now what shall i do ?