Jim Cornette wrote: > You might try uninstalling the kernel that fails to boot and then > re-installing it. On rare occasions I have had kernels install poorly > but would install correctly on the second install. I believe my problem > was due to mkinitrd being updated after the kernel in the past. When I > erased the failed kernel and then installed it again, everything was n > place for the kernel to install correctly. > Thank you, Jim I tried that but unfortunately it didn't help. I only removed the kernel proper (using pirut), not kernel-devel nor kernel-headers packages (assuming they have little relevance to the problem at hand), and dl'd the 2.6.22.1-27 kernel again. When installed and rebooted, the problems persist just like before. Maybe it's my hardware but it has worked with every kernel since FC4 as I told earlier. Guess I'll stick to 2.6.21-1.3228.fc7 kernel for now. > As some stated earlier, if your system has a kernel that does not work > correctly and you are booted into the previous working kernel, the > kernel that you are using will stay intact. The busted kernel will be > replaced with the newer kernel when it is available. > Yes, that should be understood by now. Thanks anyway. > Jim > Antti -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list