I don't know if this has ever been discussed before on this list but I did a search and couldn't find anything, so... We currently use autoupdate to update our RedHat boxes. I like some things I see in yum and have thought about switching. However, I really like how autoupdate handles kernel updates and was wondering if others would like yum to have similar features. Basically, our systems are configured such that autoupdate will install any new kernel versions and make the new one the default. The previous kernel is then renamed with a configurable tag ("-old" by default). In addition, all old kernels (i.e. kernels other than the new and "-old") are uninstalled. This is very nice for a lab environment because it is fairly obvious to end users which ones they should select. In particular, we have a dual-boot lab where Windows is the default, but Linux is an option. If there were multiple kernels listed with nothing but the version numbers to identify them, some people might not know which one to select (even though to you and I it might be obvious). What do others think of having this sort of feature in yum? -- Jeremy Dreese Engineering Computing Systems Integrator College of Engineering Bucknell University voice: (570) 577-3714 fax: (570) 577-3579 email: jdreese@xxxxxxxxxxxx