rotru@xxxxxxxxxx writes: > Hi Seth, > > I see in the "Users Interface Changes" that new Yum: > > Don't allow users to remove the running kernel. > > > How is this going to work ? > For instance, if a system only allows users to have one version of Kernel > installed, will > the user never be allowed to update the kernel ? This configuration isn't possible with yum, installonly_limit has a minimum value of 2 (although we'd recommend at least 3). So the only time yum would try and remove the running kernel before were bugs (or things like "yum remove kernel" matching all kernels). Saying that the documentation does tell you how to turn it off (from man yum.conf): protected_packages This is a list of packages that yum should never completely remove. They are protected via. Obsoletes as well as user/plugin removals. The default is: yum glob:/etc/yum/protected.d/*.conf So any packages which should be protected can do so by including a file in /etc/yum/protected.d with their package name in it. Also if this configuration is set to anything, then yum will protect the package corresponding to the running version of the kernel. -- James Antill -- james@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://yum.baseurl.org/wiki/releases http://yum.baseurl.org/wiki/whatsnew/3.2.28 http://yum.baseurl.org/wiki/YumMultipleMachineCaching _______________________________________________ Yum mailing list Yum@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.baseurl.org/mailman/listinfo/yum