On 4/16/11 6:37 PM, Nicolas Ross wrote: >>>> Because they survive kernel updates transparently and you can run the >>>> distro kernel, there will be no "waiting" for each kernel update. >>> That is indeed what I need, I use ieee1394, raw1394 and sbp2 to access >>> my 2tb firewire external drive that is used for backup rotation. >>> >>> I will try that on monday. >> >> Yum shouldn't have deleted your running kernel in the update. It should >> just be >> a matter of changing the default to boot in the grub config if you want to >> run >> the old one a while longer. > > No, it didn't, but on reboot, it booted the non-centosplus kernel, the one > that was more upto date... It's not exactly because it is more up to date - the install process edits the new one in as the default in grub.conf. You can still interrupt the boot screen and pick the one you want, or edit grub.conf to make the older one the default. -- Les Mikesell lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos