Karanbir Singh wrote: > Hi Robert, > > Robert wrote: > >>> why did you manually need to install the kernel ? >> >> >> >> Because a "yum update kernel" offered to install the -SMP kernel. >> This is, no doubt, an artifact of anaconda & associates deciding at >> the time CentOS4 was first installed that an SMP kernel was >> appropriate for an Athlon XP in an ASUS A7NX8 ver.2 deluxe m/b, >> compounded by my packrat reluctance to throw it away at the outset. > > > if you remove the kernel-smp ( which, based on your statement - you > dont seem to be using) yum should not update it :) technically, only > packages already installed are updated ( or pkgs that satisfy depends > for other pkgs ). > > Anyway, if anaconda left behind a smp kenel on UP machine, sounds like > a bugreport to me..... Not only leaves it behind but configures GRUB to make SMP the default. Drives NTP nuts! I should be shot for not removing it when I first installed CentOS4. It'll be gone when the smoke clears from my upcoming exercise. > >> I'm reasonably sure everything is gonna be O.K. Yum is one of the >> packages that gets reported twice: > > > sounds like you are going to have a fun filled Monday morning. I > forsee rpm and coffee in your immediate future. Be a good idea to > backup the rpmdb somewhere. Just in case. > > remove everything apart from the Packages file from /var/lib/rpm - > then rebuild the db ( rpm -v --rebuilddb ). then try work with the -V > option to verify what you have what rpm thinks you have. > > - K Thanks for the advice. My Monday and Tuesday have already been scheduled for other joyous tasks, so I'll attack this fiasco Wednesday. (Now that I'm retired, I wonder almost daily how the hell I ever had time to work!) At any rate, I've already burned /var/lib/rpm to a CD and I'll have a brand new full backup by about 3:00 AM Wednesday.