On Wed, 2005-10-19 at 11:30 -0700, BRUCE STANLEY wrote: > > --- Jim Perrin <jperrin@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > Humm.. Even Red Hat is supporting RHEL releases longer than this. > > > We use RHEL AS Release with full support. > > > > Not correct. RHEL is on RHEL 4 update 2. If you run up2date -fu, you > > will get the full updates. Follow that with a cat /etc/redhat-release > > and it will confirm thusly (note we use ES, not AS, but same applies): > > > > [jperrin@xxxx ~]$ cat /etc/redhat-release > > Red Hat Enterprise Linux ES release 4 (Nahant Update 2) > > [jperrin@xxxx ~]$ > > > > > > it's the major version number that has the support, not the minor. > > > > > > > > Does this mean if Red Hat comes out with more updates for RHEL 4.1 > > > you will not apply them to Centos 4.1 any more? > > > > All updates are being applied to the 4.2 tree now, just as upstream is > > applying them to AS4 update 2. > > > > > > -- > > Jim Perrin > > System Administrator - UIT > > Ft Gordon & US Army Signal Center > > _______________________________________________ > > CentOS mailing list > > CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx > > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos > > > > Hi Jim! > > I not real concerned with how the numbering of releases are done. > > This is what I am concerned with: > 1). Don't see any need at this point to update from 4.1 to 4.2 it is an RHEL update set ... if you had RHEL 4 and updated, you would get update set 2 ... CentOS does the same thing. > 2)... down the road... say 4.3 comes out and there are updates > to a few packages I might need/want. > 3). Can 4.1 be updated with these packages correctly or > will there be a problem with rpm dependency/compatibility issues? Maybe ... if you pick and choose individual updates, they may depend on other updates, but the versions are the same as upstream. > > If issues arise, then it would seem to me you would have to do the > MS service pack type of routine everytime a new version comes out. > Again ... our updates are like upstream. > I do not like to upgrad entire systems unless it is absolutely > necessary. > You can always just upgrade individual packages ... but the upstream provider only has the latest packages available via RHN ... not all packages from the beginning of EL-4. Running "yum update" or "up2date -u" on a CentOS-4 machine does the same thing that upgrading from RHN does. It takes you to the latest updates for all packages. With CentOS, you can use vault.centos.org to get any of the packages that were released since the beginning of CentOS-4 ... you can also add excludes in your yum or up2date configurations to exclude updating certain packages. -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 189 bytes Desc: This is a digitally signed message part Url : http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20051019/02733e99/attachment.bin