Great feedback. You are all dodging around the basic question though and thats why doesn't centosplus show all it's kernels when i do the yum list all kernel*? centosplus repo *is* enabled in my Centos-Base.repo file.. The behavior with the list command *seems* to be that it only shows the most recent kernel which happens to be 2.6.9-34.107.plus.c4. When i look in the RPMS directory i see a unsupported kernel for 2.6.9.34.106 which doesn't appear in the list (as well as many more). Gerald On 7/5/06, Matt Hyclak <hyclak@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Wed, Jul 05, 2006 at 05:39:26PM -0700, mike opoien enlightened us: > nano /etc/yum.repos.d/CentOS-Base.repo > I won't comment on the choice of editors... > add the following repos, and it should get more options. > Several problems with your suggestion: 1. Dries and Dag both package for rpmforge, so in fact these both give you the same thing. 2. RPMforge does package some kernel modules, but not full kernels. 3. Better than editing the CentOS-Base.repo file, you should create a new .repo file, since the CentOS file could be overwritten on later upgrades. 4. The OP was asking about the unsupported kernel, which is located in the CentOSPlus repository. Try enabling that repository either via the command line or by setting enabled=1 in Centos-Base.repo 5. The better option may be to use the kernel-module-xfs from the testing repo at dev.centos.org. This is updated code from SGI whereas the XFS support in the unsupported kernel is mostly untouched and out of date. -- Matt Hyclak Department of Mathematics Department of Social Work Ohio University (740) 593-1263 _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
-- -Gerald _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos