On 17/07/06, Alex Palenschat <alex@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I recently took over a x86_64 CentOS 4.0 server running an "unsupported" kernel. On examining the box it seems that perhaps it is because of the use of xfs and netatalk. I would like to update the box to 4.3. I think I can do away with the netatalk, but doing away with xfs would require a substantial amount of work. Questions: 1: In reading the archive of this list there was a post regarding the kernel in the Testing repo supporting xfs. Is this the case and if so, would it be a "bad idea" to run that kernel without essentially runnning a test box using all packages from the testing repo? 2: Does the same kernel include netatalk support? It would be easier to leave the netatalk in place if that were so. 3: Should I just bite the bullet and get rid of the xfs? I'm not sure what predicated the choice of filesystem in the first place. Any thoughts/comments would be welcome,
If you don't need netatalk, then upgrade to 4.3 and use the kernel-module-xfs module from http://dev.centos.org/centos/4/testing/x86_64/RPMS/ This has more up to date XFS code than the centosplus "unsupported" kernel. James Pearson _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos