> This is the 2nd time this has happened to me. There was a kernel > release over the weekend to .67.0.15, yet, they did not release the > updated GFS to go along with it, so when the machine > rebooted, there was > no gfs file system in the new running kernel which in turn > wreaked havoc > on my cluster. I truly wish they would not do that :). I > guess I shall > have to not allow automatic yum updates from these machines. Use the yum's exclude functionality. Man yum.conf for the syntax. I think it will just be exclude=kernel. You also might want to remove the non gfs kernels from your installation and get a staging environment for patching set up (if this is a production system). Best Patrick _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos