Rob Kampen wrote: > I am running a 64 bit 5.3 kernel on an intel mb and all has been well. > Today I thought it would be okay to reboot so that the latest kernel was > running - i.e move from 128.2.1 to 128.4.1 release. > The system passes POST fine, grub passes control to the 128.4.1 kernel > and the boot process is under way. > after some 30 secs the system starts beeping - continuously. > After I hooked up a monitor I find that udev does not come up with OK > and thats when the system starts the beep beep beep ...... > No logs to see ...... > using grub to select 128.2.1 boot fine > Any ideas? I just upgraded the kernel also, and I'm having the same problem (except that my screen goes blank). I noticed that Interactive mode allows the system to boot. So, I'm wondering how to revert to the penultimate kernel. I tried to find info - all I got was rpm -e kernel-oldversion Would that make the system drop to the next-to-most-recent? I saw a few mentions of using grub - but I set the timeout to 0 (but I don't use that screen, so I don't even see it now). If this method is a permanent fix, should I set it so that it comes up on the next boot? [mykolas@sr1220 ~]$ uname -r 2.6.18-128.4.1.el5 [mykolas@sr1220 ~]$ rpm -q kernel kernel-2.6.18-128.el5 kernel-2.6.18-128.1.16.el5 kernel-2.6.18-128.4.1.el5 _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos