On Tue, Oct 5, 2010 at 9:14 PM, Jesse Keating <jkeating@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > There was a change in glibc during the F14 development cycle that > requires running a newer kernel in order to run the f14 binaries. > > You could probably cheat a new kernel onto F11 and then do the pungi > compose in a mock chroot of f14 content (I do all the pungi runs in mock > chroots anyway). After seeing your mail it spurred me on to trying to find a way to "upgrade" to f12 - I found some notes on doing this via a series of yum commands after localinstalling the f12 fedora-release rpm. It took a while with a number of dead ends but eventually I managed to find a path through the dependency hell and got all packages updated to f12 - on rebooting I have the system on f12 and have been able to build f14 test DVD install isos from the packages in the development/f14 repo - so I am happy again! Given this is a headless machine running in a quiet corner of the office, and it would have been a while before I could get a monitor attached to it, I am very pleased that it was possible to do the upgrade without direct physical access to the machine. Even at f11 Fedora had great abilities! Roll on f14 release! -- mike c -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel