On 4/10/2003 3:57 PM, M A Young wrote: > On Thu, 10 Apr 2003, Danial Howard wrote: > I suggest none of them. The safest way is to install (rpm -ivh) a > different kernel (such as an old kernel or an smp kernel), reboot to this > kernel, and then uninstall (rpm -e) the wrong kernel and install the > right one. While having a 2nd kernel is a wise choice, there's little reason to avoid Uvh in this particular case since the only difference in the files is the architecture that it was compiled for. Since i386 is backwards compatible, with i686, little is lost. Now if "-Uvh"ing (if you're sure it works after testing i.e. on a server farm of identical hardware), you may get a brief but relatively harmless "tizzy" from the kernel if it tries to load an obscure module before you reboot. Otherwise, this is something I've gotten away with 99% of the time. Only time it used to bite me was on the old 7.0 and 7.1 machines using lilo when mkinitrd wasn't properly called afterwords. 7.2, 7.3, 8.0, and 9 have worked flawlessly. While more risky, it's a calculated risk based on the fact that it worked on the other machines, it'll work here too. My 2 cents. Feel free to do it how you choose :-) -Rick -- Rick Johnson, RHCE #807302311706007 - rjohnson@xxxxxxxxxx Linux/Network Administrator - Medata, Inc. PGP Public Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc