Am Do, den 21.07.2005 schrieb Daniel Vogel um 0:32: Please don't post HTML formatted list mails. > I got the same issue, problems after yum update... > > The thing is, is it right to drop new files for upgrading when they > have known problems? It is certainly a good idea to exclude a package from being updated by telling yum to do so (see exclude in man yum.conf), when you will be affected by a known issue. Unfortunately sometimes this can't be generally predicted. > i was finishing instaling 2 machines (thanks god they were exactly the > same configuration...), i upgraded one of them for the last 15 new > packs and then KERNEL PANIC!... Just boot the old kernel. Thats the reason why it stays on your system and is not removed by a kernel update run. > ...im going to suede my own luck because of that. > > How sure can we be about all the things we'r upgrading are ok? Follow the list and watch out for reports by other users. Check bugzilla.redhat.com. Having a test system use the updates-testing period to experiment with upcoming update packages and instantly report problems if they occur. > Daniel Vogel Alexander -- Alexander Dalloz | Enger, Germany | GPG http://pgp.mit.edu 0xB366A773 legal statement: http://www.uni-x.org/legal.html Fedora Core 2 GNU/Linux on Athlon with kernel 2.6.11-1.35_FC2smp Serendipity 01:08:20 up 5 days, 5:40, load average: 0.12, 0.19, 0.16
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