If you have two entries in grub.conf, one for the new kernel and another for the old. It should give you the option to choose which one you want to boot to. Once the new kernel is working as you want it to. you can then go disable the line referring to the old kernel. It's entirely up to you. I usually keep them both for testing purposes.
~J~
On 3/23/06, Naoki <naoki@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Howdy,
I'm thinking the kernel upgrade script should set the new kernel to default and set the previous kernel to fallback..
Anybody else think this is good/bad/nuts?
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