John DeDourek wrote: > Yes. No problem with that. It still boots and runs fine > under the old kernel. > A previous reply suggested that the new kernel might have > a bad initrd. > Can anyone tell me whether the initrd is > installed as a binary from the kernel package, or is > custom built by a script during the install process? If > the latter, I am inclined to remove and reinstall the new > kernel, thus rebuilding the new initrd. (Or, I will find > the instructions for rebuilding the initrd manually.) > It is built during the install. This is because it is specific to the system it is installed on. It is created by running mkinitrd. Mikkel -- Do not meddle in the affairs of dragons, for thou art crunchy and taste good with Ketchup!