On Tue, 2008-03-25 at 11:25 +1100, Peter McNeil wrote: > For some reason the update to a new kernel seems to randomly point to a > kernel to boot by default which would be OK but the livna nvidia setup > breaks the older kernels nvidia module, so you need to make sure you > boot on the latest kernel by default (by editing /etc/grub.conf to point > to the latest kernel). Generally, it doesn't. There's a glitch when installing a new kernel results in installing a new version of the nVidia driver. > > The "solution" is to install the nvidia module manually from the nvidia > site download, which is not really a simple option. ...which has its own problems. Search the archives of this list for how to rebuild new Livna nvidia packages for the old kernel. > > > > David Kramer wrote: > > I simply don't understand why this is the case, but every time I > > upgrade the . After some updates, the symlinks point to the wrong > > version, etc. But I will only address my current situation. This is > > on a Dell D820. > > > > Currently running the newly-installed 2.6.24.3-34 kernel. > > > > [...] > > > > Thanks for any advice you can offer. > > > > -- Matthew Saltzman Clemson University Math Sciences mjs AT clemson DOT edu http://www.math.clemson.edu/~mjs