On Wed, May 14, 2008 at 11:57 AM, Chris G <cl@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Wed, May 14, 2008 at 04:25:51PM +0100, Anne Wilson wrote: >> On Wednesday 14 May 2008 15:20, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote: >> > On Wed, 2008-05-14 at 09:56 -0400, Gene Poole wrote: >> > > I started using yum to update my systems as-soon-as 'up2date' was no >> > > longer supported. So, I have friends and people I work with asking me >> > > for a 'rule of thumb', which I don't know. So, I'm asking the member of >> > > this list: >> > > >> > > What is the 'rule of thumb' for re-booting after the completion of the >> > > 'yum -y update' command? How do you know if you should re-boot - if >> > > there is a kernel update? Should you reboot based upon what key >> > > components have been updated? How do you know what's been updated if >> > > you schedule it to run at 2 AM? Do you ever have to re-boot? >> > > >> > > I don't have a answer to these questions, do you? >> > >> > AFAIK there isn't a hard and fast rule. You need to look at what yum has >> > updated. Thus if it changed the kernel or libc, you should reboot >> > whenever convenient. If it changed an X driver or the X server, or the >> > basic part of your desktop manager, you'll want to logout and in again, >> > usually restarting X in the process. If it changed a running >> > application, quit the app and restart it, etc. etc. >> > >> > I agree it would be nice for yum to tell you this explicitly. >> > >> If you install logwatch you will get a daily update of many activities, >> including a section like this: >> --------------------- yum Begin ------------------------ >> >> >> Packages Installed: >> kernel-2.6.25-14.fc9.i686 >> mozilla-filesystem-1.9-2.fc9.i386 >> initscripts-8.76-1.i386 >> adobe-release-i386-1.0-1.noarch >> >> Packages Updated: >> upstart-0.3.9-19.fc9.i386 >> libxslt-1.1.23-3.fc9.i386 >> hal-libs-0.5.11-0.7.rc2.fc9.i386 >> libdrm-2.4.0-0.11.fc9.i386 >> libtdb-1.1.1-9.fc9.i386 >> system-config-printer-0.7.82.2-4.fc9.i386 >> 6:kdelibs-common-4.0.3-7.fc9.i386 >> .... >> xorg-x11-utils-7.3-3.fc9.i386 >> kdebase-workspace-libs-4.0.3-20.fc9.i386 >> mesa-libGL-7.1-0.29.fc9.i386 >> nash-6.0.52-2.fc9.i386 >> >> Packages Erased: >> event-compat-sysv >> >> ---------------------- yum End ------------------------- >> > ... and how does that help the OP decide what (s)he needs to restart > after doing a yum update? > > -- > Chris Green It shows a new kernel is installed. New kernels require a reboot and some hal packages do as well. Max -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list