Make newly installed kernel a default.
Jim Cornette
redhat-jc at insight.rr.com
Thu Oct 23 11:32:49 UTC 2003
Jack Bowling wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 23, 2003 at 12:02:44PM +0200, Pavel Rosenboim wrote:
>
>>
>>Hi,
>>
>>Whenever I install a new kernel rpm (using rpm -i) it configures
>>grub.conf file to load an old kernel as a default. Isn't it better to
>>set the new kernel to be a default one?
>
>
> IMO and experience, no. Just in case there is something wrong with the
> new kernel and your box oopses it avoids the possibility that you can't
> get to a grub menu and you just loop into the bad kernel on a reboot.
> Once you have confirmed that the new kernel works then you can go into
> grub.conf and set the new default.
>
Running *redhat-config-boot* (if installed) lets you change the
preferred kernel to boot and/or adjust the timeout settings.
This is through a GUI and works great for switching desired boot
kernel easily, without directly editing the grub.conf directly.
Jim
--
Fourth Law of Revision:
It is usually impractical to worry beforehand about
interferences -- if you have none, someone will make one for you.
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