Mike Brown:

$ grep ^BRANCH /usr/src/sys/conf/newvers.sh
BRANCH="RELEASE-p12"
$

then again, I used freebsd-update and not /usr/src, but it makes sense what
you said with kernel, so I guess I _AM_ on the latest -p12 and kernel is on
-p9 as there was no changes after that to kernel.

thank you.



On Tue, Oct 8, 2013 at 11:32 PM, Mike Brown <m...@skew.org> wrote:

> alexus wrote:
> > ok, I just did fetch & install and got bumped from p5 to p9
> >
> > # uname -a
> > FreeBSD XX.XXXXX.org 7.4-RELEASE-p9 FreeBSD 7.4-RELEASE-p9 #0: Mon Jun
> 11
> > 19:47:58 UTC 2012
> > r...@amd64-builder.daemonology.net:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC
> >  amd64
> > #
> >
> > can I take it all the way to -p12?
>
> -p10 through -p12 probably didn't involve any kernel changes. Bumping the
> reported patchlevel isn't considered important enough to warrant building a
> new kernel.
>
> If your sources are in /usr/src, do this:
>
> grep -v # /usr/src/sys/conf/newvers.sh | head -4
>



-- 
http://alexus.org/
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