On Sun, 12 Aug 2012 20:50:43 -0600, Brett Glass wrote: > Everyone: > > Just ran freebsd-update (fetch, then install) on a system on which > I run a customized kernel, and discovered that it has overwritten > my custom kernel... even though I'd copied the original to > /boot/GENERIC when I first installed the system. I was under the > impression that creating /boot/GENERIC, and putting the GENERIC > kernel in it, would cause freebsd-update to update that directory > rather than one's custom kernel. I now must rebuild the kernel to > keep the machine working.
That seems to be the default behaviour, as freebsd-update is not supposed to be used with a custom kernel. It works with GENERIC kernels (because it updates them by overwriting). > What went wrong, and how do stop it from recurring? Nothing went wrong. :-) Just an idea, not tested: Leave the GENERIC kernel updated by freebsd-update, and put your own kernel unter a different name into /boot, for example: /boot/kernel/kernel <- GENERIC kernel /boot/mykernel/kernel <- your kernel Then change /boot/loader.conf to contain: kernel="mykernel" bootfile="/boot/mykernel/kernel" See /boot/defaults/loader.conf and "man loader.conf" for details. I'm _not_ sure freebsd-update doesn't touch that file, but if my assumption is correct, it won't, and it will therefore only update /boot/kernel/ containing the GENERIC kernel that matches your binarily updated world (so it's a good fallback kernel in case of problems!), and you boot from /boot/mykernel which still contains your untouched kernel. However, what you're doing seems to be "not supported", but it would be a shame if it was impossible. :-) -- Polytropon Magdeburg, Germany Happy FreeBSD user since 4.0 Andra moi ennepe, Mousa, ... _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"