Alan McKinnon wrote:
On Friday 11 December 2009 17:07:17 Dale wrote:
Alan McKinnon wrote:
On Friday 11 December 2009 15:16:01 Dale wrote:
Rebooting will also do all of this but it is not needed.  From a
technical stand point, the only time you must reboot is to load a new
kernel.
And these days, not even then :-)

[it requires some voodoo but is certainly possible]

[[and I don't mean build and install a new kernel, I really do mean loa
ti into memory and run it, dispensing with the old one]]
I have read about that but never read something from someone who has
actually done it.  I have always been curious as to how that would work,
in reality not just theory.

kexec and CONFIG_RELOCATABLE

I have also wondered why a person would go to all that trouble.
Wouldn't all the services have to be restarted anyway?

Nope. userspace ABI is stable so services just carry on as normal once he new kernel comes up. You don't need to restart SeaMonkey if you restart a local apache on your machine - same thing


That would be cool of you had a system that just couldn't be rebooted. Is there such a thing tho? What would be the reason a machine just could not be rebooted? I guess one would be if the puter was on planet Mars maybe? Is that how NASA does it? lol Could you imagine getting a blue screen of death on a computer that is on Mars? O_O

Dale

:-) :-)

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