Well, considering that glibc is used dynamically (being the only case 
where restarting anything would make a difference), you would just 
have to restart processes that use it. glibc updates are known for 
breaking umount on the first unmount of the root partition after the 
update. This means an fsck gets forced at remount. Other than that,
rebooting is still only ever used, really, for hardware and kernel changes.

-Statux

On Sun, 16 Dec 2001, Emmanuel Seyman wrote:

> 
> Hey all.
> 
> I've updated all my Zoot installs with the glibc update that came out
> and was wondering if there was a way to reload glibc without having
> to reboot.
> 
> Emmanuel
> 
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Redhat-list mailing list
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list
> 

-- 
-Statux



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