Hello gahn,
Monday, August 14, 2006, 6:07:08 PM, you wrote:
> Thanks for ur advice.
> actually i did that; rename the current kernel and
> name the "kernel.old to "kernel", which worked. but i
> am looking for a command that could do that.
you actually don't have to rename your kernels when you
Thanks for ur advice.
actually i did that; rename the current kernel and
name the "kernel.old to "kernel", which worked. but i
am looking for a command that could do that.
the reason is that i am trying to keep my kernel up to
date, but my understanding is that it could be done
only with the orig
On 2006-08-14 11:20, dick hoogendijk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 13 Aug Atom Powers wrote:
> > And, although I've never tried it, you sholud be able to `cp
> > /boot/kernel.old /boot/kernel` to restore the previous kernel.>
>
> I did. A few times. I just renamed the directories to "kernel" and
On 13 Aug Atom Powers wrote:
> And, although I've never tried it, you sholud be able to `cp
> /boot/kernel.old /boot/kernel` to restore the previous kernel.>
I did. A few times. I just renamed the directories to "kernel" and
"whatevername" ;-) Works like a charm..
--
dick -- http://nagual.nl/ --
On 8/13/06, gahn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi:
I am using a customized kernel and it works fine. But
at the same time I am wondering whether there is a
quick way to fall back to the original kerenel.
If you compiled your own kernel you should have, at the very least, a
/boot/kernel.old file;
Hi:
I am using a customized kernel and it works fine. But
at the same time I am wondering whether there is a
quick way to fall back to the original kerenel.
thanks
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