On Sat, Jun 29, 2002 at 10:26:39PM +0200, hans schneidhofer wrote:
> Am Samstag, 29. Juni 2002 22:07 schrieben Sie:
> > >>>>> "hs" == hans schneidhofer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >
>
> hi again,
> looks good
> thanks and bye
> hans
>
> > rpm -q --queryformat '%{NAME} %{VERSION} %{RELEASE} %{ARCH}\n' kernel
> >
> > will show you all kernel RPMS you have installed. On one random
> > machine, this tells me:
Just be careful if you ever compile your own kernel without building
an RPM. You can even get messed up if you only install via RPM
because it is possible to have more than one set of kernel RPMs
installed at a time. For that reason, I think it is safest to use
'uname' for determining which kernel you are actually *running*.
Here's what I get on my machine:
$ rpm -q kernel
kernel-2.4.2-2
$ uname -a
Linux mach1 2.4.13-ac8 #1 Sat Dec 8 06:25:18 EST 2001 i586 unknown
Regards,
Ben
--
Ben Logan: ben at wblogan dot net
OpenPGP Key KeyID: A1ADD1F0
Why does a ship carry cargo and a truck carry shipments?
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