[CentOS] Installing from USB flash drive
Les Mikesell
lesmikesell at gmail.com
Wed May 26 20:07:56 UTC 2010
On 5/26/2010 2:37 PM, JohnS wrote:
>
>>> And, in fact, that is exactly what happened. The default= line was set
>>> to 1, so it booted the old kernel instead of the new one. Other than
>>> that, it seems to be fine. I wonder what causes that? I've never
>>> noticed that behavior in my other systems. (But maybe I should go check
>>> now...)
>>
>> I have *no* idea. I've even seen it pointing to 2, or 4. Anyone here have
>> any idea why it wouldn't *always* change the default to 0?
>>
>> mark
> ----
> Where did you get the kernel from? There is a reason why I ask this
> because all installed kernels I have installed that were built by CentOS
> do the right thing. As in update the boot sequence for you.
>
> The exception is The Upstream Real Time Kernel does not do this and is
> docoed.
>
> Now the PAE Kernel I can not speak for because I do not use it. I only
> utilize the pae form for 32 bit under the RT Kernel which pae is built
> into for 32bits.
I think this fails where you initially install a non-PAE kernel and
later add RAM and change to the PAE version.
--
Les Mikesell
lesmikesell at gmail.com
More information about the CentOS
mailing list