On 05/26/2010 11:57 AM, m.roth@5-cent.us wrote:
Bowie wrote:
m.roth@5-cent.us wrote:
Bowie 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?
Look at /etc/sysconfig/kernel - it specifies the default kernel type.