Jim Perrin wrote:
As I said before, this is a production server, so downtime is an important issue and had to be minimized. On the other hand, in my country, internet is very expensive, we pay US$100 for 128Kbps. That's the bandwidth I have available on the server, not to mention the technology used for wireless, which gave us huge delays, so the performance I get is even lower than 128Kbps. I know that yum could take me to the 4.3 with no problem, except for the time that it would have required. I also know that some versions of you (not the one shipped with 4.1) have the option to "download only", that might have help me, that is why I went to the option of upgrading via de CDs. I appriciate the suggestion, but I'm was not asking for that, I'm just trying to figure it out, what did happend. Is CentOS (or RHEL) not upgradeable skipping versions through CD or DVD?
Sure, the DVD includes a yum repository on it, or you can sxtract the iso images to make a yum repository of your own. Running an internal yum mirror in such a fasion is an easy way to cut down on bandwidth use depending on how many machines you have. From here you can even rsync from available mirrors to maintain updates between versions.
I mean through a "normal" upgrade via the installer, booting from the media (CD or DVD), I knew about getting a local yum repository with the createrepo, I use it on intranet to update several installation with a local mirror when updates for relases are available. I did not think of extracting packages from CD, I rather use the CD, and to be honest, even if I knew before, I still would have gone with the CD direct option.