On Dec 7, 2015 07:45, "Johnny Hughes" johnny@centos.org wrote:
On 12/06/2015 10:11 PM, Greg Lindahl wrote:
On Sun, Dec 06, 2015 at 09:22:15PM -0500, Jonathan Billings wrote:
On Sun, Dec 06, 2015 at 06:35:58PM +0000, Timothy Murphy wrote:
Always Learning wrote:
I always admire Johnny's prose, passion for Centos and his calm
approach
to everything.
Agreed. But two possibly OT and probably ignorant queries:
- I am running a standard Centos 32-bit system on my home servers.
I keep them up-to-date, but have not re-booted for several months. I see from /etc/centos-release that I am running 7.1. If I re-booted would this become 7.2?
- If so, is this kernel panic a widespread phenomenon?
You're running the 32-bit AltArch build of CentOS?
The /etc/centos-release is owned by the centos-release package, and the contents will be updated when you update that pacakge. A reboot won't change that. In the default x86_64 release, I think that you'd need to pull updates from the CR repo to get the 7.2.1511 packages, still.
And just look at the confusion -- because the website almost never mentions 7.1.1053 or 7.2.1511, it can be really hard to understand this discussion -- one person using "7.1" and "7.2" and the other using "7.2.1511". Good thing the 2nd person didn't use "7 (1511)", like the website does.
Oh, wait: CentOS, love it or leave it.
Correct.
In fact, I would prefer you leave.
Really?
This is what we're dealing with now?
OK. I will recommend we move away from CentOS.
Good job. _______________________________________________
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