Dario Lesca wrote: <snip>
... start with "linux dd" and, at the end of setup, install the
What? What are you saying you did with the dd command?
hpahcisr into kernel 2.6.18-194.el5PAE
But after reboot if I run a "yum update" and reboot, the new kernel not contain the driver hpahcisr for new kernel and I get a kernel panic.
Of course not. You installed a proprietary driver, that is *not* part of the new kernel. Why would you think it should magically be part of the new kernel? Look at /boot, and you'll see more than one kernel file. The configuration files for *one* kernel make it aware of your driver; the new one has no clue, *and* some of the shared libraries may/will not match, so of course you have to reinstall.
The question is:
How to update to last kernel without lost the proprietary driver?
It's possible?
Where is the new driver for new kernel?
Where'd you get the original? Does installation of it build the driver, the way, for example, I have to rebuild a years-old driver for my Nvidia card at work, every time I update the kernel?
mark