On 11/20/2013 7:40 PM, Michael Hennebry wrote: > Might this have something to do with the following boot message?: > Starting virt-who: Traceback (most recent call last): > File "/usr/share/virt-who/virt-who.py", line 33, in <module> > from subscriptionmanager import SubscriptionManager, > SubscriptionManagerError > File "/usr/share/virt-who/subscriptionmanager.py", line 24, in <module> > import rhsm.connection as rhsm_connection > ImportError: No module named rhsm.connection > ^[[60G[^[[0;31mFAILED^[[0;39m]^M > Starting libvirtd daemon: ^[[60G[^[[0;32m OK ^[[0;39m] > > If not, I'd like to test the idea that my problem with Linux > dying on me is that recent kernels do not like my computer. > My most recent installation that still runs reliably is Fedora 14. > If I copy a kernel from F14 into my CentOS installation, > what else do I need to copy with it? > I know that I will need to add to my grub.conf . random centos6.4 system I looked at doesn't even have a directory /usr/share/virt-who, so this must be part of some optional package not required for centos to load and operate.... indeed, yum provides says... virt-who-0.8-5.el6.centos.noarch : Agent for reporting virtual guest IDs to subscription-manager another centos 6.4 server, on which I'm doing some KVM tests and uses libvirt and stuff, doesn't have virt-who either. 'rhsm' 'subscription manager', thats sounds like RHEL stuff tied into their licensing scheme ?? -- john r pierce 37N 122W somewhere on the middle of the left coast