On Fri, 23 Feb 2018, Akemi Yagi wrote: > On Fri, Feb 23, 2018 at 12:30 AM, Robert P. J. Day > <rpjday at crashcourse.ca> wrote: > > > > i'm sure there's a simple answer to this -- i already understand > > that newer kernels than the ones shipped with the official release > > aren't officially supported but there is the elrepo kernel repository > > here: > > > > http://elrepo.org/linux/kernel/el7/x86_64/RPMS/ > > > > with a mixture of long-term (lt) and mainline (ml) kernels. i assume > > that the mainline kernels pretty closely track the latest kernel > > release but that's not the one i'm interested in. > > > > if i was interested in the additional longevity of the LTS kernels, > > i can see that 4.4 is available. but the most recent LTS kernel was > > 4.14, was it not? so why is a 4.14 "lt" kernel not available in that > > repository? > > > > i am obviously unclear on the policy used to determine which kernel > > versions end up in that repository. > > > > rday > > You want to ask elrepo-related questions on the elrepo mailing list. > > But here's the post that would answer your question: > > http://lists.elrepo.org/pipermail/elrepo/2018-February/004120.html ah, was not aware there was a separate mailing list for that, my apologies. rday