On 9/19/2017 9:51 AM, Jerry Geis wrote:> I was doing an update to 7.4 and somewhere in middle the machine died. > > If I drop back to a previous kernel the machine is alive. So how do I say > "forget the previous yum update" and start all over and do it again. > > Booting into the new kernel I get a kernel fault. So going back one level > on teh boot screen solves that - I just need to start the update again. How > is that?I think I'd try.... yum remove kernel-(broken version) yum update ------------------------------------------------------------- This happened to me on one of the units during a 7.4 upgrade, and the only way for the system to work for me was to use the previous os. I tried to use the yum remove kernal 7.4 , but yum tried to remove all of the kernels instead of just that last one installed. I obviously aborted the command. Looks like 7.4 has some major problems. Greg
On Wed, 20 Sep 2017, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:> This happened to me on one of the units during a 7.4 upgrade, and the only > way for the system to work for me was to use the previous os. > > I tried to use the yum remove kernal 7.4 , but yum tried to remove all of > the kernels instead of just that last one installed. I obviously aborted > the command.Uninstall a specific kernel, e.g.: yum remove kernel-3.10.0-693.2.2.el7.x86_64> Looks like 7.4 has some major problems.I've seen no major problems so far, having updated a fair few machines. jh
-----Original Message-----From: John Hodrien <J.H.Hodrien at leeds.ac.uk> Reply-to: CentOS mailing list <centos at centos.org> To: CentOS mailing list <centos at centos.org> Subject: Re: [CentOS] update to 7.4 Date: Wed, 20 Sep 2017 15:59:25 +0100 (BST) On Wed, 20 Sep 2017, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:> This happened to me on one of the units during a 7.4 upgrade, and the only > way for the system to work for me was to use the previous os. > > I tried to use the yum remove kernal 7.4 , but yum tried to remove all of > the kernels instead of just that last one installed. I obviously aborted > the command.Uninstall a specific kernel, e.g.: yum remove kernel-3.10.0-693.2.2.el7.x86_64> Looks like 7.4 has some major problems.I've seen no major problems so far, having updated a fair few machines. jh _______________________________________________ John, The machine that had the boot problem related to 7.4 would only boot with the use of kernel-3.10.0-514.26.2.el7, when I used yum after booting to the 7.3 kernel and I tried to remove kernel-3.10.0-693.2.2.el7.x86_64 using the command that you recorded above, yum presented me with a list of all the kernels instead of the just the singular kernel-3.10.0-693.2.2.el7.x86_64; I was surprised and aborted the process. Greg