I have two CentOS 5 machines that I just updated to 5.4. On both machines the new kernel was inserted into the top of the list in grub.conf. However, on one machine the default line in grub.conf was changed such that the old kernel would boot by default. On the other, default was left at 0 so the new kernel would boot. This is not the first time I've seen this behavior. What controls whether the default gets changed on a kernel update? I can't think of anything I would have done that would cause these two machines to behave differently.
thanks, galen -- Galen Seitz [email protected] _______________________________________________ PLUG mailing list [email protected] http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug
