you can recreate new boot disk with new kernel by
mkbootdisk(look at mkbootdisk --help).

On Thu, Mar 21, 2002 at 09:05:12AM +0100, Kjetil Tjensvold wrote:
> I installed a new kernel from rpm, but whitout makeing
> a new boot diskette. So in the beginning it booted the
> old
> img file from redhat 7.2 kernel 2.4.7-10. My new
> kernel is 2.4.9-31.I tried to make a new boot disk,
> but unfortunely I copied the new vmlinuz and
> initrd-2.4.9-31.img over to my old boot disk, and that
> diden work.I downloaded a new boot disk from redhat,
> but that was intended to install redhat again. Well
> there was an otion about a rescue disk but then I was
> was promped on which cd disk the images where. The
> problem is that I downloaded redhat 7.2 from the
> internet and  that the images isn't on any of the iso
> disks that I downloaded.
> So the boot disks from redhat will not work. I need a
> boot disk from an already installed redhat 7.2
> installation.
> Another question: Can I install rh 7.2 upon the old I
> have whitout removing it first.If not how do I remove
> redhat whitout destroying the data on that partision.
why?
> 
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> The multiheaded animal.
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