Hi JJ. Glad you got to shutdown completely using the earlier kernel. You have obviously done a yum update, and a newer kernel was installed. If you are using yum for updates, and want to keep the kernel that is shutting down ok, you need the edit something. Yum as default only keeps 2 kernels, so if you run yum update again, and there is a yet newer kernel, it will install that, and remove the oldest one, which in your case is the one you want to keep.
You can change this behaviour by either disabling the plugin, or changing the number of kernels to save.
Open the CLI, and su to root, open a text editor, go to /etc/yum/pluginconf.d/installonlyn.conf.
My FC6 one looks like this.
[main] enabled=0 # this sets the number of package versions which are kept tokeep=2
I just disable the plugin by just changing "enabled=1 to enabled=0", but you can just change the "tokeep=2" to whatever number you like. 5 might be a good number. It's possible that the next kernel update from the one that's not shutting down completely will again shutdown completely, but you can't be sure, so you want to keep the 2.6.18 one which is doing what you want.
After saving the changes, keep the text editor open, and go to /boot/grub/grub.conf . Afew lines down you'll see this.
#boot=/dev/hda default=3 timeout=30 splashimage=(hd1,0)/boot/grub/splash.xpm.gz title Fedora Core (2.6.10-2.3.legacy_FC2)
I say this, but this is from FC2. The "default" line sets the kernel you want to boot. Grub starts at "0", so you can change this to "1", then at the moment it will boot the 2.6.18 kernel that works ok. The "timeout" line I have already changed. The default is 5 secs, and it's worth changing this to 30, as it gives you a bit more time to make decisions as to which kernel you want to boot. The next line "splashimage" IIRC is "hiddenimage" on FC5, and FC6. if you are not seeing the grub menu when you bootup, you can put a "#" at the start of this line (no double quotes), which will comment out the line.
Just a few suggestions, so you don't lose your working kernel, along with the grub stuff.
Nigel.
Btw. I use apt, and synaptic as update managers, so am not involved in this ptential kernel problem with yum.
Hey Nigel, thank you for the suggestions, much appreciated. Jessica.
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