On 11/19/18 11:16 AM, Mark C. Allman wrote:
*Mark C. Allman, PMP, CSM*
Founder, See How You Ski,
www.seehowyouski.com <
http://www.seehowyouski.com>
Sr. Project Manager, Allman Professional Consulting, Inc.,
www.allmanpc.com <
http://www.allmanpc.com>
617-947-4263, Twitter: @allmanpc
On 11/19/18 10:42 AM, SternData wrote:
> On 11/19/18 9:20 AM, Antonio M wrote:
>> try dnf update --refresh --best
>> Antonio Montagnani
>>
>> Linux Fedora 29 Workstation
>> da/from Gmail
>>
>> Il giorno lun 19 nov 2018 alle ore 16:19 SternData
>> <subscribed-lists(a)sterndata.com> ha scritto:
>>> dnf updates are not picking up kernel-4.19.2. My current kernel is
>>> 4.18.18-300.fc29.x86_64
>>>
>>> I've tried a "dnf clear all", followed by a "dnf
update", but it doesn't
>>> find anything new (at least the new kernel).
>>>
>>> Any ideas?
>>>
>>> --
>>> -- Steve
> Nope:
>
> [sdstern@sds-desk download]$ sudo dnf update --refresh --best
> Copr repo for chrome-gnome-shell owned by regio 2.3 kB/s | 3.0 kB
> 00:01
> Fedora Modular 29 - x86_64 12 kB/s | 17 kB
> 00:01
> Fedora Modular 29 - x86_64 - Updates 13 kB/s | 16 kB
> 00:01
> Fedora 29 - x86_64 - Updates 13 kB/s | 16 kB
> 00:01
> Fedora 29 - x86_64 - Updates 2.3 MB/s | 13 MB
> 00:05
> Fedora 29 - x86_64 14 kB/s | 17 kB
> 00:01
> google-chrome 1.2 kB/s | 1.3 kB
> 00:01
> google-earth 1.2 kB/s | 1.3 kB
> 00:01
> RPM Fusion for Fedora 29 - Free tainted 2.5 kB/s | 2.8 kB
> 00:01
> RPM Fusion for Fedora 29 - Free - Updates 11 kB/s | 13 kB
> 00:01
> RPM Fusion for Fedora 29 - Free 13 kB/s | 14 kB
> 00:01
> RPM Fusion for Fedora 29 - Nonfree - Updates 8.1 kB/s | 13 kB
> 00:01
> RPM Fusion for Fedora 29 - Nonfree 9.1 kB/s | 14 kB
> 00:01
> slack 413 B/s | 1.0 kB
> 00:02
> Dependencies resolved.
> Nothing to do.
> Complete!
> [sdstern@sds-desk download]$ uname -a
> Linux sds-desk.local 4.18.18-300.fc29.x86_64 #1 SMP Mon Nov 12 03:12:14
> UTC 2018 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
> [sdstern@sds-desk download]$
> _______________________________________________
I noticed that grub didn't make the latest kernel the default for one of
my cloud servers. No idea why. It's one thing to boot into an old
kernel because it's the default and another to just not have it
installed at all.
What does "sudo dnf list installed | fgrep 'kernel.'" show? I see
three
kernels, including F29 19.2-300. Also look in /boot (that's actually
faster), e.g., "ls -1 /boot/initram*".
*Mark C. Allman, PMP, CSM*
Founder, See How You Ski,
www.seehowyouski.com <
http://www.seehowyouski.com>
Sr. Project Manager, Allman Professional Consulting, Inc.,
www.allmanpc.com <
http://www.allmanpc.com>
617-947-4263, Twitter: @allmanpc
Ugh! Sorry about the duplicate signature (copy/paste when I meant to
cut/paste).
-- Mark