After retrieving all the necessary packages, it is time to upgrade the existing kernel. At a shell prompt as root, change to the directory that contains the kernel RPM packages and follow these steps.
Important | |
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It is strongly recommended that the old kernel is kept in case there are problems with the new kernel. |
Use the -i argument with the rpm command to keep the old kernel. If the -U option is used to upgrade the kernel package, it will overwrite the currently installed kernel. (the kernel version may vary):
rpm -ivh kernel-2.4.21-1.1931.2.399.ent.<arch>.rpm |
If the system is a multi-processor system, install the kernel-smp packages as well (the kernel version may vary):
rpm -ivh kernel-smp-2.4.21-1.1931.2.399.ent.<arch>.rpm |
If the system is i686-based and contains more than 4 gigabytes of RAM, install the kernel-hugemem package built for the i686 architecture as well (the kernel version might vary):
rpm -ivh kernel-hugemem-2.4.21-1.1931.2.399.ent.i686.rpm |
If the kernel-source or kernel-utils packages are to be upgraded, the older versions are probably not needed. Use the following commands to upgrade these packages (the versions might vary):
rpm -Uvh kernel-source-2.4.21-1.1931.2.399.ent.<arch>.rpm rpm -Uvh kernel-utils-2.4.21-1.1931.2.399.ent.<arch>.rpm |
The next step is to verify that the initial RAM disk image has been created. Refer to Section 39.5 Verifying the Initial RAM Disk Image for details.