Thanks Michael , for your response i have already test updation by using snapshot option. But main problem was it didn't rollback kernel rpm. is there any other process to avoid kernel updation. This time i found exclude parameter in yum.conf which may be helpful for me to avoid this kernel updation. if you have any thing else please share.
Thanks in advance On Fri, Nov 22, 2013 at 3:34 PM, Michael Mraka <[email protected]>wrote: > vijay singh wrote: > % Hi All, > % > % I want to upgrade the RHEL 4 server . This is production machine. I would > % like how can I rollback the changes if something goes wrong? I am going > to > % upgrade the RHEL server by running command "up2date -uf". > > By upgrade you mean update lots of rpms or replace whole OS with newer > one (RHEL5, RHEL6)? > > In the first case you can use snapshots to restore old rpms from spacewalk. > In the second case this is not supported way of upgrading operating > system; a lot of other things have to be done other then just updating > rpms. > > % I have below version installed right now: > % "Red Hat <http://it.toolbox.com/trd/95/7/9824/> Enterprise Linux ES > release > % 4 (Nahant Update 8)". I tried to run below command on staging server but > i > % came to know that it is not supported in this version. > % > % Please let me know is there any procedure to do rollback the installed > rpm. > % > % up2date --list-rollbacks > % This feature is deprecated and no longer functional > > > Regards, > > -- > Michael Mráka > Satellite Engineering, Red Hat > > _______________________________________________ > Spacewalk-list mailing list > [email protected] > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/spacewalk-list > -- *Regards* *Vijay Singh |* Linux Admin *Mob No.+919555344167*
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