You should be able to install it on the same server. You can install it with
"yum install ovzkernel" or download ovzkernel* and rpm -ivh it.
Ensure you use "yum install" or "rpm -ivh" so you install the new kernel in
addition to the existing kernel, rather than upgrading it, then if you can't
boot the new kernel you can fall back to the previous kernel. If you upgrade
instead you will most likely find your old kernels are messed up and won't boot.
You should check http://wiki.openvz.org/Kernel_flavors to ensure you're booting
the most suitable kernel. This page also reiterates the need to install, not
upgrade.
Regards,
Andrew Cranson
Layershift Limited
US-Hosted: http://us.layershift.com
UK-Hosted: http://uk.layershift.com
ICQ: 161813538
AIM: cransona
>>> Virtuozzo Virtual Private Servers now available from $12.95/mo! US or UK
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Romeo Theriault wrote:
Hi, I'm subscribed to the OpenVZ news/blog in my rss reader. Today I
received a notice that the current stable kernel would be switched to the
red hat 5 kernel. Specifically this was the comment:
Our internal testing shows this RHEL5 kernel is pretty good, so it will
replace our current stable branch real soon.
How will this affect current RH 4 systems running OpenVZ. Will we simply be
able to install the new kernel while keeping all of the rest of the system
at the RH 4 level?
Or will we need to install RH 5 and use the Openvz kernel based off of RH 5
to keep our systems up to date with the stable kernel branch?
Thanks for any pointers on this.
Romeo
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