Mensaje citado por eculp_at_encontacto.net: | Mensaje citado por Ceri Davies <setantae_at_submonkey.net>: | | | On Thu, Nov 13, 2003 at 06:48:35AM -0800, eculp_at_encontacto.net wrote: | | > I installed an older current snap, Oct 26, on a brandnew dell power edge | | > with a single Xeon 2.4 GHz cpu and 1G in memory. It was running great. | | > I installed everything except the kitchen sink. Then I decided it was | | > time to update, I've got serveral other machines weathering the storms. | | > Bad idea. It doesn't hang or anything that I can get my teeth into but | | > it just give signal 12 core dumps on many if not most applications. I | | > caught this before finishing an install on another box, yesterday | morning. | | > One of the apps that generates signal 12 is ls so I tried pulling ls | | > from the other box and it no longer has a problem. I am at a lost. | | > Any suggestions for where to start would be appreciated. | | | | Read /usr/src/UPDATING. | | | Thanks, I missed that. :( Sorry for the noise. | | ed I'm building new kernels as I write this. My next question is: One of the machines I'm building on is remote and was last rebuilt just before the change. What would be be better sequence for making the change after a fresh cvsup ? 1. Build and Install a new kernel 2. build a new world 3. Run mergemaster 4. ReBoot (I'm not sure it will come up multiuser with a new kernel and a 4 day old userland.) 5. Installworld and assess possible problems :-) or 1. Build and Install a new kernel 2. make buildworld 3. Run mergemaster 4. make installworld; shutdown -r now # and pray :-) Or is there a better option? Has anyone else already done this? Thanks, ed -------------------------------------------------Received on Thu Nov 13 2003 - 06:39:17 UTC
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