On Fri, Jul 11, 2014 at 4:19 PM, Frank Cox <thea...@melvilletheatre.com> wrote: > I have been reading the bug reports about the problem with initializing > Logitech wireless devices using the current stock Centos 7 kernel. It's my > understanding that this issue will be fixed in the Centos Plus kernel. > > However, I suspect that the issue will also be fixed at some point when Red > Hat get around to fixing their kernel as well. > > My main computer has a Logitech wireless mouse that's likely affected by the > bug, though I haven't tried it yet to verify that. > > One of these days I intend to get around to installing Centos 7 on this > computer, and this will then become an issue. > > If I install Centos 7 and then the Centos Plus kernel to get the Logitech bug > fix, what happens when the stock Centos 7 kernel also gets the bug fix > applied? Will a standard "yum update" automatically find and download the > new stock Centos 7 kernel and set everything up to it instead of the Centos > Plus kernel? > > I suppose I could go and hunt down a different mouse to use on this computer > until the issue is resolved upstream, too.
Look in /etc/sysconfig/kernel. There is a line: DEFAULTKERNEL=kernel For the default kernel, you can select between kernel and kernel-plus by adjusting that option. Akemi _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos