At this point, I have upgraded my src as it was out of date before I upgraded via sysinstall. The system is up and running, although far from stable. My question is, at this point, have I done enough damage to everything that using sysinstall to upgrade is out of the question, or can I reboot my old kernel and try the sysinstall since my src is now up to date? Thanks,
Joe > You should be able to hit the space bar at the appropriate time, drop > to a prompt that consists of one word: > > ok > > then, type ? > > you'll see a list of options, among them unload...so type: > > unload kernel > > then type: > > load kernel.GENERIC > > and you should be able to complete a boot...OTOH, there are > (probably?) many ways to do what you will need to do. > > BTW: did you copy the list on your reply to me? Its' a really good > idea to do so, as it may be instructive for us all; and there may be a > better way to do what your needs dictate; and someone may offer it. > > On Fri, Apr 23, 2004 at 11:51:01AM -0500, Joseph Koenig wrote: >> They are both there actually. However, my question is, what do I need to do >> to boot from them? I was able to get the network working on the machine, and >> someone on the list recommended doing a CVSup of my source, then build >> world, then build new kernel, as my source is most likely out of date (In >> fact, I'm sure it was). Does that sound reasonable? Thanks _______________________________________________ [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"