Am Samstag, 23. September 2006 22:51 schrieben Sie: > On 9/23/06, Tom Cosgrove <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > >>> Greg Thomas 23-Sep-06 19:37 >>> > > > > > > I just upgraded my storage box to -current to test the ath upgrades > > > on another slower computer. I ran make install after compiling the > > > kernel instead of copying the kernel manually: > > > > > > [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/home/ethant# ls -al /*bsd* > > > -rwxr-xr-x 1 root wheel 6049422 Sep 23 10:53 /bsd > > > -rw-r--r-- 1 root wheel 5002407 Aug 21 18:00 /bsd.rd > > > -rw-r--r-- 1 root wheel 6028254 Aug 21 18:00 /obsd > > > > > > But the first 3 times I rebooted the system it booted the Aug 21 > > > /obsd kernel. The 4th time it finally booted the Sep 23 one. I kept > > > getting interrupted by the cat, the phone, and the cat while at the > > > boot prompt while I was troubleshooting and then the last time it > > > finally booted /bsd. > > > > > > Any ideas on why that happened? > > > > I doubt this is what happened. > > In this case I'm sure of what I saw because I scrolled through the > entire dmesg and saw 4.0-current compiled by Theo 2 times before the > one 4.0-current compiled by me even though I had rebooted several > times with new kernel in place. > > Anyway, I've rebooted enough times now that they're all my kernel so > I'll just strike it up to me not having had coffee yet. > > Greg
You may be a victim of the "feature" that ( for hardware related reasons) the dmesg buffer doesn't get cleared after reboot so you actually have 2 dmesgs, (or maybe even more ?) one after the other, in dmesg buffer. This can easily be overlooked by scrolling back to fast. The exact reasons are somewhere in the archives. Alf