On CentOS 4.x, you can refer to the date of install.log that anaconda
writes in /root. But that is assuming that the files are still the
original ones.

On Dec 8, 2007 2:33 PM, jan gestre <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> On Dec 8, 2007 11:53 AM, Eduardo Tongson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > Hello Jan,
> >
> > Getting this information is probably bound to be distribution
> > specific. For example, in one of my Gentoo Linux installs I can
> > accurately get the installation data and time from the top line of
> > /var/log/emerge.log <1194875898: Started emerge on: Nov 12, 2007
> > 13:58:18>. Of course that is if the particular log file is archived or
> > kept.
> >
> > Maybe you can try checking the top line of a software installation log
> > specific to your distribution.
> >
> > Hi Ed,
>
>
> The previous admin did not make any documentation whatsoever  so  I'm having
> a hard time documenting them.  Basically they are all  CentOS 4.x  servers
> and the problem is the install log was already rotated and I already read
> them and did not find any relevant info.
>
> jan
>
>
>
> --
> http://jangestre.wordpress.com
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