Re: Best way to "pin" a kernel

2014-09-12 Thread Matt Ventura
I'm just doing 'make deb-pkg' on the kernel, and installing the resulting package. From what I can tell, update-grub isn't treating it special in any way, just picking the highest-numbered kernel. It looks like my best bet is to probably change the behavior in the 10_linux script to only choose f

Re: Best way to "pin" a kernel

2014-09-12 Thread Jonathan Dowland
On Thu, Sep 11, 2014 at 08:27:46AM -0700, Matt Ventura wrote: > Quick question: I want Debian to not switch Grub2 to a new kernel > when I update > it, since I have a custom kernel on a particular machine. When I > install a new > kernel from apt, I don't want to immediately use it. What's the > cl

Re: Best way to "pin" a kernel

2014-09-11 Thread Brian
On Thu 11 Sep 2014 at 08:27:46 -0700, Matt Ventura wrote: > Quick question: I want Debian to not switch Grub2 to a new kernel when > I update it, since I have a custom kernel on a particular machine. > When I install a new kernel from apt, I don't want to immediately use > it. What's the cleanest

Re: Best way to "pin" a kernel

2014-09-11 Thread Bzzzz
On Thu, 11 Sep 2014 08:27:46 -0700 Matt Ventura wrote: > Quick question: I want Debian to not switch Grub2 to a new kernel > when I update > it, since I have a custom kernel on a particular machine. When I > install a new > kernel from apt, I don't want to immediately use it. What's the > cleanes

Best way to "pin" a kernel

2014-09-11 Thread Matt Ventura
Quick question: I want Debian to not switch Grub2 to a new kernel when I update it, since I have a custom kernel on a particular machine. When I install a new kernel from apt, I don't want to immediately use it. What's the cleanest way of doing this? Matt Ventura -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to