On Fri, Apr 22, 2005 at 04:13:34PM -0500, Eric Rostetter wrote:
> As an example, it doesn't reboot to the new kernel. So that is an
> extra step that is needed. If I just do auto updates without checking
> what was done, how do I know I need to reboot to the new kernel? If
> I don't, then I'm not protected by the new security update to the kernel.
> Similar for restarting daemons, etc.
I have a "kervercheck" script that runs nightly and e-mails root whenever
you're running a kernel older than the latest one installed.... I'll try to
get that into Fedora Extras....
--
Matthew Miller mattdm@xxxxxxxxxx <http://www.mattdm.org/>
Boston University Linux ------> <http://linux.bu.edu/>
Current office temperature: 74 degrees Fahrenheit.
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