Date: 02 Nov 2002 17:43:47 -0700 From: Ned Wolpert <wolpert@codeheadsystems.com> To: conrads@cox.net Cc: freebsd-current@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: Upgrading 4.7-stable to -current question Message-ID: <1036284227.297.26.camel@wolpert.codeheadsystems.com> In-Reply-To: <XFMail.20021102182004.conrads@cox.net> References: <XFMail.20021102182004.conrads@cox.net>
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On Sat, 2002-11-02 at 17:20, Conrad Sabatier wrote: > Read the UPDATING file very carefully. You'll see that one of the steps in > upgrading from 4.x to 5.0 is updating the boot blocks. Yes, there are several entries. 20000615 is the most interesting: In addition, you'll need to update your boot blocks to a more modern version, if you haven't already done so. Modern here means 4.0 release or newer (although older releases may work). Now, my system was installed around 4.4, so I "should not" need to update my boot blocks. Correct? Getting back to my original question, the problem I was having was with the loader itself. Now, do I have to execute this step (from the UPDATING document) cd src/sys/boot ; make install Reason why I ask is because my loader is from 4.4, so it should work. (Provided I do a ok unload ok boot /boot/kernel/kernel manually) As the UPDATING doc mentions, upgrading from 4.x to 5.x needs that step to avoid those extra steps, yes? But it should still boot if I unload and load manually, correct? I guess the real question was that if this is the case, it didn't boot into /boot/kernel/kernel at that point either... after the unload and boot steps above. Could that have occurred because I still had the old /modules directory? -- Virtually, Ned Wolpert <wolpert@codeheadsystems.com> 4e75 To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message
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