You can save typing by using rpm -Fvh *.rpm which will "freshen" your install by updating only those things that are already installed. Of course, this will include the kernel, which means you will have to reboot in order to switch to the new kernel. But it will be a shorter downtime. I like to exclude kernel and related rpms (look for --excludepath in the rpm man page) and deal with those deliberately and carefully... It won't update /etc/lilo.conf automatically, so you'll have to do that (add a stanza for the new kernel, but keep the old one around). Sorry, don't have time for more detail. Andy On 26 Aug 2000, Jon Schewe wrote: > Ok, I know how to upgrade redhat without a floppy, now how about without a > reboot, ie on a running system? I upgrade rpms all the time on this system > while it's running and it's fine, this is not a heavily loaded system in case > you're wondering, just happens to be my gateway and I don't want that to go > down if possible. I figure I can just rpm -Uvh everything, but that's a lot > of typing, can I just run the installer from the image or something like that? --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: tclug-list-unsubscribe at mn-linux.org For additional commands, e-mail: tclug-list-help at mn-linux.org