![]() ![]() ![]() In some of the future posts, I will set up the installation process in an easier way, through the elrepo-kernel repository. The manual installation of the new kernel will take a long time (it may take several hours) so do not be surprised – the system is doing normal for that time because you are booted into the current kernel and as long as it is there, there is no worry. ![]() If you are doing a kernel update please make a backup system – just for any case, or if you use some kind of virtualization, do a snapshot of the system, and if after a while there are no problems in the work … you can delete a snapshot – surely if the kernel does not show up well you can always boot system from the older kernel and pretend where were nothing bad happens. ![]() I will do an installation on CentOS 7 Minimal with a yum update -y done. With this instruction, I will just briefly go through the process of installing the currently latest kernel (on when this instruction is written, the latest version was labeled 4.13.8) without any additional changes ( check the released versions), deeper configurations, eject unnecessary things and choosing options through a configuration file. CentOS is primarily a Linux distribution designed for servers, so for example, recognizing a newer audio or network card is not a priority, but if there is a security flaw within the existing kernel version – CentOS and Red Het will release updates through a standard repository that can be installed with simple yum update, not from ‘zero’ as it will be here in this tutorial. ![]()
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