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Kernel Elevate blocker Centos 7 to Almalinux

Comments

4 comments

  • ffeingol

    Reboot.  Seems like a kernel got installed, but you never rebooted.

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  • Humphrey Mutai

    Thanks for responding. I've rebooted severally, however I still seem to be booted into a different kernel from the system default.

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  • Humphrey Mutai

    The below is the output from running elevate --check:

    2024-09-07 15:12:17 [INFO] Successfully verified signature for cpanel (key types: release).

    * 2024-09-07 15:12:17 [INFO] Running: /usr/bin/yum list extras

    * 2024-09-07 15:12:17 [INFO] 

    * 2024-09-07 15:12:23 [ERROR] 1 package(s) installed from unsupported YUM repo 'elrepo' from /etc/yum.repos.d/elrepo.repo

    * 2024-09-07 15:12:28 [INFO] Checking EasyApache profile compatibility with AlmaLinux 8.

    * 2024-09-07 15:12:28 [INFO] Running: /usr/local/bin/ea_current_to_profile --target-os=CentOS_8 --output=/tmp/VAS4PvlJmk/ea_profile.json

    * 2024-09-07 15:12:28 [INFO] Backed up EA4 profile to /tmp/VAS4PvlJmk/ea_profile.json

    * 2024-09-07 15:12:34 [WARN] *** Elevation Blocker detected: ***

      The running kernel version (3.10.0-1160.45.1.el7.x86_64) does not match that of

      the default boot entry (3.10.0-1160.119.1.el7.tuxcare.els2.x86_64). This could be due to the kernel

      being changed by an update, meaning that a reboot should resolve this.

      However, this also could indicate that the system does not have control

      over which kernel and early boot environment (initrd) is used upon

      reboot, which is required to upgrade the operating system with this

      script.

      

      If this message remains after a reboot, your server may have been

      configured to boot into a particular kernel directly rather than to an

      instance of the GRUB2 boot loader. This often happens to virtualized

      servers, but physical servers also can have this problem under certain

      configurations. Your provider may have a solution to allow booting into

      GRUB2; contact them for further information.

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  • Andrew

    If you have KVM access you can manual select the newest kernel during boot otherwise check your boot entries and see if the most up to date kernel is the first there.

    Andrew N. - cPanel Plesk VMWare Certified Professional
    Do you need immediate assistance? 20 minutes response time!* Open a ticket
    EmergencySupport - Professional Server Management and One-time Services

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