Sean,
Here's what I did as a test case:
(1) Launched an AMI (Amazon Linux AMI ami-7f418316 in us-east-1).
(2) yum upgrade -y, yum install -y httpd, chkconfig httpd on, touch
~/foo.txt
(3) Through the console, went to the Create Image (EBS AMI) option, and
went through that workflow. This gave me a new AMI ID (private just to
myself, though it could be made public).
(4) Launched another AMI with that new AMI ID.
(5) Logged into the new AMI to see that the packages I had installed
were there, httpd was running, and ~/foo.txt existed.
That seems quite a bit different from your struggles to upgrade the
kernel. I wonder if we're now talking about different things.
What AMI ID are you using, in what region, and what exactly are you
trying to do?
--Max
On Tue, 4 Oct 2011, sean darcy wrote:
On 10/04/2011 03:56 PM, Max Spevack wrote:
> On Tue, 4 Oct 2011, sean darcy wrote:
>
>> I see on the AWS Management Console an instance action "create image".
>> Would this be a coward's way out?
>
> It certainly seems that way.
>
> Try it:
>
> Launch an AMI.
>
> Modify the instance in some way -- add packages using yum, enable it as
> a webserver, etc.
>
> Go through that create image workflow in the console. It will give you
> a private AMI ID for a new AMI that you own.
>
> Then launch more of that instance, and see if it is in the same state as
> the original.
>
> I haven't tried it, but it seems like that is the way it will work.
>
> --Max
Not quite OT, but I've yum upgrade'd the F15 ami. That installed
kernel-PAE-2.6.40.4-5.fc15.i686. Rebooted - still
2.6.38.8-32.fc15.i686.PAE. Then fixed grub to boot 2.6.40. Reboot. Still
2.6.38.
cat /boot/grub/grub.conf
default=0
fallback=1
timeout=5
splashimage=(hd0,0)/boot/grub/splash.xpm.gz
hiddenmenu
title Fedora-15 (2.6.40.4-5.fc15.i686.PAE)
root (hd0,0)
kernel /boot/vmlinuz-2.6.40.4-5.fc15.i686.PAE ro
root=LABEL=79d3d2d4
initrd /boot/initramfs-2.6.40.4-5.fc15.i686.PAE.img
title Fedora-15 (2.6.38.8-32.fc15.i686.PAE)
root (hd0,0)
kernel /boot/vmlinuz-2.6.38.8-32.fc15.i686.PAE ro
root=LABEL=79d3d2d4
initrd /boot/initramfs-2.6.38.8-32.fc15.i686.PAE.img
Does aws actually reboot the instance? If not, how do you (can you)
upgrade the kernel? If aws does really reboot, what am I doing wrong?
sean
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