On Wed, 04 Aug 2021 19:35:20 -0000
"Sampson Fung" <sampsonfung(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Finally!
[snip]
I got:
$ ls -lsh
total 97M
68K -rw-rw-r--. 1 fcc fcc 66K Aug 5 03:00
kernel-5.13.6-200.0805.fc34.x86_64.rpm 38M -rw-rw-r--. 1 fcc fcc 38M
Aug 5 03:00 kernel-core-5.13.6-200.0805.fc34.x86_64.rpm 15M
-rw-rw-r--. 1 fcc fcc 15M Aug 5 03:00
kernel-devel-5.13.6-200.0805.fc34.x86_64.rpm 42M -rw-rw-r--. 1 fcc
fcc 42M Aug 5 03:00 kernel-modules-5.13.6-200.0805.fc34.x86_64.rpm
2.3M -rw-rw-r--. 1 fcc fcc 2.3M Aug 5 03:00
kernel-modules-extra-5.13.6-200.0805.fc34.x86_64.rpm 272K -rw-rw-r--.
1 fcc fcc 272K Aug 5 03:00
kernel-modules-internal-5.13.6-200.0805.fc34.x86_64.rpm
After doing `rpm -ivh kernel-5* kernel-core-5* kernel-modules-5*
kernel-devel-5*`, it booted OK.
Good job.
I think it would be better to use dnf -C install so that the package
manager knows about the packages in its database. It is possible that
it will refresh its database from the rpm database, though it didn't in
the past. If you do a dnf list installed kernel\* , are your new
packages in the list.
Anyway, all's well that ends well.