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Operating Systems Linux Red Hat how to undo the last installed update on fedora. Post 302353489 by pludi on Tuesday 15th of September 2009 12:16:48 PM
Old 09-15-2009
If you've got the root filesystem on a LVM logical volume, and have space left in the volume group, you can do a snapshot, and restore to that if you don't like the update.
 

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KSPLICE-UNDO(8) 						      Ksplice							   KSPLICE-UNDO(8)

NAME
ksplice-undo - Undo a Ksplice update that has been applied to the running kernel SYNOPSIS
ksplice-undo [OPTIONS] KSPLICE_ID DESCRIPTION
ksplice-undo takes as input a Ksplice identification tag, as reported by ksplice-view(8), and it reverses that update within the running binary kernel. OPTIONS
--debug Reverses the update with debugging output enabled. Recommended only for debugging. --debugfile=filename Sets the location where debugging output should be saved. Implies --debug. --raw-errors Print only raw error information designed to be machine-readable on standard error (standard output is still intended to be human- readable). If ksplice-undo fails due to an error from the Ksplice kernel modules, the first line on standard error will be a Ksplice abort code (see the Ksplice source code for documentation on these codes). Further lines will vary depending on the abort code. If ksplice-undo fails for any other reason, it will output the line "OTHER ", followed by a human-readable failure message, to standard error. SEE ALSO
ksplice-create(8), ksplice-apply(8), ksplice-view(8) BUGS
Please report bugs to <devel@ksplice.com>. AUTHORS
Jeff Arnold, Anders Kaseorg, and Tim Abbott COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2007-2009 Ksplice, Inc. This is free software and documentation. You can redistribute and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License, version 2. Ksplice v0.9.9 2011-02-13 KSPLICE-UNDO(8)
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