Jeremy Utley wrote:
On 4/11/06, Matt Darcy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
It seems to have worked, I built a monolithic kernel using "7.11.
Linux-2.6.16.1" and the gcc-64.
# uname -a
Linux lfs 2.6.16.1 #1 PREEMPT Tue Apr 11 09:41:42 UTC 2006 x86_64 AuthenticAMD
unknown GNU/Linux
Am I now, safely, able to use the chroot method to continue?
-pete
No,
you can't use chroot method unless your host is the same as your target
if you've just use the "boot" method to make a 64bit kernel and you've
now booted into it, you should continue with the "boot" method, not
switch to chroot.
Matt,
I beg to differ, but by all rights he should be able to safely chroot.
He may still have a 32-bit userland, but his kernel fully supports
64-bit binaries, so chrooting should be perfectly fine.
Jeremy
It is very strange to have a 64 bit kernel while using 32-bit userland
programs.
Besides, some like ALSA does not work if the kernel and the userland
program
did not match.
William
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