> I repeat, I am not doing anything "non-standard":
 > 
 > $ cp /boot/config-2.6.31-1-amd64 .config
 > $ make-kpkg --initrd --revision=custom.1.2 kernel_image

        That's [retty non-standard for a custom kernel. You are using
 a distro kitchen sync config for making a custom kernel; and
 kernel-package is mostly geared for individuals.

 > 
 > *I* did not ask for XEN, this is part of the debian stock
 > kernel image configuration.

        Yes, you did, by using that config file.

 
 > *I* did not instruct grub2 not to ignore vmlinux, my grub2
 > configuration was installed as standard.

        And you fed it a non-standard image, which had vmlinux in
 it. kernel-package is not geared for people cargo culting.

 > Until the recent change, I had never seen vmlinux,
 > and therefore there was no problem. Why was the decision made
 > to now produce this?

        This is part of the effort to make kernel-package friendlier
 to XEN, and as Xen moves closer to inclusion in mainline. Also, the
 usage conventions for XEN are changing, and k-p has to be made to
 adapt to it.

 > Also, I can find no mention of "make defconfig" in
 > /usr/share/doc/kernel-package/README.gz

        kernel-package does not say _anything_ about how you get your
 .configs. The  defconfig is documented in upstream kernel
 documentation.

 > so please do not moralize me and recognize that there IS a bug!

        I do not think there is a bug anymore, anyway.  You are using
 unstable, there is a reason it is called the bleeding edge. Behaviour
 changes, and it sometimes takes a few days for things to stabilize.

        manoj
-- 
Manoj Srivastava <sriva...@acm.org> 
1024D/BF24424C print 4966 F272 D093 B493 410B  924B 21BA DABB BF24 424C



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