The installation of the packages including operation succeeded here,
even with my custom kernel installed via building a debian package.
Thank you for your work, Itay.

The procedure with building a kernel module using module-assistant
was new to me, and I guess I would have ignored it if Thomas didn't
mention it. This is what had to be done:

0. Add "deb http://www.math.wisc.edu/~pezz/debian/ unstable/" to
   /etc/apt/sources.list
1. Install package bluetooth-alsa-source, which leaves the file
   /usr/src/bluetooth-alsa-source.tar.bz2
2. Run "module-assistant auto-install bluetooth-alsa", which leaves a
   debian package file
   /usr/src/bluetooth-alsa-modules-<KVERS>_0.4+cvs20050911-1_i386.deb
3. Install that package
4. Install package bluetooth-alsa-utils
5. Edit /etc/default/bluetooth-alsa-utils to contain the BD Address
   of your headset
6. Run "( . /etc/default/bluetooth-alsa-utils ; btsco $BADDR )"
   when you want the headset to be ready to use as /dev/dsp2 or
   ALSA device plughw:Headset (the mixer is named "BT Headset here).

I had no problems, although there is a flaw in step 2:
The package is build and looks proper, but module-assistant
nevertheless reports an error. The generated buildlog doesn't show
anything looking like an error to me.
Could be something wrong with the exit code of the make?


Gero


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