Scripsit Martin Kittel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >> You can check in the preinst if the running kernel is new enough, >> but that is about all you can do.
> But this happens only after you have downloaded the whole package > and leaves you with a broken one. So I don't think that would be an > acceptable solution. It would be less acceptable to refuse installation for people who prefer to install custom kernels themselves and bypass the packaging system. Remember that having a kernel image installed is no guarantee that it is actually the same kernel that *runs*, so a dependency would not prevent users from having a package that does not work. -- Henning Makholm "Gå ud i solen eller regnen, smil, køb en ny trøje, slå en sludder af med købmanden, puds dine støvler. Lev!"