On Wed, 4 May 2005 18:25:43 +0300, Andres Järv <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> 1. (*) text/plain ( ) text/html > Version tracking isn't important to me. I dont get it why i should > need the deb either. And I don't like that the deb symlinks the > kernel as the default. What if the kernel fails? Isn't it good then > to have another one in the Grub menu? ,----[ /etc/kernel-img.conf ] | do_boot_enable = NO | postinst_hook = /sbin/update-grub | postrm_hook = /sbin/update-grub | do_bootloader = NO | do_symlinks = NO `---- I have usually 4-5 locally compiled .debs at hand, and grub handles them all nicely. ,----[ Advantages of using make-kpkg ] | I have been asked several times about the advantages of using | the kernel-package package over the traditional Linux way of hand | compiling kernels, and I have come up with this list. This is off | the top of my head, I'm sure to have missed points yet. Any | additions welcomed. | | i) Convenience. I used to compile kernels manually, and it | involved a series of steps to be taken in order; | kernel-package was written to take all the required steps (it | has grown beyond that now, but essentially, that is what it | does). This is especially important to novices: make-kpkg | takes all the steps required to compile a kernel, and | installation of kernels is a snap. | ii) It allows you to keep multiple version of kernel images on | your machine with no fuss. | iii) It has a facility for you to keep multiple flavours of the | same kernel version on your machine (you could have a stable | 2.0.33 version, and a 2.0.33 version patched with the latest | drivers, and not worry about contaminating the modules in | /lib/modules). | iv) It knows that some architectures do not have vmlinuz (using | vmlinux instead), and others use zImage rather than bzImage, | and calls the appropriate target, and takes care of moving the | correct file into place. | v) Several other kernel module packages are hooked into | kernel-package, so one can seamlessly compile, say, pcmcia | modules at the same time as one compiles a kernel, and be | assured that the modules so compiled are compatible. | vi) It enables you to use the package management system to keep | track of the kernels created. Using make-kpkg creates a .deb | file, and dpkg can track it for you. This facilitates the task | of other packages that depend on the kernel packages. | vii) It keeps track of the configuration file for each kernel image | in /boot, which is part of the image package, and hence the | kernel image and the configuration file are always together. | viii) It allows you to specify a directory with config files, with | separate config files for each subarchitecture (even allows | for different config files for i386, i486, etc). It is really | neat for people who need to compile kernels for a variety of | sub architectures. | ix) It allows to create a package with the headers, or the | sources, also as a deb file, and enables the package | management system to keep track of those (and there are | packages that depend on the package management system being | aware of these packages). | x) Since the kernel image package is a full fledged Debian | package, it comes with maintainer scripts, which take care of | details like offering to make a boot disk, manipulating | symbolic links in / so that you can make boot loader scripts | static (just refer to the symbolic links, rather than the real | image files; the names of the symbolic links do not change, | but the kernel image file names change with the version). | xi) There is support for the multitudinous subarchitectures that | have blossomed under the umbrella of the m68k and powerpc | architectures. | xii) There is support there for optionally applying patches to the | kernel provided as a kernel-patch .deb file, and building a | patched kernel auto-magically, and still retain an UN-patched | kernel source tree. | xiii) Allows one to compile a kernel for another computer, for | example using a fast machine to compile the kernel for | installation on a slower machine. This is really nice since | the modules are all included in the .deb; and one does not | have to deal with modules manually. | xiv) The postinst looks at a configuration file on the installation | machine (as opposed to the machine that the image was compiled | on), and allows the local admin to decide on issues of | symbolic links, and whether the boot loader stuff must be | run, and whether one wants to create a boot floppy or not. | xv) The postinst and the postrm scripts allow the local admin on | the installation machine to add a script into runtime hooks; | this can allow, amongst other things, grub users to add and | remove kernel image stanzas from the grub menu (example | scripts to do this are in the package). | xvi) One can append to the kernel version on the command line, or | by setting an environment variable. So if your kernel is | called kernel-image-2.4.1John.Home; it is unlikely to be | overridden by the official 2.4.1 kernel, since they are not the | same version. | | Disadvantages of using make-kpkg | ------------- -- ----- --------- | | i) This is a cookie cutter approach to compiling kernels, and | there are people who like being close to the bare metal. | ii) This is not how it is done in the non-Debian world. This | flouts tradition. (It has been pointed out, though, that this | is fast becoming Debian tradition) | iii) It forces you to use fakeroot or sudo or super or be root to | create a kernel image .deb file (this is not as bad as it | used to be before fakeroot). `---- manoj -- For certain people, after fifty, litigation takes the place of sex. Gore Vidal Manoj Srivastava <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <http://www.golden-gryphon.com/> 1024D/BF24424C print 4966 F272 D093 B493 410B 924B 21BA DABB BF24 424C -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". 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