while configuring the kernel i saw no option to choose iso9660 support ...did i miss something?
Under 'filesystems' click on 'yes' for 'Native Language Support (NLS)'. Once this is done you will see iso9660, vfat, etc options. [menuconfig came up in b&w instead of color (not that i care)...just weird.] I just tried 'menuconfig'... I get color when using a console window, but if I am in X using an xterm I get b&w. I think that may be the way it is supposed to work. also, ps2 mouse doesn't work as a module, only if it is built into the kernel...is this peculiar to my system or generally the case...just curious...related to this...why do i get the following during boot regardless of whether device support is built-in or selected as module: cdrom: can't locate module cdrom psaux: can't locate module psaux serial: can't locate module serial in the case of the mouse and serial ports doesn't seem to affect function and they are correctly configured during boot process later on Did you specify support for the above devices to be configured as modules, or directly supported by the kernel? If you specified module, did you execute 'make modules; make modules_install' ?? If your kernel directly supports these devices, just comment out the appropriate lines in /etc/modules. Sorry I cannot help with slirp, as I have never used it. :( For ppp connections I configure /etc/ppp/peers/provider and /etc/chatscripts/provider and just run 'pon'. I don't know exactly what they are since I am at work right now... Let me know if you would like them for example and I can send them later. Upgrades do not affect the configurations, either. I'm not sure if they do, but if chat/pppd packages prompt you during installs/upgrade, you should keep the existing configuration files instead of installing the maintainers configs. Keeping existing config files is usually the default. Dennis -- Dennis Kelly <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> | phone: 353.4844 Network Admin, College of Engineering, MSU | pager: 222.5875 -- Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null