On Mon, 17 May 1999, R.Feenstra wrote: > Sorry for jumping right in but you seem eager to help :)
> Where exactly can i find the option for turning ppp on in the kernel using > make menuconfig ? > I've looked till my head hurts but am not able to find it ! > I'm using kernel-source-2.2.1 is that the problem ? > Any help would be greatly apreciated ... Rene Perhaps too eager. Do feel free to ask, but sometimes I speak too soon ;) I copy to the list so any foolish things I say can be corrected by some of the good folk out there. This time I have just compiled my own kernel for a newly installed 2.0 system and for my 2.1 sytem, these run so _perhaps_ I can talk a little about kernel compiling. You enable ppp in the kernel in the configuration. Of course you must have tcp/ip enabled as well, and your ppp packages installed as well. To compile a kernel, I recommend that you do it the Debian way, with the kernel package. There many things are automated. >From the README file that appears on my system as /usr/doc/kernel-package/README For the Brave and the impatient: [to compile the kernel] 1% cd <kernel source tree> 2% make config # or make menuconfig or make xconfig and configure 3% make-kpkg clean 4% make-kpkg --rootcmd fakeroot --revision=custom.1.0 kernel_image 5% dpkg -i ../kernel-image-X.XXX_1.0_<arch>.deb 6% shutdown -r now # If and only if LILO worked or you have a means of # booting the new kernel. YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED!! In the variant of make config that you use, you set the various options (CPU, file systems supported, CDROM, SCSI, low level drivers for boards, ppp, tcp/ip, and so on.) You need to get and install the .deb kernel-package, and the kernel source package for kernel 2.0.36, as well as bin86. I will say that the command in 4% did not work for me. I did this instead: 4% make-kpkg --revision=custom.1.0 kernel_image The reason for the "custom.1.0" is so you can identify just compiled kernel .deb. You will, of course need to read the README and all the doc files BEFORE trying things. If you are running slink (2.1) or earlier, 2.0.36 is a good solid kernel. If you are running something later, and you are a beginner, don't, slink (2.1) is the latest stable version of Debian. You don't want to run unstable versions. Heck! I DON'T want to urn unstable versions. If I can help you further, feel free to ask. Only, understand that while I know some things, and am willing to share, there are many things I'll have to ask about on the mailing list, even as we discuss your problems. --David David Teague, [EMAIL PROTECTED] Debian GNU/Linux Because software support is free, timely, useful, technically accurate, and friendly. (Hope this qualifies:)