On Wed, 16 Feb 2000, Ron Rademaker wrote: > Check your /etc/init.d/modutils, during installation you selected some > modules to be loaded into your kernel at boot time, when upgrading to a > new kernel, such a file isn't changed, so it's looking in > /lib/modules/2.2.14 for modules that are now in your not a module but > right in the kernel. > Easy way to solve it is (if there is no need to load any modules at > booting time) to rename the file /etc/init.d/modutils to something like > /etc/init.d/no-modutils
This is better done by removing the symbolic link in /etc/rcS.d pointing to /etc/init.d/modutils. Martin -- This is Linux Country. In a quiet night, you can hear Windows reboot. For public PGP-key: finger [EMAIL PROTECTED]