JakeCatfox <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: JCF> This is probably a stupid question, but: I'm trying to install JCF> the driver for my Lucent 56k modem, but once I installed the JCF> package, it told me I needed "kernel-image-2.4.5". I am running JCF> kernel 2.4.5, and don't know what it means by kernel image. Can JCF> anyone help? Thanks.
How did you install your kernel? In particular, did you use kernel-package, or the procedure documented in the kernel source tree? Using kernel-package will generate a kernel-image-2.4.5 package, which you can then install. If you hand-built your kernel, you need to hand-build any add-on modules as well. The Right Way to build kernels and add-on modules in Debian would appear to be: (1) apt-get install kernel-package (module)-source (2) Unpack /usr/src/*.tar.gz (3) Acquire and unpack kernel source (4) make *config in the kernel source tree (5) make-kpkg --revision=custom.1 kernel_image (6) make-kpkg modules_image (7) Install all of the packages in the directory above the kernel source using 'dpkg --install' -- David Maze [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://people.debian.org/~dmaze/ "Theoretical politics is interesting. Politicking should be illegal." -- Abra Mitchell