On Fri, May 31, 2002 at 01:54:08PM -0700, Paul E Condon wrote: > I ran "X -version" on my Debian system on which I have applied the > "go-woody" script to move from potato to woody. I got a result that > puzzles me. > > The "X -version" output contains a line > "Operating System: Linux 2.4.13 i686 [ELF]". > But when I run "uname -r", I get "2.2.19", and /proc/version contains > "Linux version 2.2.19 ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) (gcc version 2.7.2.3) #1 Sat Jun 9 > 13:04:06 EST 2001" > > Should go-woody have installed kernel 2.4.13?
I haven't checked the script, but distribution upgrades generally don't upgrade the kernel automatically. The 'X -version' output is probably describing the system on which X was built. > Did it? How can I determine, really, what kernel I am using? 'uname -r' is always correct. -- Colin Watson [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]