I have just done my first Debian install, and one of the things I want to do before I declare it complete is to make sure I can recreate the kernel from source so that I know I have the source for what I am running on hand..
I am doing this on a 233MHz 'Mobile Pentium MMX', and so during the install selected vmlinuz-2.6.8-2-386 (and vmlinuz-2.4.27-2-586tsc) which seem to work ok, though I am not sure if I made the optimal choice. So far I have done: apt-get install kernel-tree-2.6.8 cd /usr/src tar jxf kernel-source-2.6.8.tar.bz2 Which I assume has given be a source tree corresponding to my running 2.6 kernel. The problem at this point is working out how the current kernel binary was configured. In my previous Linux distributions (SuSE and gentoo), I could copy /proc/config.gz which was garanteed to be the configuration of the running kernel, but my new Debian system doesn't seem to have that. Is there a different mechanism? Can I assume that if I don't run menuconfig etc that the default kernel configuration installed from the source tarfile will be what was used to produce my running kernel? Anything else I should know when building in a Debian system? Regards, DigbyT -- Digby R. S. Tarvin digbyt(at)digbyt.com http://www.digbyt.com -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]