On 6/12/06, Javier-Elias Vasquez-Vivas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 6/12/06, Hugo Vanwoerkom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
> How do I find out whether a Debian Unstable linux-image has kernel.org's
> 2.6.16.17?
> H
Linux image package comes with specific versions, for example, there's
a package linux-image-686, accompanied by linux-image-2.6-686, which
in turns install the latest version of the 2.6 kernel series uploaded
in debian, as of now it's linux-image-2.6.16-2-686. To find out the
latest version of the kernel for the debian version you use, you can
go to:
http://www.debian.org/distrib/packages
And perform the request... For unstable and i386:
linux-image-2.6.16-2-686
unstable (base): Linux kernel 2.6.16 image on PPro/Celeron/PII/PIII/P4 machines
2.6.16-14: i386
But you can search for your architecture if it's not i386. If you
want to play with debian compiled kernel, from 2.6.17 pre-releases,
experimental has the RC3 pre-release:
linux-image-2.6.17-rc3-686
And if you go to:
www.kernel.org
You'll find out the latest pre-released version corresponds to RC6:
2.6.17-rc6
If you want latest, you better download the RC6 from www.kernel.org
mirrors. Notice 2.6.17 has not been released yet, you'll find only
pre-releases, so if you really want the 2.6.17 kernel you'll have to
wait more.
I wouldn't go for any binary beyond unstable, and if I'm compiling
myself, I wouldn't go with pre-releases unless trying to test a fix
required for some hardware.
My applogies. I thought the question was about 2.6.17, and it was
2.6.16.7, :-(. Better some one else answers...
--
Javier
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]