i hope you don't mind me asking a question... also sprach Manoj Srivastava <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2003.07.06.0223 +0200]: > % sudo echo 'debian := 5:501c' >> /etc/kernel-pkg.conf
what does this line do? the reason why i don't like your approach, although i really appreciate you showing it to me, is as follows: i have about 33 machines under my control, each of which i run with customised kernels. and each of which is different, of course. previously, i had a schema that allowed me to compile e.g. a kernel with grsecurity and freeswan patches, and the nvidia and lm-sensors modules as follows: kcompile 2.4.21 grsecurity freeswan-ext . nvidia lm-sensors it would compile the patched kernel and the modules, drop the .deb (which would be named just right) into an apt-getable tree, and off i went. configuration all automated in the background. this scheme broke (it was never really unbroken). so now i want to make a new one. i guess what i will be doing is something like: cd ~/debian/kernel/src tar xfj KERNELS/linux-${desired_version}.tar.bz2 rm -rf ../modules/* for i in $desired_modules; do tar xfz /usr/src/${i}.tar.gz done MODULE_LOC=`pwd`/modules cd linux-${desired_version} make-kpkg ... || exit -1 make-kpkg ... || exit -1 make-kpkg ... || exit -1 anyhow. is there anybody in a similar situation to me? how do you solve the problem? and manoj: i don't think i quite get lndir yet. i mean, i understand 100% what it does. i just don't know how i can profit of it. it only works if the ln'd source trees all have the same patches, right? so unless i want to keep a source tree around for each patch combination, it won't really help me a lot, right? -- Please do not CC me when replying to lists; I read them! .''`. martin f. krafft <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> : :' : proud Debian developer, admin, and user `. `'` `- Debian - when you have better things to do than fixing a system Invalid PGP subkeys? Use subkeys.pgp.net as keyserver!
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