Re: initrd question

2004-09-11 Thread Steven Curtis
BENOIT wrote: Hello May be the simplest way is to build your own kernel. On the other I guess that surch an information is somewhere in the initrd file. Jerome Steven Curtis wrote: I'm not sure how to check that. I am using the kernel that is included with the Debian package kernel-image versi

Re: initrd question

2004-09-11 Thread Steven Curtis
well important bugs were fixed]: have you check that your kernel was built with the latest version ? hth, Jerome Steven Curtis wrote: Stefan O'Rear wrote: On Fri, Sep 10, 2004 at 07:58:53PM -0400, Steven Curtis wrote: I'm trying to upgrade to the vmlinuz-2.6.7-1-k7 kernel and my system

Re: initrd question

2004-09-10 Thread Steven Curtis
Stefan O'Rear wrote: On Fri, Sep 10, 2004 at 07:58:53PM -0400, Steven Curtis wrote: I'm trying to upgrade to the vmlinuz-2.6.7-1-k7 kernel and my system has an Adaptec AIC7XXX EISA/VLB/PCI adapter. The stock vmlinuz-2.6.7-1-k7 kernel has aic7xxx support compiled as a module. I

initrd question

2004-09-10 Thread Steven Curtis
I'm trying to upgrade to the vmlinuz-2.6.7-1-k7 kernel and my system has an Adaptec AIC7XXX EISA/VLB/PCI adapter. The stock vmlinuz-2.6.7-1-k7 kernel has aic7xxx support compiled as a module. I added the aic7xxx module line to /etc/mkinitrd/modules and recreated the initrd image with 'mkinitr