On Sat, 2004-06-12 at 06:48, Pablo Santiago Blum de Aguiar wrote:
> I compiled a new kernel (2.4.18) for a woody box (a 233MHz pc) on my sid
> box (an Athlon 800MHz pc). On sid, I did an 'apt-get install
> kernel-source-2.4.26', configured the kernel for my needs, ran
> 'make-kpkg clean' and used
> > don't use initrd
>
> Thanks for the reply. Not sure if I understand what you suggest me. I
> tryed:
He's suggesting that you reconfigure your kernel to build whatever you need in
order to boot directly into the kernel, rather than building those things as
modules. If you do that, you don't
On Sat, 2004-06-12 at 03:08, Laurent CARON wrote:
> Pablo Santiago Blum de Aguiar wrote:
>
> >Hi all,
> >
> >I compiled a new kernel (2.4.18) for a woody box (a 233MHz pc) on my sid
> >box (an Athlon 800MHz pc). On sid, I did an 'apt-get install
> >kernel-source-2.4.26', configured the kernel for
Pablo Santiago Blum de Aguiar wrote:
Hi all,
I compiled a new kernel (2.4.18) for a woody box (a 233MHz pc) on my sid
box (an Athlon 800MHz pc). On sid, I did an 'apt-get install
kernel-source-2.4.26', configured the kernel for my needs, ran
'make-kpkg clean' and used the following command do compi
Hi all,
I compiled a new kernel (2.4.18) for a woody box (a 233MHz pc) on my sid
box (an Athlon 800MHz pc). On sid, I did an 'apt-get install
kernel-source-2.4.26', configured the kernel for my needs, ran
'make-kpkg clean' and used the following command do compile it:
[/usr/src/linux] - 0
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