Hi again,
thanks to the help of Jonathan Shipley I could solve the problem!
It seems that it had not anything to do with the old version of the
initrd-tools I used.
The problem came from the file '/etc/mkinitrd/modules' which was completely
empty in my case (except of some comment lines).
Her
Hi there again,
--On Wednesday, February 26, 2003 07:44:48 PM +1100 Herbert Xu
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Wed, Feb 26, 2003 at 09:27:17AM +0100, Harry Brueckner wrote:
My initrd-tools are version 0.1.37 which seems to be the most current
version.
Any other ideas?
If you go to packages.debian.
On Wed, Feb 26, 2003 at 09:27:17AM +0100, Harry Brueckner wrote:
>
> My initrd-tools are version 0.1.37 which seems to be the most current
> version.
>
> Any other ideas?
If you go to packages.debian.org/initrd-tools you'll find that the
latest version is 0.1.38.
--
Debian GNU/Linux 3.0 is out
Hi there,
--On Wednesday, February 26, 2003 07:46:33 AM +1100 Herbert Xu
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Any idea what could be wrong? I found several postings about this
problem but not a single useful reply to them. :-/
Upgrade your initrd-tools package and reinstall kernel-image.
I removed the pa
Harry Brueckner , Harry Brueckner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Any idea what could be wrong? I found several postings about this problem
> but not a single useful reply to them. :-/
Upgrade your initrd-tools package and reinstall kernel-image.
--
Debian GNU/Linux 3.0 is out! ( http://www.deb
Hello,
I am fairly new to Debian (not to Linux though) and run into a problem with
the kernel update.
I installed the system from a woody CD-ROM and then upgraded the system to
the current 'unstable' release. So far everything went just fine.
Then I wanted to upgrade the kernel from 2.2.20 to
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