Re: Brain transplant for Debian testing box.

2005-10-10 Thread Jeff Stevens
Depending on how you configured your custom kernel, it may well work just fine with your new board and CPU. I haven't done this, but if I were in your situation (and my kernel didn't like my new MB), the first thing I would try is installing a standard kernel image. The install CD for testing com

Re: Brain transplant for Debian testing box.

2005-10-10 Thread John Hasler
Scott Denlinger writes: > Basically, my question is whether I can use my current partititions and > data, and just compile a new kernel to match my new system's hardware > configuration. Yes, of course you can. -- John Hasler -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "un

Re: Brain transplant for Debian testing box.

2005-10-10 Thread Craig M. Houck
A rescue disk will gain access to the HD from what ever you have in the box. There is a quasi-Debian rescue disk at: http://rescuecd.sourceforge.net/ At 09:15 AM 10/10/2005 -0700, Scott Denlinger wrote: >Hi all, > >I'm running Debian testing, and my processor recently died. I used this as an >oppo