On Sat, 4 Oct 1997, Lucas wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Could someone please help me interpret the following messages:
>
> during boot:
>
> "/dev/hda3 (my Linux part.) has reached maximal mount count ... forced
> check"
This is a harmless message. If you mount and unmount an ext2 partition a
certain nu
why don't you simply use make-kpkg to compile the kernel?
Will Lowe wrote:
>
> On Sat, 4 Oct 1997, Tom Ed White wrote:
>
> > How can I find out which sound cards, if any, are supported in this
> > kernel image?
> If you're using the standard debian-installed kernel, I don't think ANY
> are auto
should have gone to the list, too ...
-Forwarded message from Marcus Brinkmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>-
To: Will Lowe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Sound support in kernel-image-2.0.30
References: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Mime-Version: 1.0
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Hello Tom!
You don't have any sound drivers installed by default, although all the
device drivers are there. E.g. you have scsi devices even if you don't
posess a scsi drive. Look at:
/usr/src/linux/drivers/sound/Readme.cards
for a list of supported sound cards. You get this file if you install
On Sat, 4 Oct 1997, Tom Ed White wrote:
> How can I find out which sound cards, if any, are supported in this
> kernel image?
If you're using the standard debian-installed kernel, I don't think ANY
are automatically supported.
> I want to know if I need to recompile my kernel for
> sound. I sus
Hi,
Could someone please help me interpret the following messages:
during boot:
"/dev/hda3 (my Linux part.) has reached maximal mount count ... forced
check"
second message (only as regular user, not as root):
$man [whatever]
(the man page does display, but with a message that obviously co
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