On 12/23/06, Dale <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
If he has that enabled in the kernel. That can be a good thing to have
around though. Especially if you accidentally erase your old config.
It is also very useful for being able to check the configuration of
the kernel you are _actually_ running,
On Sat, 23 Dec 2006 17:22:36 +0200, Daniel Iliev wrote:
> make config | menuconfig | xconfig
... | gconfig
--
Neil Bothwick
System halted - Press all keys at once to continue.
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Daniel Iliev wrote:
>
> Yet another approach:
>
> cd /usr/src/linux/
> zcat /proc/config.gz > .config
> make oldconfig
> make config | menuconfig | xconfig
>
>
>
>
If he has that enabled in the kernel. That can be a good thing to have
around though. Especially if you accidentally erase your ol
Trenton Adams wrote:
> Hi guys,
>
> Does anyone know of a kernel config manager that manages the kernel
> configuration settings that I want? For instance, I want this network
> driver, and that driver, and the other driver.
>
> Want this to be managed outside the standard menu config because it
>
On Fri, 22 Dec 2006 18:07:42 -0700, Trenton Adams wrote:
> Want this to be managed outside the standard menu config because it
> will make it easier to switch to a new kernel, such as xen-sources, or
> vanilla-sources. I can then keep the default settings of that
> particular kernel, and enable a
Trenton Adams wrote:
> Hi guys,
>
> Does anyone know of a kernel config manager that manages the kernel
> configuration settings that I want? For instance, I want this network
> driver, and that driver, and the other driver.
>
> Want this to be managed outside the standard menu config because it
>
Hi guys,
Does anyone know of a kernel config manager that manages the kernel
configuration settings that I want? For instance, I want this network
driver, and that driver, and the other driver.
Want this to be managed outside the standard menu config because it
will make it easier to switch to
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