So I'm running a test install and notice kernel-image-2.4.24-amiga-di being installed as a d-i component. Hmmm, I say, my mac should never need that particular kernel and why would the boot image need a kernel anyway -- it's already booted.
I believe it's because some linux-kernel-di modules depend on kernel-image. Okay as far as that goes, but now I've got kernel modules and a kernel that doesn't work for this subarch on my machine. This gives some odd modprobe errors. So is this a lack of subarch support somewhere? I suspect I'm only now noticing it because I'm finally using linux-kernel-di kernels, some of which are priority standard. Any thoughts? Thanks, Stephen -- Stephen R. Marenka If life's not fun, you're not doing it right! <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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