On Thu, Apr 26, 2001 at 05:39:34PM +0200, Kenneth Vestergaard Schmidt wrote: > If instead, you were able to type something akin to "update-kernel" or > whatever, and then have a kernel built suited to your arch, but with the > "default" Debian-options (ie. lotsa modules), wouldn't that be better? I > mean, just make a note to the user, to switch to another console, or minimize > the window in case of X. Then he'll get a kernel freshly built. IMHO, that's
A compromise would be for the kernel-image- build environment for each kernel-image- to be packaged as, say "kernel-builder-2.4.4-686-smp", which would (I guess) consist of a depends on kernel-package, initrd-tools and mkcramfs, a script to make and install the kernel using make-kpkg, and the linux/.config file needed for that particular configuration. I'd suspect that each of these packages would be of the order of 64kbytes maximum. -- Paul Martin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>