Recently, I grabbed the newest ibcs source (ibcs_970513-2) and compiled it sucessfully on my machine (running hamm and kernel 2.0.29). I then proceeded to try the same thing on two other debian machines (running 1.3) using the same source for ibcs. It choked because /usr/src/linux/include/linux/modversions.h was missing. I realized that I did not install the kernel source on these machines and did so and tried again. Still choked due to that missing file. So I decided to look at if modversion.h was included in the kernel source. It isn't. Doing a search using dpkg --search, I found out that file only exists in
modutils: /usr/doc/modules/examples/Stacking/modversions.h So my question is, does kernel-package put that file into the source tree? Or, more generally, how did it get into my source tree? Also, should there be some documentation in the ibcs package warning of this? Cheers. -- Colin R. Telmer, Institute of Intergovernmental Relations School of Policy Studies, Queen's University Kingston, Ontario, Canada, K7L-3N6 (613)545-6000x4219 [EMAIL PROTECTED] PGP Fingerprint = 09 E9 DA 66 9C EE 33 DC B8 3B 97 0E 01 BC EC 0B PGP Public Key at <URL:http://terrapin.econ.queensu.ca> -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .