Hi, Thibaut Varene writes:
> I didn't pay much attention to that at that time, knowing it was the > new default for debian kernels. But, I started giggling when I > realized the total boot time (time before first login prompt) of the > box was almost tripled (that's a P2 400). How big is the initrd you generated? I've found that it helps to strip it down as much as possible, by setting MODULES=dep in mkinitrd.conf for example, and getting all unnecessary filesystem drivers out. > I was wondering why are we using initd on installed debian kernels. Even if you only consider booting from a harddisk partitions, a generic kernel without an initrd needs basically all low-level IDE and SCSI drivers built in in order to access the harddisk, and a good many filesystem drivers on top of that. So everybody is forced to load lots and lots of drivers they will never need. On the other hand, with an initrd kernel you only have the bare minimum in the kernel and use the initrd to load precisely the drivers you need to get your root filesystem running. > my question about proper 2.6 packaging still holds, I'd suggest you just look at the existing 2.6 kernel-image and kernel-patch packages of other archs and pick what you like best. Regards, Jens. -- J'qbpbe, le m'en fquz pe j'qbpbe! Le veux aimeb et mqubib panz je pézqbpbe je djuz tqtaj!