Hello! I am a fairly new developer - just approved last week and only have one 'original' package in the archive (vgrabbj)..
I also am now the proud new administrator of a 2-3 node MOSIX cluster (soon to grow, hopefully). I have been seriously pondering packaging the MOSIX tools for debian use (I already have the end-user tools partially packaged), but have a dilemma: MOSIX is a kernel patch as well as a number of include files and a handful of userspace files and libraries. The userspace binaries are completely useless without a kernel patched with the MOSIX patches. I can deal with packaging the include files (mosix-dev) and the libraries (libmosmap, libmos), and the userspace binaries (mosix-bin). My question is this: All of this is fine and dandy, except that none of these packages are useful without a MOSIX kernel. Right now I see 4 options: 1) Include some sort of patched-kernel source package in the debian archive 2) Include some sort of patchfile package (to patch against official debian sources) in the archive. 3) Do #1, but also provide precompiled binary kernels with MOSIX enabled. 4) Don't include any kernel packages, trusting that if the user wants the mosix binaries/includes/libraries, they will make a MOSIX-enabled kernel on their own. Of course, if there is some DebianBlessed(tm) to do this sort of thing, please point me to it. I'd rather not do #3, because it would require me to track all the kernel-* that the rest of the debian crew puts out, and currently it looks like it's moving a little to fast for me to keep up (correct me if I'm wrong, plz, I'm going off the idea that if they track preXX they're keeping pretty up-to-date). Anyway - thoughts/suggestions/flames? Michael Janssen - Jamuraa - [EMAIL PROTECTED] - [EMAIL PROTECTED]