Just wondering if I could benefit from those more experienced. Concerning a kernel that I installed as: dpkg -i kernel_2.6.10-2.1127_powerpc.deb I can't seem to remove it with dpkg --purge --force-remove-essential kernel-image-NNN http://www.debian.org/doc/FAQ/ch-kernel.en.html or dpkg -P kernel-imageXXXX http://newbiedoc.sourceforge.net/system/kernel-pkg.html
I get the feeling that if the kernel was not built with make-kpkg, it was not as it was a .deb alien converted kernel, the above removal methods do not work. Is this correct? So I've removed System.map-x.x.xx, config-x.x.xx, vmlinuz-x.x.xx and vmlinuxXXX for the new kernel, as well as /lib/modules/alienKernelXXXX So I imagine that I did not leave a trace of this kernel install. Right? What might confounds the matter is that the "rpm file is 2.6.10-1.1127_FC4.dwmw2.ppc.rpm" and alien converted it to "2.6.10-2" but dpkg -i kernel_2.6.10-2.1127_powerpc.deb creates 2.6.10-1 (not 2.6.10-2) files in /boot So the kernel starts off as a 2.6.10-1 rpm file then alien turns it into a 2.6.10-2 .deb but then dpkg -i uses the original rpm name to create /boot files. I imagine that this confusion may have kept the kernel from working in the first place. Thanks for your time. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]