On Sat, Dec 09, 2000 at 09:32:30AM -0600, Phil Fraering wrote: > I'd like to ask _what_ it sees as being different about kernel 2.4 from > kernel 2.2. Just guessing from the fact that it's an input device, and > in a generic sense the input layer has changed on 2.4 systems than on > 2.2 systems... except there's a bigger catch: > > Many people here on this list are using versions of the 2.2 kernel with > the relevant input sections of the 2.4 kernel's source "backported" to > it, so that they have a 2.4-like input layer. I'm one of those people. > > Due to various constraints, users of newer Mac hardware will probably > be either using a 2.2 kernel with backported stuff or a 2.4 kernel.
I think it's mainly just an error on the part of the author of xf86Wacom.c, Frederic Lepied. He appears to be defining a structure in his source file that collides head-on with something defined in <linux/input.h>. > > In other news, the donated B&W G3 showed up, but I am having difficulty > > partitioning it. mac-fdisk is not the world's friendliest tool! I'm sure > > the folks on #debian-devel can get me going, though. > > There's a really nifty tutorial for mac-fdisk (or whatever else you're > supposed to be using) at Ethan Benson's web site, at > http://www.alaska.net/~erbenson. Thanks for pointing that out, I'll check it out. > The long and the short of it is, you'll have to work out the size of your > combined linux partitions; don't forget the bootstrap partition! Then use > MacOS's partitioner to create a single partition that size ahead of your > planned MacOS partition(s), if any. You then boot your linux CD, go into > mac-fdisk, delete the big placeholder partition, and create a bunch of > partitions where it was, starting with the bootstrap partition (which must > be hfs, not hfs+, and about 800k. Again, see the web site for the > instructions, including details on mac-fdisk.) I've found that having MacOS > present on the hard drive can be a help if one accidentally screws up the > yaboot.conf on the bootstrap partition so that you can't boot the Linux > partition to fix the yaboot.conf there, BTW. Yes, it's inelegant, but I > think you've noticed by now there's no place to stick a rescue floppy in the > machine. You can use the CD if things get that bad... Yes, I have one of the world's few extant 2.2r2 PowerPC binary CD #1's right now, apparently. > Anyway, I have to go. I hope that helped. Thanks for the tips. > (Maybe it would help if some of us pitched in and donated memory for one > of the machines, so you would have faster compile times? I think we should > discuss this before I'm broke again). Heh, I think I'm doing fine right now. If the stickers on the DIMM's are correct, this machine has 256MB of RAM. I think I probably have as much of a PowerPC as I need for the moment as far as X compiles go; the important thing was getting the compile time below 11 hours, which is how long it took on the old 7200/90. Someone was wanting to donate a beige G3; it should go to a worthy home, and perhaps you can help that person get a decent amount of RAM in it. I'll get back to you if the DIMM's mislabeled, though, and I really only have 8MB. :) I'll probably continue to use i386 as my primary development platform, just because I can cycle in less than an hour and a half on it. But having a PowerPC fast enough that I can start and evaluate a build within a normal workday is enough. (Like I *have* any normal workdays, but that's a separate issue...) -- G. Branden Robinson | There's nothing an agnostic can't do Debian GNU/Linux | if he doesn't know whether he believes [EMAIL PROTECTED] | in it or not. http://www.debian.org/~branden/ | -- Graham Chapman
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