Putting this back to the list... On Wed, Dec 29, 2004 at 04:33:43PM -0700, Paul E Condon wrote: > On Wed, Dec 29, 2004 at 12:45:09PM -0700, CW Harris wrote: >> On Wed, Dec 29, 2004 at 12:31:33PM -0700, CW Harris wrote: >>> On Wed, Dec 29, 2004 at 12:33:14PM -0500, William Ballard wrote: >>>> On Wed, Dec 29, 2004 at 10:19:23AM -0700, CW Harris wrote: >>>>> There are source packages kernel-latest-{version}-{arch}. Is this what >>>>> you are looking for? (E.g. kernel-latest-2.6-i386) >>>> >> >> Following up on this a bit more... >> >> I don't know what kernel-latest-2.6-i386 is (maybe patches?) but it is >> definitely too small to be the full kernel source. >> >> $ apt-get -s source kernel-latest-2.6-i386 >> Reading Package Lists... >> Building Dependency Tree... >> Need to get 3691B of source archives. >> Fetch Source kernel-latest-2.6-i386 >> >> Sorry for the trouble. Maybe these are just packages the maintainers use >> to keep things up to date (since they don't show up properly in >> searches). >> > > For most Debian packages, one can upgrade to the latest version > without fear of breaking anything. But, installing a new kernel > requires a reboot of your computer in order to check if it has been > correctly. You don't have to do the reboot, but if its not correctly > installed and if there is a power failure and you try to get going > again after it, you have a problem. So, Debian policy is that kernel > upgrades require manual intervention. You can build a script that > finds the latest kernel patches and applies them to the latest > kernel source, and compiles the kernel, builds the kernel deb, and > installs it, but the high priests of Debian are too timid to do > such a thing. (And, IMHO, you should be, also.)
This was in response to automatically installing the latest *source* package, not automatically installing the latest image. I agree it would not be good to automatically install a new kernel. -- Chris Harris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ------------------------------------------- GNU/Linux --- The best things in life are free. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]