On Sat, Jul 18, 1998 at 10:44:22PM +0800, Alex Kwan wrote: > It was said that if the system have more than > 64MB RAM, the user needed to use kernel > option specified the actual RAM size,
> (1) Does the Linux is seem? > (2) If needed, how to? You may want to try it without further options first. Sometimes it works?! If not (check with "free"), append "mem=128" or whatever to your boot procedure. For example (with lilo): "linux mem=128". You don't want to type this everytime, so you use append=128M in /etc/lilo.conf. See /usr/doc/HOWTO/BootPrompt-HOWTO.gz Marcus -- "Rhubarb is no Egyptian god." Debian GNU/Linux finger brinkmd@ Marcus Brinkmann http://www.debian.org master.debian.org [EMAIL PROTECTED] for public PGP Key http://homepage.ruhr-uni-bochum.de/Marcus.Brinkmann/ PGP Key ID 36E7CD09 -- Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null