I am pretty sure that I have seen this discussed in the past, but I can't seem to find it in the mailing list archives.
What is the deal with the include directories? My specific problem is that I am trying to install the 2.0.36 kernel, with a Pentium performance counter patch from the Beowulf project. Now I made the patch, and used make-kpkg to build the kernel-headers and installed that. The perf patches have an additional header file, which did appear in the /usr/src/linux sym linked directory which was installed from the header package that I just created. But when I try to build the perf patch library, it can't find that header file! And then I realized that /usr/include has no links to /usr/src/linux. So what is the point in installing header packages? What am I missing? How are these header files supposed to be accessed by users at compile time? (Please CC to me directly, I'm not on the list any more; mail server problems.) ------------------------------------------------------------------- Christopher J. Morrone (302)831-1257 Computer Architecture and Parallel Fax: (302)831-0752 Systems Laboratory, University of Delaware [EMAIL PROTECTED]