On Mon, Feb 14, 2000 at 12:07:46PM -0600, Timothy C. Phan wrote: > Hi Lee, > > So, when I do a dpkg -i kernel_image, would this allowed > me to install the modules one by one or it would just > install all the modules that I configure to build before > rebuilding the kernel?
dpkg -i install the modules onto the disk. Some other mechanism is required to install the modules into memory when you boot. The command should install (onto the disk) all the modules that you compiled into a directory under /lib/modules (/lib/modules/2.2.14 for example). You can put specific modules to load (into memory) in the file /etc/modules or use auto to have the kernel get them automatically (if you compiled the kernel with support for this feature.) You can also install modules (into memory) with 'modprobe modulename' by hand. > Secondly, when I installed the module during the fresh > installation, I selected a several modules and the system > would prompt me for some command line options to the modules > that I selected, what are the available options? Look in /etc/modutils and edit whatever seems to be the appropriate file, or make a new file called options. Add a line of the form: options module module_options Then run update-modules. This command will process the files in /etc/modutils and generate a single /etc/modules.conf file. > > I believe at the same time, it also display some warning > message about unavailable of some document... > > Thanks! > -- Lee Bradshaw [EMAIL PROTECTED] (preferred) Alantro Communications [EMAIL PROTECTED]