On 6 Nov 2000, David Z. Maze wrote: > Timo Benk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > TB> Hi, > TB> On Mon, 6 Nov 2000, Matthew Sackman wrote: > MS> The problem is that my kernels refuse to install. I have
[snip -- non-deb kernel compile sequence -- ] > David M. answers: > It's far easier and cleaner to install the Debian kernel-package > package, untar the kernel source tarball, configure it with your > favorite variant on 'make config', and then run 'make-kpkg > buildpackage' to build Debian source, headers, documentation, and > kernel image packages from the source tree. Installing the image > package will prompt you to run lilo. If you decide you want a > new/different/better kernel, you can just install a different > package. If you decide you don't want the one you've installed, you > can remove it as you would any other Debian package. Having got good answers here to other less-than-knowledgable questions before, I proceed to ask a horribly newbie question: You say that installing the kernel package will "... prompt you to run lilo..." Do I assume correctly: I have to modify /etc/lilo.conf, that is, the installation does not do this for me? (It has been a while since I built a kernel.) --David David Teague, [EMAIL PROTECTED] Debian GNU/Linux Because software support is free, timely, useful, technically accurate, and friendly. (I hope this is all of the above.)