When I came into possession of a Micron dual PPro with a Symbios scsi adapter and new scsi drive, I grabbed the "compact" flavor of 2.2r6 and easily installed Debian over a cable 'net connection. The compact kernel boots nicely with LILO on /dev/sda; the only tweaking needed was adding an append in lilo.conf: append="sym53c8xx=mpar:n"
Problem: I cannot build a kernel that will boot from the hard drive! I am using the 2.2.19 source, and every custom kernel I have built fails the same way; the boot dies - grinds to a halt - with no error messages as soon as the "Ok, now booting the kernel" message appears. These kernels _can_ boot from floppy if you make a boot floppy when make-kpkg prompts you as to whether or not you want one. Hence the Subject: line "How does compact do it?" i.e. how does the compact kernel manage to boot off the hard drive when all of my custom ones, even those that consist for the most part of compact's .config itself, fail. I'm getting ready to go the initrd route, but that shouldn't be necessary, should it? -- Eric d'Alibut I am not a looney! Why should I be attired with the epithet looney merely because I have a pet halibut? I've heard tell that Marcel Proust had an addock! So, if you're calling the author of 'A la recherche du temps perdu' a looney, I shall have to ask you to step outside! -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]