On Mon, 2011-12-26 at 08:42 +0100, Ralf Madorf wrote: > On Mon, 2011-12-26 at 08:39 +0100, Ralf Madorf wrote: > > On Mon, 2011-12-26 at 06:23 +0330, a dehqan wrote: > > > [snip] > > > Have told debian kernel , not upstream kernel , so my kernel source is > > > in /usr/src , do you mean they are the same in applying patch way ? > > > > > > On Mon, Dec 26, 2011 at 12:09 AM, Ralf Madorf > > > [snip] > > > > > > http://www.crucialp.com/resources/tutorials/server-administration/linux-kernel-2.6-compilation-compile-with-grsecurity-grsec-2.6.5-2.6.7-2.6.8-2.6.8.1-2.6.9-2.6.10-2.6.11.6-tutorial-how-to.php > > > > The howto missed to cd into the kernel source directory. > > > > cd /path/to/wherever/the/kernel/source/is > > patch -p0 /path/to/the/patch/grsecurity-VERSION.patch > > > > A side note [1] > > Than you can run ... > > > > make oldconfig > > make-kpkg clean > > make-kpkg --rootcmd fakeroot --initrd kernel-image kernel-headers > > > > ... or anything else. The way you build the kernel is independent of > > building the patch. > ^^^^^^^^ *chuckle* adding the patch > > > > - Ralf > > > > [1] > > I'm not using this patch, hence I don't know it, but I'm using other > > patches. Btw. I'm even not using Debian. > > If needed try -p1 instead of -p0. > > "-pnum or --strip=num > > Strip the smallest prefix containing num leading slashes from each file > > name found in the patch file. A sequence of one or more adjacent slashes > > is counted as a single slash. This controls how file names found in the > > patch file are treated, in case you keep your files in a different > > directory than the person who sent out the patch. For example, supposing > > the file name in the patch file was > > > > /u/howard/src/blurfl/blurfl.c > > > > setting -p0 gives the entire file name unmodified, -p1 gives > > > > u/howard/src/blurfl/blurfl.c > > > > without the leading slash, -p4 gives > > > > blurfl/blurfl.c > > > > and not specifying -p at all just gives you blurfl.c. Whatever you > > end up with is looked for either in the current directory, or the > > directory specified by the -d option."
Since my description is a little bit confusing, please post the output of cat grsecurity-VERSION.patch and [snip] everything but the path to one of the headers that should be patched. I assume that you have got /usr/src/linux-VERSION, right? Usually you should be inside the linux-VERSION directory and use the -p1 option. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [email protected] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [email protected] Archive: http://lists.debian.org/[email protected]

