Alexander Skwar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> I have sys-fs/fuse installed. >> # eix -I fuse >> [I] sys-fs/fuse >> Available versions: 2.6.1 2.6.3 >> Installed versions: 2.6.3(06:56:33 03/20/07)(-kernel_FreeBSD >> kernel_linux) >> Homepage: http://fuse.sourceforge.net >> Description: An interface for filesystems implemented in >> userspace. >> >> [I] sys-fs/sshfs-fuse >> Available versions: 1.6 (~)1.7 >> Installed versions: 1.7(06:38:10 02/22/07) >> Homepage: http://fuse.sourceforge.net/sshfs.html >> Description: Fuse-filesystem utilizing the sftp service. >> >> Should I have a fuse module? > > If you've build fuse for the currently running kernel, then > yes, you should've. > >> root # find /lib/modules -iname '*fuse*' >> /lib/modules/2.6.19-gentoo-r4/fs/fuse.ko >> /lib/modules/2.6.19-gentoo-r4/kernel/fs/fuse >> /lib/modules/2.6.19-gentoo-r4/kernel/fs/fuse/fuse.ko >> >> I guess I'm kind of lost here, as to what has happened... > > hm. What's unclear? You have build fuse only for this kernel > version. When you update your kernel, you'll need to rebuild > all the external modules (fuse, maybe alsa, ...). module-rebuild > is your friend.
Whats unclear is why I have to do anything extra for this kernel when I did not in past 2. I don't understand why it didn't get built with `genkernel all' as in previous 2 kernels. -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list