On Wed, 2007-09-12 at 09:13 -0700, Dan Stromberg wrote: > I sent this to kernel newbies first, and while I got one response there, > it answered a different question than the one I was asking...
Are you sure? > I'm on a SuSE system. > > I'm working on automating the install of said system, but it needs a > Linus kernel - 2.6.21.7 specifically, and it needs kernel source too so > that we can build modules in the field as needed. Find a kernel-source.*.src.rpm or kernel-*.src.rpm or whatever SuSE uses for nameing convention and reverse engineer the .spec file. Fedora BTW abandoned kernel-source* and they have now a website with a description how to produce a configured kernel source tree (e.g. for out-of-tree modules). > I see you can make an rpm of a bootable kernel with "make rpm". Well, then there must be a .spec file somewhere which just wants to be extended. > Is there a streamlined way of building a corresponding kernel-source > RPM? Or do people pretty much all just dump the source in /usr/src, and Yes, you put all the steps you do by hand into the .spec file. That's it. > manually update symlinks as needed? If the latter, what symlinks need > to be updated? Actually nowadays usually there no "sym-link updating" anymore necessary - just put the correct ones in /lib/modules/$(uname -r)/ and the full name in /boot/grub/menu.lst. Bernd -- Firmix Software GmbH http://www.firmix.at/ mobil: +43 664 4416156 fax: +43 1 7890849-55 Embedded Linux Development and Services - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/