Didier Kryn writes:
> Le 25/05/2016 18:55, Rainer Weikusat a écrit :
>> Linux has the nice policy of never changing a public ABI, hence, there's
>> no problem in this respect
>
> Good to know. Although this is not true for kernel internals (if
> you write or maintain a driver) and it obviously
I have managed to compile and package the 4.4.11 kernel following Katolaz
instructions (thank you!).
It took ages to compileand I knew I would forgot to create a initrd for
it: kernel panic at first boot!
And yet today I saw...
>Lazier:
apt-get -t jessie-backports install linux-image-4.5.0.
Le 25/05/2016 18:55, Rainer Weikusat a écrit :
Linux has the nice policy of never changing a public ABI, hence, there's
no problem in this respect
Good to know. Although this is not true for kernel internals (if
you write or maintain a driver) and it obviously cannot apply to new
features
On 05/25/2016 08:49 AM, Antonio Trkdz.tab wrote:
>
> Can you suggest a lazier solution (like pre-compiled packages)?
>
> Thank you!
>
> Antonio
>
Lazier:
apt-get -t jessie-backports install linux-image-4.5.0...
-fsr
___
Dng mailing list
Dng@li
On Wed, May 25, 2016 at 04:19:23PM +0100, KatolaZ wrote:
> > The kernel doesn't make any call to the glibc; it is the
> > opposite: when running the new kernel, the userland invokes the
> > glibc all the time, and this glibc makes system-calls to the new
> > kernel, and there are some changes i
Didier Kryn writes:
> Le 25/05/2016 16:25, Antonio Trkdz.tab a écrit :
>> Thank you Didier and Urban.
>>
>> >I think you can compile your kernel with any version of gcc 3, 4 or
>> 5, but take care of the C library. The libc used by your OS (ie
>> glibc) must be compiled with the kernel headers for
>i've built linux-libre-4.3.5 in 686, 686-pae and amd64 architectures, and
shortly i'll share the beta of Gnuinos. Give me one week...
Great! Looking forward to it.
Antonio
On Wed, May 25, 2016 at 5:01 PM, aitor_czr wrote:
> Hi Antonio,
>
> El 25/05/16 a las 16:25, "Antonio Trkdz.tab"
> escr
Hi Antonio,
El 25/05/16 a las 16:25, "Antonio Trkdz.tab"
escribió:
Another thing I had a small attempt at was to pull the kernel
4.3.05(ish)-libre from gnuinos, but for some reason the repository listed
in the web page didn't work in my hands.
You are right, both links to the apt repositories
On Wed, May 25, 2016 at 04:49:12PM +0200, Didier Kryn wrote:
> Le 25/05/2016 16:38, KatolaZ a écrit :
> >Having said that, I think you should not have too many problems
> >compiling a 4.x kernel with glibc-2.19 (the version you find in
> >Jessie)
>
> The kernel doesn't make any call to the gli
On Wed, May 25, 2016 at 03:53:50PM +0100, Antonio Trkdz.tab wrote:
> Thank you for the info!
>
> >It's Devuan, obvoiously.
>
> Got it! :)
>
> >I don't know whether you already are aware of it, but the best way to
> compile a vanilla kernel on Debian/Devuas is through using
> kernel-package, whic
Thank you for the info!
>It's Devuan, obvoiously.
Got it! :)
>I don't know whether you already are aware of it, but the best way to
compile a vanilla kernel on Debian/Devuas is through using
kernel-package, which compiles the kernel and produces a
ready-to-install .deb package.
Yeah, you mentio
On Wed, 25 May 2016 15:25:56 +0100, Antonio Trkdz.tab wrote:
> Now that I think of it, I got rid of libsystemd0 by having gvfs and dbus
> installed from angband repos, might it be that I need to reinstall some
> packages from there, but ascii repo (it will take a bit of system
> pinning,though)
Le 25/05/2016 16:38, KatolaZ a écrit :
Having said that, I think you should not have too many problems
compiling a 4.x kernel with glibc-2.19 (the version you find in
Jessie)
The kernel doesn't make any call to the glibc; it is the opposite:
when running the new kernel, the userland invoke
Le 25/05/2016 16:25, Antonio Trkdz.tab a écrit :
Thank you Didier and Urban.
>I think you can compile your kernel with any version of gcc 3, 4 or 5, but take care of the C
library. The libc used by your OS (ie glibc) must be compiled with the
kernel headers for the kernel version it runs on.
On Wed, May 25, 2016 at 03:38:11PM +0100, KatolaZ wrote:
[cut]
>
> I don't know whether you already are aware of it, but the best way to
> compile a vanilla kernel on Debian/Devuas is through using
^^
It's Devuan, obvoiously.
HND
KatolaZ
--
[ Enzo Ni
On Wed, May 25, 2016 at 03:25:56PM +0100, Antonio Trkdz.tab wrote:
[cut]
>
> In a previous discussion Hendrick Boom suggested it as an easy solution,
> but do you recommend having mixed source (ascii/jessie)? I am afraid I
> could mess up my system regretfully in the long runeven if only for
Thank you Didier and Urban.
>I think you can compile your kernel with any version of gcc 3, 4 or 5, but
take care of the C library. The libc used by your OS (ie glibc) must be
compiled with the kernel headers for the kernel version it runs on.
So to be clear...if I download the sources and I comp
On Wed, 25 May 2016 13:49:23 +0100, Antonio Trkdz.tab wrote:
[...]
> I had a look at installing the 4.5 kernel from ascii, but it pulls a lot o
> dipendences, including libsystemd0 (again)
[...]
This is odd. (FWIW, I'm writing from an Ascii installation
with the stock 4.5 kernel, and no libs
Le 25/05/2016 14:49, Antonio Trkdz.tab a écrit :
Can I compile the 4.1 without having to get the gcc4.9 compiler?
I think you can compile your kernel with any version of gcc 3, 4 or
5, but take care of the C library. The libc used by your OS (ie glibc)
must be compiled with the kernel hea
Hi All,
I didn't want to resuscitate old discussions, so I am writing a new one.
I am actually using Nvidia drivers from jessie-backports, but I would like
to try nouveau drivers for my Nvidia card to get rid of some proprietary
blobs...
With current kernel in stable(3.16), nouveau don't support
20 matches
Mail list logo