> > > > I'm in a similar situation. > > > > I just ended up grabbing the source from kernel.org > > > > and recompiling with debian's kernel-package package. > > > > (kernel 2.6.17.4) > > > > Did this both for i386 and AMD64 machines. > > > > > > Thank you for clarifying. > > > > > > Perhaps a naive observation: to save enrgies (and make a treasure of op > > > competence) why not putting your deb packages (if they are deb) for > > > download? Is any server that could accept them? > > > > This would, offhand, *seem* to be a job for Debian security. > > Thank you for courage in saying that. But I know little about the > policy of Debian to this concern, and, most of all, I understand > that volunteers may lack the time at the moment for what seems to be > the most economical (and secure) procedure. francesco
Why not try compiling your own kernel? make-kpkg makes it quite simple for us non developer types. All you need to do is install kernel-package, and perhaps gcc, make, g++ if they don't already come down with kernel-package. /usr/share/doc/kernel-package has the readme that shows you how to compile your own .deb. Cheers, -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

