Hi, On Sun, 2007-02-11 at 13:54 +0000, Mark South wrote: > From > http://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/debian-faq/ch-kernel.en.html > (page 9 of the FAQ) section 9.2 on the mddle of the page: > > "Execute the command: make-kpkg -rev Custom.N kernel_image, where > N is a revision number assigned by the user. The new Debian > archive thus formed would have revision Custom.N, e.g. > kernel-image-2.2.14_Custom.1_i386.deb for the Linux kernel 2.2.14 > on i386." > > Under Debian 3.1r4 this results in, for example: > > # make-kpkg -rev Custom.01 linux-2.4.34
Assuming that by "this" you mean "doing something other than what the section quoted says", then yes. > Error: Unknown target linux-2.4.34 > use --targets to display help on valid targets. Indeed, linux-2.4.34 isn't a valid target. It's also *not* what the section you quoted says to do. If one follows the instructions above, the correct command would be make-kpkg -rev Custom.01 kernel_image as the make-kpkg documentation, or running make-kpkg --targets as suggested in the error message would also suggest. "kernel_image" is the name of the target, not text you're intended to replace. Where text is a placeholder which you need to replace, it's shown in italics, as with the "N" in the quoted section. > The command should instead read as > > make-kpkg --revision Custom.N buildpackage No, it shouldn't, imho, as that would have a different effect. buildpackage produces far more than just the kernel image. Regards, Adam -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

