Am Montag, 20. Dezember 2004 13:19 schrieb Daniel Pittman: [...] > > Last time I checked, using the initrd hack prevented you using an initrd > to boot with. This is incompatible with both future kernel plans where > early boot-time code like partition detection move to an initrd, and > with Debian kernels -- they use an initrd by default.
IIRC, this isn't the case any more. You can put your DSDT in the initrd and the patch will find it. As I use a vanilla kernel, I don't need an initrd and used the DSDT file as "initrd". Tobias > > The preference for the built-in DSDT has a lot to do with this. :) > > Regards, > Daniel > -- > Paperwork is the embalming fluid of bureaucracy, > maintaining an appearance of life where none exists. > -- Robert J. Meltzer -- Diese Email-Adresse dient nur als Spam-Ziel. Nachrichten an diese Adresse werden nicht gelesen! This email address is a spam-tarpit. Mails sent to this address are not read! -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

