Hi All, Thank you for the replies.
I'll use the kernel-package since it will make my life easier :) Could someone send me the kernel-package/README.modules since I do not have my potato-box with me :) Thanks! Gary Hennigan wrote: > > Lee Bradshaw <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > On Mon, Feb 14, 2000 at 10:22:11AM -0600, Timothy C. Phan wrote: > > > Hi, > > > > > > I'm in the middle of rebuild the 2.2.13 kernel for potato > > > to include IP-MASQ plus some other modules. I'd like to > > > know after the kernel and some modules were built, how would > > > I go about install the modules. > > > > > > I learned that I can re-install the new kernel by simply > > > dpkg -i. But, for module, what is the command to install > > > or unstall. > > > > > > Thanks! > > > > After you do something like: > > > > make-kpkg --revision=custom.1.0 kernel_image > > > > add: > > > > make-kpkg modules_image > > > > Install both the kernel-image and pcmcia-modules .deb files. > > > > See /usr/share/kernel-package/README.modules for more info. > > First, it seems that Timothy is not using the kernel-package > package. You'll want to use this Timothy since it makes life a lot > easier on our Debian systems, and it is the Debian Way (TM). > > Now, what Lee said only applies to "extra" modules, like PCMCIA. The > modules that are part of the kernel source tree are included in the > kernel image file that is generated by make-kpkg. Read the docs for > the kernel-package package to learn how to use it. It's pretty > straightforward. An example session for building a kernel: > > % cd /usr/src/kernel-source-2.2.13 > % make menuconfig > % make-kpkg --revision homePC.1 --bzimage kernel_image > % cd .. > % dpkg -i kernel-image-2.2.14_homePC.1_i386.deb > > and you're done. > > Gary > > -- > Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null