If you build one during the install with everything you need it will support your hardware. The LiveCD kernel may not support all but during the install you get to make your own.
> On Saturday 29 March 2003 04:02, Brett I. Holcomb wrote: > > I guess that's what you essentially do. Gentoo is booted off the LiveCD > > with a kernel of Gentoo's choice. However, during the install you have > > to run make menuconfig and specify what you want for kernel options. > > Then you run make dep && etc and when you are done you have your own > > kernel that will be used on your new system. There isn't much point in > > replacing the LiveCD kernel as it's only used to do the install. Your > > final system has YOUR kernel. > > The gentoo kernel sometimes doesn't work well (or doesn't support a > particular piece of HW). In that case it could be usefull to install a > different kernel on the CD. > > Paul -- Brett I. Holcomb AKA Grunt <>< -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
