Ah, but now that you have a working kernel it's easy to upgrade.  Unpack the
kernel source, then "make mrproper", then copy your 2.6.9 config file to
.config, then "make oldconfig".  You'll only be prompted for new options
(most of which you can accept the default for) and, after "make" will have a
working 2.6.10 kernel that matches (more or less) your configure and working
2.6.9 kernel.

-----Original Message-----
From: Peng [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Sunday, January 16, 2005 7:31 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [gentoo-user] Any way to kill frozen X/KDE?

On 01/16/05 17:23, Douglas James Dunn wrote:
> I would really suggest trying to switch eventually though it should work
> on 2.6.9 but there is a lot of bug fixes on 2.6.10.  It shouldnt work
> too much different from your kernel you have now you just have to make
> sure you have all the correct kernel modules loaded for your hardware.
> once you have all the correct kernel modules compiled for new kernel.
> It wouldnt be like a switch from 2.4 to 2.6.  between 2.6.9 and 2.6.10
> there shouldnt be too many huge differences.   There's a lot of bug
> fixes, its the best they made so far
> 
> the only ones I use are the agpgart cipset alsa NIC and nvidia which
> gets compiled from.  But personally i wouldnt worry about upgading to
> the new version of the kernel breaking anything. it could possibly even
> fix things rather than break them.

Meh. I will go change to 2.6.10 right now, it's just that it took me a 
good amount of time and a good number of threads on the Gentoo forum 
before I got it to work, so I'm kind of afraid of touching the kernel. :P

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