Charity wrote: > Kevin Day wrote: > >>> udev had to be updated. I used udev-105 >>> >>> >> Interesting, I have udev-094, anything higher causes the system to not >> boot. I have been wondering if they changed how their stuff works but >> made no documentation of it..considering that project has negatives in >> the areas of information about itself.. >> It took me a while to figure out udev versions higher than 094 were >> causing my system to not boot. Did you have similar problems until >> you changed to 105? I do not belive I have tried 105 as of yet, but I >> have tried 104. >> >> > I could not get udev-081 to compile which was what was suggested in the > book. I just took the most recent version and it compiled and installed > cleanly. I didn't have a chance to try to boot from it actually because > of my kernel snaffoo. I will keep this in mind, but I will try udev-105 > first. If I can't boot, I will go back to 094. Thanks for the heads up. > Correction. Forgot I did have a problem with udev. It did not automatically copy the udevstart binary. I did a locate on it and it was nowhere on my system except in my recently built udev directory...so, I manually copied this into /sbin and then typed /sbin/udevstart. I checked my /dev folder and it looked like all my devices where there correctly. Perhaps that is the problem with the newer udevs? If the bootscripts expect the /sbin/udevstart to be there, then that could cause a problem. :)
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