>
> Your best bet, I think, is to use lsmod with CentOS
> running, and see
> what's loaded, and configure appropriately.
>
I used lsmod on the running CentOS and it must have had nearly 100 modules.
> Anyway, you might try replacing the USB mouse with a
> regular one,
> either PS/2 or serial port, and see if you can use the
> machine that
> way, until you resolve whatever the problem is.
I tried that. NO inputs work. Not USB or PS/2 mouse and old XT keyboard.
Today I booted up the LFS 6.3 DVD and its works as well. I found its .config
and tried to use it to build a kernal:
make mrproper
Copied it to .config
make oldconfig
make
make modules_install
and then copied everything to its place in the /boot directory.
I had previuously done the same thing with the CentOS .config. Both end up in a
'panic'.
So now I went back to building a clean kernel that will at least boot again.
So to state it again, none of the inputs work after I make the kernel selection
from the menu. The last time I made this selection I was not using the USB, I
was using XT and PS/2 mouse.
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