Is there any way to determine the configuration of my currently booting kernel
is ?
i.e. I've built a new kernal for a flash disk, but when I build a new kernel for
my normal hard disk boot, it isn't the same size and doesn't have some of the
stuff I need in it. I'd just like to be able to build my original kernel..
Do I have to re-install everything to get back to a fresh start ?
Red Hat 5.1 - V2.0.34
Thanks!
Ralph Stickley
Datalux, Corp.
(sorry I sent first one to Peter...oops...:-0)
Peter Schuller wrote:
>
> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
> Hash: SHA1
>
> > I need to compare two .config files, and have an output of what's
> > different between them. How would I do this?
>
> How do you want the output formatted?
>
> There's a program called "diff" that is the defacto standard tool for creating
> patches - mainly inteded for source code. It will prodoce a file documenting
> the changes between two files - and those changes can be applied to an old file
> using "patch".
>
> Is that what you want?
>
> / Peter Schuller
>
> - ---
> PGP userID: 0x5584BD98 or 'Peter Schuller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>'
> E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Web: http://hem.passagen.se/petersch
> Help create a free Java based operating system - www.jos.org.
>
> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
> Version: PGPfreeware 5.0i for non-commercial use
> Charset: noconv
>
> iQA/AwUBNynxmcBfJ1FVhL2YEQK/9wCeIdsihmiEMgPhy6XylsdTCdBP/0YAoM1a
> WaLtRNF+6/ZgWNtg59WsArJo
> =cYz9
> -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----