On Sun, Nov 14, 2010 at 5:18 AM, Matt Domsch <[email protected]> wrote: > On Sat, Nov 13, 2010 at 07:03:36PM -1000, Philip Tait wrote: >> This is a nice improvement. >> >> Will the components be readily available for installation on other >> distros? Sounds like it is possible to get this working on RHEL5/CentOS5, >> for example. > > You bet, it's open source, (git tree http://linux.dell.com/git), and > earlier versions of biosdevname are already in EPEL. The new 0.3.0 > version will land in EPEL soon as I can get to it after it hits > rawhide, and Colin Watson has offered to help get it into Debian and > Ubuntu Natty. > > -- > Matt Domsch > Technology Strategist > Dell | Office of the CTO > > _______________________________________________ > Linux-PowerEdge mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.us.dell.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-poweredge > Please read the FAQ at http://lists.us.dell.com/faq >
Hi, I want to make a gentoo ebuild for this as having the device naming consistent with the labels on the server would have saved me some confusion last week when we had to remove and reconnect some network cables and a couple of labels fell off, however I am having trouble compiling the source, I tried the following: git clone git://linux.dell.com/biosdevname.git cd biosdevname autoconf ./configure which errors in the final step: configure: creating ./config.status config.status: error: cannot find input file: `Makefile.in' make in the main folder or in src fails with make: *** No targets specified and no makefile found. Stop. What do I need to do to compile on Gentoo? Thanks Andy _______________________________________________ Linux-PowerEdge mailing list [email protected] https://lists.us.dell.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-poweredge Please read the FAQ at http://lists.us.dell.com/faq
