You can get a full source tree at several different place,
ftp://ftp.kernel.org being one, ftp://sunsite.unc.edu being another, as
well as many others.
ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel
ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/kernel
ftp://ftp.ou.edu/mirrors/linux/sunsite/kernel
-----------------------------------------------------------
Matt Housh email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
MicroComputer Specialist University of Tulsa
Engineering and Natural Sciences
"Pardon me, stewardess. I speak Jive."
On Tue, 5 May 1998, glory wrote:
> In an article at http://www-plateau.cs.berkeley.edu/people/chaffee/fat32.html
> the author says:
>
> I'd like to thank everyone for their help in my kernel upgrade.
>
> "Make sure that the file /usr/src/linux/fs/fat/inode.c exists. If it doesn't,
> you don't have a full kernel source tree installed. This is often the case with
> RedHat distributions. The most common sympton of this is that patch with ask you
> which file to patch. If is does, something is wrong."
>
> I don't have the inode.c file, so I'm thinking I don't have a full kernel
> source tree with my RH 5.0 release. Two questions:
>
> 1) How do I obtain a full kernel source tree?
>
> 2) In the absence of that, where can I get the inode.c file he refers too.
>
> Gary
>
>
> --
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--
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