If you copied your kernel to /boot when it wasn't mounted it doesn't do
you much good. Did you try mounting /boot, then copying your kernel?
Be sure to remove the kernel from the /boot directory when /boot is not
mounted.
- Sebastian
On Fri, 27 Jan 2006, Austin Stanhope wrote:
I don't think so. In my /etc/fstab i set it as noauto
-Austin
Sebastian Smith wrote:
Was /boot mounted when you copied the new kernel over?
- Sebastian
On Thu, 26 Jan 2006, Austin Stanhope wrote:
I assume so. I followed the instructions in the gentoo handbook.
-Austin
Todd A. Jacobs wrote:
On Thu, Jan 26, 2006 at 04:35:49PM -0800, stanhope wrote:
Does anyone know how to do this and would they be willing to explain
it to me? I don't have much experience with kernel stuff. This is
Did you actually build and install the new kernel? And did you reboot
afterwards?
--
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Austin Stanhope www.cse.unr.edu/~stanhope
Engineering Computing Center www.ecc.unr.edu
University of Nevada, Reno www.unr.edu
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Voice: 775.784.1437
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==========================================================
Austin Stanhope www.cse.unr.edu/~stanhope
Engineering Computing Center www.ecc.unr.edu
University of Nevada, Reno www.unr.edu
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Voice: 775.784.1437
==========================================================
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