You forget to do a couple important steps if you're using modules.
1. After make-kpkg -revision... kernel_image do
make-kpkg modules_image .
2. Then either:
a) mv /lib/modules/[kernel version] \
/lib/modules/[kernel version]-old
or
b) rm -rf /lib/modules/[kernel version]
3.
Eric G . Miller wrote:
You forget to do a couple important steps if you're using modules.
1. After make-kpkg -revision... kernel_image do
make-kpkg modules_image .
Actually 'make-kpkg kernel-image' also compiles any modules you
configured. So it is not necessary to do this extra
| You forget to do a couple important steps if you're using modules.
| 1. After make-kpkg -revision... kernel_image do
| make-kpkg modules_image .
|
| Actually 'make-kpkg kernel-image' also compiles any modules you
| configured. So it is not necessary to do this extra step. I never
On Mon, Jul 05, 1999 at 09:06:23AM +0530, Ramakrishnan M wrote:
hello,
I had been reading the Linux Device Drivers,and tried running the
first program.
#define KERNEL
#include ...
...init_module(...)
.
when I do insmod prog.o it says the program has been compiled to run on
Quoting Ramakrishnan M ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
hello,
I had been reading the Linux Device Drivers,and tried running the
first program.
#define KERNEL
#include ...
...init_module(...)
.
That first line is wrong, but I guess you copied into the email
wrongly.
when I do insmod prog.o
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