On 5/8/07, Johannes Winkelmann <jw@smts.ch> wrote: [...] No. What I mean was simply a working kernel, made to meet your requirements and hardware.
ok, i always do this: "make menuconfig, make, make modules_install". All in the handbook, you know (Section 3.2. Installing From CD-ROM). The important part is the menuconfig part, which on CRUX is entirely left to
Hi Arnuld, This will be my final reply on this list to you for a while. CRUX is meant for experience users, and while we're trying to help everyone including newbies on this list, you've posted so many beginner questions here lately that I think you should do some more research on linux and linux distributions before posting here again. Just like the distribution isn't targetted at beginners, this list isn't meant for linux beginners; your kernel problems are in no way CRUX related, they're just exposed by the fact that CRUX doesn't come with a kernel package. I see that you're very hard working to find good information, so you're probably on the right way. On Tue, May 08, 2007 at 03:51:32 -0400, arnuld wrote: the user.
how about getting a the latest stable kernel from here: http://www.kernel.org/ , makeing a symbolic link of its source to "/usr/src/linux" and then compile it on CRUX 2.3 ? That symbolic link is a relic, and usually rather making things worse.
will that solve my problem ? Probably not, but really, what kept you from trying? The handbook states: http://crux.nu/Main/Handbook2-3#ntoc55
"The kernel source, which is found in /usr/src/linux-2.6.20.3/ is not installed using pkgadd. If you decide to upgrade your kernel you can safely do so by manually replacing the kernel source with a newer version" So if you decide to update your kernel to try to fix the error, go ahead. The decision is really up to you, just like choosing a newer kernel version than the one supplied on the ISO. No one's holding your hand, sorry. If you're not ready yet to build your own kernels, there's a number of possibilities: - choose a distro with kernel packages (optionally study it if you want to switch to custom kernels at a later point in time; otherwise just enjoy the music and Bruce Lee videos :-) - use some other distro's kernel (including configuration and patches) on CRUX - learn more about kernels by reading the VAST amount of information available online; the problem here is that there's also lots of wrong information outthere, so choose your sources wisely - keep building new kernels until it works - find some local linux guru to help you Good luck, Johannes -- Johannes Winkelmann mailto:jw@smts.ch Zurich, Switzerland http://jw.smts.ch