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Re: [tlug] Upgrading the kernel...?
Godwin
Thanks for explaining things.
I'm setting aside tomorrow afternoon to try upgrading my kernel. If I
can get reliable Palm connections and not create a world of other
hassles, then it's worth it. The key is if I can reboot to my current
system if things go horribly wrong.
Before I proceed, I want to make sure that I'm doing the right things.
So I'm just going to put here the commands I need to do, and if any
expert eyes spot any gotchas, that would help a lot.
The instructions I'm using are, as mentioned before, from here:
http://www.ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=217657
First, a question. There is a warning midway down the page that says
"MPORTANT: READ THIS POST OR THE KERNEL MAY NOT COMPILE!". It links to
this page:
http://www.ubuntuforums.org/showpost.php?p=1308736&postcount=106
On that page, it says to "unset the following", followed by these
directions:
Device Drivers -> Multimedia Devices -> Digital Broadcasting Devices
But, I don't understand what it's pointing to. Those aren't directories,
and I can't find any kind of "Device Drivers" program in my Gnome Panel.
What setting or application am I supposed to be using to remove these
"Digital Broadcasting Devices"?
Okay, then onto the actual kernel building. Here's what the web site
says I should do, without all the commentary:
sudo apt-get install build-essential bin86 kernel-package libqt3-headers
libqt3-mt-dev wget && cd /usr/src
sudo wget
http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v2.6/linux-2.6.17.7.tar.bz2 &&
sudo tar -xvjf linux-2.6.17.7.tar.bz2
sudo rm -rf linux && sudo ln -s /usr/src/linux-2.6.17.7 linux && cd
/usr/src/linux
sudo cp /boot/config-`uname -r` .config && sudo make xconfig
sudo -s -H
cd /usr/src/linux
make-kpkg clean
make-kpkg -initrd --revision=386 kernel_image kernel_headers modules_image
dpkg -i <name of the image .deb file>
dpkg -i <name of the header .deb file>
QUESTION: As per Godwin's recommendation, I want to ensure that I can
boot back to my current setting. What exactly is it that I'm moving to
/boot/vmlinuz-test to ensure that's the case? I assume I do it at this
stage of the kernel creation. And when I edit GRUB, what do I put in
menu.ls to point to the new kernel?
QUESTION: The web site says I have to re-install the Nvidia drivers for
my graphics card to work with the new kernel. However, if I type "sudo
apt-get install nvidia-glx" at this stage, before rebooting, apt-get
will think I'm trying to install nvidia-glx for my 2.6.15 kernel, and
say "latest version already installed"
Is there a way I can install nvidia-glx for the new kernel before
rebooting so that I can come up to X right away? Or will I have to
reboot and install nvidia-glx from the command prompt when the new
kernel is running?
reboot
--
Dave M G
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