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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: Building a 2.0 kernel
- To: tlug@example.com
- Subject: Re: Building a 2.0 kernel
- From: turnbull@example.com (Stephen J. Turnbull)
- Date: Mon, 26 Aug 96 17:55 JST
- In-Reply-To: <199608260807.RAA01744@example.com> (schweiz@example.com)
- Reply-To: tlug@example.com
- Sender: owner-tlug@example.com
>>>>> "Jim" == Jim Schweizer <schweiz@example.com> writes: Jim> Hi all, Thanks for the advice, Steve - I know what I'm doing Jim> until the wee hours tonight;-) He he. Jim> I decided to take your advice and try to build a more recent Jim> kernel so I fetched linux-2.0.tar.gz off the July Mo' Linux Jim> CD-ROM and untarred it in /usr/src figuring it would unpack Yep. That's an oops. I *always* do "tar tzf nantoka.tar.gz | head" before unpacking anything. Jim> into something like /usr/src/linuxelf-2.0. It didn't. It That's logical and safe. Unfortunately, that's not the way Linus does it. Unfortunately, lots of other people don't do it that way either. "tar tzf" is your buddy. Jim> unpacked into /usr/src/linux which, as you'll recall, was a Jim> symlink to linuxelf-1.2.13. Is this a problem? (I'm *sure* Jim> that's a Newbie question <grin>) Since you've got the relevant CD-ROMs, your best bet is to "rm -r /usr/src/linux*"---or a more cautious equivalent ;-) and re-untar. The linuxelf-1.2.13 should be in a tar file by that name somewhere on the slackware distribution; or you could reinstall from the Slackware setup program. It also probably untars into ./linux, though; be careful when you do that (if you do---if you have any luck with 2.0, you probably won't go back). Jim> Wish me luck..... Good luck! And a few words of advice: Don't do build any modules; it's not hard, but you need the new modules distribution for 2.0. That requires untarring the kernel sources, building the module support programs, and only then building the kernel. Or maybe you have to build the kernel first, and then rebuild it after building the module programs. Just avoid that headache---if you want it in your kernel, put it in the kernel, not as a loadable module. You can deal with the module issue later. Keep your old kernel around; you are going to have to upgrade a number of utilities for v2.0.0 (eg, the old series of ps tools don't work right with new kernels; file locking changed so Smail gets downright buggy). I forget the list; here are a couple of things from my Bookmarks file that should help: <H3>Linux</H3> <DL><p> <DT><A HREF="http://www.singnet.com.sg/~sunsurf/linux11.html"> http://www.singnet.com.sg/~sunsurf/linux11.html</A> <DT><A HREF="http://puck.nether.net/~jared/victim.html"> Software Uvatims of the 1.3 Kernel Development</A> <DT><A HREF="http://netrom.com/~soul/"> Mikes's Linux WeB Page</A> </DL> (you might be able to just suck this message into Netscape and go from there...). "Software Uvatims" is especially relevant. However, you should be able to boot and play with the 2.0.0 kernel even if not all the system software works perfectly. So just copy the new kernel (it should be in /usr/src/linux/arch/i386/boot/zImage if you did "make zImage") to something like /boot/vmlinuz-2.0.0-JS-24Aug1996-firstTry (long names are allowed, and useful if you are moving stuff into and out of modules, or trying different author's drivers for the same device, or whatever), make sure you've got a delay in your lilo.conf so you can use <LEFT SHIFT> to bring up the boot menu, and add a copy of your current Slackware boot stanza, then edit it to reflect the new kernel (here's the relevant parts of mine): # LILO configuration file # by SJT 96/04/09 # # LILO global stanza delay = 50 # This gives you some time to call up the kernel menu # leave the rest of the global stanza alone vga = normal # force sane state ramdisk = 0 # paranoia setting # 1st Linux stanza (untouched) image = /boot/linux-1.2.13-95Sep14 root = /dev/sda6 label = linux1213 # 2nd Linux stanza (added by coping and editing first stanza) image = /boot/vmlinuz-2.0.0 # edited to change kernel name root = /dev/sda6 # not edited label = linux200 # edited to give unique label # DOS stanza (untouched) other = /dev/sda1 label = dos table = /dev/sda # end of lilo.conf and then run /sbin/lilo (as root, of course) when you've finished editing it. No big deal, but (0) of course you have a boot disk, don't you, and you know how to boot to your normal system using it (you can use your Slackware boot disk with the "kernel root=/dev/sda1" option, substitute the correct kernel label and root device as in the lilo.conf) (1) do a "cp /etc/lilo.conf /etc/lilo.conf.old" first; then you can recover from any lilo errors by copying back and running /sbin/lilo. (2) leave the old kernel where it is and don't touch the related lilo.conf stanza (3) leave the old kernel first, so that you can reboot to a stable environment without having to remember to select the old kernel (4) if lilo exits with errors you should fix them (either fix the typo if you understand the problem, or copy the old working lilo.conf back and run /sbin/lilo before doing anything else. You can also do this operation from the Slackware setup menu if that makes you more comfortable. -- Stephen John Turnbull University of Tsukuba Yaseppochi-Gumi Institute of Policy and Planning Sciences http://turnbull.sk.tsukuba.ac.jp/ Tennodai 1-1-1, Tsukuba, 305 JAPAN turnbull@example.com ----------------------------------------------------------------- a word from the sponsor will appear below ----------------------------------------------------------------- The TLUG mailing list is proudly sponsored by TWICS - Japan's First Public-Access Internet System. Now offering 20,000 yen/year flat rate Internet access with no time charges. Full line of corporate Internet and intranet products are available. info@example.com Tel: 03-3351-5977 Fax: 03-3353-6096
- References:
- Building a 2.0 kernel
- From: schweiz@example.com (Jim Schweizer)
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