Andi Kleen wrote:
On Monday 27 November 2006 08:24, Constantine 'Gus' Fantanas wrote:
I am running 64-bit SuSE 10 on a Presario R3240 laptop (AMD64-based). I installed the rpm for the the latest _x64 kernel of the day (KOD), 2.6.18.2, dated Nov. 25.
That's a 10.2 kernel running on 10.0 -- that unfortunately requires some other changes like updating udev or mkinitrd.
--I think --but I am not 100% positive-- mkinitrd works alright, but as for udev I cannot be sure because, starting with 9.3, udev seems to have been undergoing rapid changes. I guess it's time to bite the bullet and update to 10.2.
This section of /boot/grub/menu.lst was created using 'INSTALL_PATH=/boot make install', which is SuSE's well-thought shortcut to the drudgery of copying system map files manually. I enabled full preemption. I had no problems with full preemption with 2.6.16.
What do you mean with full preemption? Did you recompile your kernel.
--Yes, of course, I did recompile my kernel. The rpm was for the kernel sources installation only, or at least that was my understanding. The rpm for the "default" kernel could not install, complaining that my perl-Bootloader module was out of date. I wanted to compile the kernel anyway, so I can fine tune it.
Could anybody shed some light on what I may be doing wrong?
It's normally safest to use matching user land for the kernel rpms -- if you use a 10.2 kernel use 10.2 userland etc. Self compiled kernels can be more independent and work on older user land, but the rpms have more dependencies
--Alright. Thank you for your time, Andi.
-Andi
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