On Mon, Jul 02, 2001 at 08:59:25AM +0000, Yuri K wrote:
Hello Peter,
Monday, July 02, 2001, 08:26:42(UTC), Ñèæó ÿ, ñìîòðþ òåëåâèçîð, êîâûðÿþñü ãâîçäåì â óõå, âäðóã çâóê ïðîïàë that's because you wrote:
PP> On Sun, Jul 01, 2001 at 07:30:13PM +0000, Yuri K wrote:
Hi All,
Just installed, yet not sure that I haven't messed it big. What files shall go into HFS boot partition for this old world machine? I found a detailed post from Mr Bradley Smith in archives, but he deals with a newer hardware.
PP> You need the BootX application and a kernel on your boot partition. PP> Alternatively, put the BootX extension and kernel into your system PP> folder (extensions folder). Just stick to chapter 4.1 of the manual, PP> it's all described there.
So, the same kernel goes into both HFS boot volume and the working active system folder? Or is it an alias only. That's where I was not certain. Thank you very much for your reply.
If you need only one kernel, it's easy: just put it into the System Folder as 'vmlinux'. ``However, the system extension will not find your kernel easily if it is stored in another volume. In this case, create an alias of the kernel \programm{vmlinux} and store it in the active system folder. Enter the exact name of \path{vmlinux}. Furthermore, you can save an alias of the folder \programm{Linux kernel} in the system folder if you wish to use multiple kernels.''
I chose minimal installation and something is wrong with man. /usr/shared and $MANPATH seem to be OK.
It tells me there is no such file. I tried info too. I believe it's something very simple and obvious, i did not even paid much attention.
Try to run SuSEconfig, and maybe 'man -d bash' Generally, everything you need to view man pages is also in the minimal selection. Peter -- Peter Poeml poeml@suse.de ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VFS: Busy inodes after unmount. Self-destruct in 5 seconds. Have a nice day...