Re: Aunt Tillie builds a kernel (was Re: ISA hardware discovery -- the elegant solution)

Manuel McLure (manuel@mclure.org)
Tue, 15 Jan 2002 11:15:43 -0800


Red Hat provides a source RPM for their kernel - install the source RPM and
use rpm to build it. If you want to figure out what order the patches were
applied in, just look at the RPM spec file. I myself have applied patches to
a Red Hat kernel RPM in this fashion.

--
Manuel A. McLure KE6TAW | ...for in Ulthar, according to an ancient
<manuel@mclure.org>     | and significant law, no man may kill a cat.
<http://www.mclure.org> |             -- H.P. Lovecraft

----- Original Message ----- From: "Richard B. Johnson" <root@chaos.analogic.com> To: "Marco Colombo" <marco@esi.it> Cc: "Thomas Duffy" <Thomas.Duffy.99@alumni.brown.edu>; "Linux Mailing List" <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org> Sent: Tuesday, January 15, 2002 10:52 AM Subject: Re: Aunt Tillie builds a kernel (was Re: ISA hardware discovery -- the elegant solution)

> On Tue, 15 Jan 2002, Marco Colombo wrote: > > > On 15 Jan 2002, Thomas Duffy wrote: > > > > > On Tue, 2002-01-15 at 04:29, Andrew Pimlott wrote: > > > > > > > - Building from source is good karma. > > [SNIPPED...] > > > > > Every distro supplies a package with the source used to build their own > > kernel. Just recomplile it. > > Really??? Have you ever tried this? RedHat provides a directory > of random patches that won't patch regardless of the order in > which you attempt patches (based upon date-stamps on patches or > date-stamps on files). It's like somebody just copied in some > junk, thinking nobody would ever bother. > > Some distributions don't even provide source. They provide > copies of /usr/src/linux/include/asm and /usr/src/linux/include/linux > but nothing else. You have to "find" source on the internet. > > Some distributions don't even provide that, instead they provide > copies of /usr/src/linux/include/linux and /usr/src/linux/include/asm > under /usr/include. > > The "good-ol-days" where you could get 72 floppies from Yggdrasil, > install Linux, and spend the next 48 hours watching it compile > are long gone. > > I have never found a distribution that uses modules, in which is > was even remotely possible to duplicate the kernel supplied. > > Cheers, > Dick Johnson > > Penguin : Linux version 2.4.1 on an i686 machine (797.90 BogoMips). > > I was going to compile a list of innovations that could be > attributed to Microsoft. Once I realized that Ctrl-Alt-Del > was handled in the BIOS, I found that there aren't any. > > > - > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in > the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html > Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/ > >

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