thank you for your feedback Ralf which is in line with Genes' explanations.

the application that could fall into the mentioned category and that I am
paying attention to is lvm, but previous tests show that this is not the
case (the lvm2 package provided by ArchLinux behaves as expected with the
recompiled modified kernel).

regards, lacsaP.



Le lun. 20 mars 2023 à 12:49, Ralf Mardorf <ralf-mard...@riseup.net> a
écrit :

> On Mon, 2023-03-20 at 12:27 +0100, lacsaP Patatetom wrote:
> > if I understand correctly, I can install my package linux-lts-perso-
> > 6.1.15-2-x86_64.pkg.tar.zst, boot on it (eg. "my" kernel) and continue
> > to use the binaries present on my system while they have not been
> > compiled with its (new) headers and especially for the binaries that
> > call the functions present in the blk-core.c file ?
>
> I still don't know if I understand you and
> https://www.google.com/search?q=translate doesn't help.
>
> You can install
>
> core/linux-lts          6.1.20-1
> core/linux-lts-docs     6.1.20-1
> core/linux-lts-headers  6.1.20-1
>
> and also your
>
> linux-lts-perso         6.1.15-2
> linux-lts-perso-docs    6.1.15-2
> linux-lts-perso-headers 6.1.15-2
>
> neither the version, nor the pkgrel matter.
> You can run one or the other kernel and you can build modules for what
> ever kernel you like, see
>
> https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Dynamic_Kernel_Module_Support#Rebuild_modules
> .
>
> You (usually) can use a binary such as /usr/bin/vim with one or the
> other kernel, but you might need to build modules to use something like
> virtualbox.
>
> In your case something like systemd or xorg is irrelevant, but something
> like this might depend closer on kernel versions, than vim does.
>
> Regards,
> Ralf
>

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