On Tuesday, 25.10.2005 at 11:36 +0200, Goswin von Brederlow wrote: > The recommended (and only user friendly) way to build a 64bit kernel > is a 64bit userland. > > For i386 users that means installing the existing 64bit kernel, create > a 64bit chroot and compile the kernel in there. > > That way it all just magically works.
That makes sense. The slight difficulty here is that the "existing" 64-bit kernel, Debian stock package, kicks off a hardware conflict on my machine with my nVidia card. Maybe I can just run it in non-graphical mode for long enough to build a chroot and build a kernel in it. I guess that for *subsequent* kernel rebuilds, this will be easier, since I'll have a running 64-bit kernel :-) Thanks Goswin.... Dave. -- Dave Ewart [EMAIL PROTECTED] Computing Manager, Cancer Epidemiology Unit Cancer Research UK / Oxford University PGP: CC70 1883 BD92 E665 B840 118B 6E94 2CFD 694D E370 Get key from http://www.ceu.ox.ac.uk/~davee/davee-ceu-ox-ac-uk.asc N 51.7518, W 1.2016
signature.asc
Description: Digital signature