On Wed, Dec 03, 2003 at 10:43:44PM +0100, Marc F. Neininger wrote: > No experience without the first try. Take about two days for reading the > documentation and finding the brands on the chips your machine works with.
Nah, just look at /proc/cpuinfo, /proc/pci (or use lspci), dmesg, etc It's almost all there for you. Not like the old days... > P.S.: Before rebooting the first time with your custom kernel make sure > that you have a _WORKING_ boot floppy. Otherwise you may get into big > trouble. That too if you really eff up, but you rarely will screw up that badly. I've always got two or more kernels selectable in lilo. I set the new one so that it is not the default kernel, and thus if everything screws up, just power cycle and let it boot normally into the original kernel. Some of my test machines have 10 or more different kernels selectable at boot. If you are doing this on a remote machine, always use the fallback option so that if the system hangs you can call the ISP and have them just power cycle to bring you back up in the fallback kernel. -- ------------------------------------------------------ Dale Amon [EMAIL PROTECTED] +44-7802-188325 International linux systems consultancy Hardware & software system design, security and networking, systems programming and Admin "Have Laptop, Will Travel" ------------------------------------------------------ -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]