I did it!!! As root I checked disk space, and did: make-kpkg --revision=3:custom.1.0 kernel_image (with an underscore). And it works, I get the image.deb and after dpkg -i it is installed.
After rebooting it's a bit dissapointing that my new kernel will not work, but I'm going to start to find out why that is. When somebody allready have an idea about this error: kmod: failed to exec /sbin/modprobe -s -k binfmt -464c, errno=8 Ok, I start reading about this. Hans On Sat, Oct 06, 2001 at 12:30:33AM +0000, Hans Steinraht wrote: > > -- > Hi, > > I just started with Debian, installed the compact unstable version and came > to the conclusion that I had to compile a new kernel to let Debian do the > things I want. > > This is the firsttime I'm doing this, so I followed the steps described in > the Debian GNU/Linux FAQ, and in the README file that came with the > 2.2.19-kernel. > > - make-kpkg clean > - make menuconfig > - make-kpkg --revision Custum.1 kernel-image > > All looks to go well, the kernel and modules are build (vmlinuz appears in > /usr/src/linux and in modules I see the modules that I choose). > > Then the process stops. > This is the last text that I see on my screen: > > make INSTALL_MOD_PATH=/usr/src/linux/debian/tmp-image > modules-install > make[2]: Entering directory '/usr/src/kernel-source-2.2.19' > > Is there someone who can tell me what the reason is for this? > > Thanks, > Hans > > > > > -- > > > > -- > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > -- -- -<->-<->-<->-< >-<->-<->-<->- --------- [EMAIL PROTECTED] --------- ----- [EMAIL PROTECTED] ---- -<->-<->- -<->-<->- < >