On Wed January 16 2008, Александър Л. Димитров wrote: > No, the Kernel doesn't depend on those libraries. Evenything you need to > boot a machine is in /boot and /lib/modules/`uname -r`. From then on, any > init-process may get called, which will most likely depend on _a lot_ of > libs, but that's fine. (Actually, you wouldn't even need /lib/modules - if > it wasn't for Debian's default initrd-policy. Let's not start a flame-war > over that, I don't like it, but for a distro's stock-kernel it's maybe the > best solution. But it's why you'll need the kernel's modules, too, when you > boot.) > > Just one side note: never ever upgrade to a new kernel without having an > old kernel around in case something goes wrong. I've hit _stable revisions_ > that, with the *same* .config, wouldn't boot my machine. And minor > revisions are even more dangerous - a friend's laptop wouldn't boot with > anything between .21 and .23 - but is fine with .20 and 24-rc4.
I have a question about this, please. I have an NVIDIA card, and after some updates I get the black screen of death, and I have to change my video driver to nv and restart X. If I reboot into an older kernel, will my nvidia driver work? It never fails, I need to use the computer for something when that happens, and I don't have the time right then to rebuild my video driver with the current setup.. -- Paul Cartwright Registered Linux user # 367800 Registered Ubuntu User #12459