Re: [gentoo-user] Live CD for 2.6 beta 9
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: The laptop I am using needs to be repartitioned, so I dumped all the contents into an external. I thought I would use the opportunity to try out 2.6b9 as most feel it is stable enough (and fast as hell it appears). Another side effect is that I can also compile with better cflags than I did before I gathered new information. I know I don't have to reinstall just to do these two things, but since I am repartitioning and essantially starting from a clean disk I thought it good opportunity. I guess the question becomes, does a installing from a 2.4 livecd, stage1 install have any disadvantages over using a 2.6 disc, when set on using a 2.6 kernel. As I alredy have a 2.4 disc burned, if it makes no difference, I would save my time and skip downloading a new disc. The only reason you would want to use a LiveCD with a 2.6 kernel is if you have hardware that isn't supported under 2.4.20 or whatever the LiveCD uses. You can still compile a 2.6 kernel within the chroot. -- Andrew Gaffney -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Live CD for 2.6 beta 9
The laptop I am using needs to be repartitioned, so I dumped all the contents into an external. I thought I would use the opportunity to try out 2.6b9 as most feel it is stable enough (and fast as hell it appears). Another side effect is that I can also compile with better cflags than I did before I gathered new information. I know I don't have to reinstall just to do these two things, but since I am repartitioning and essantially starting from a clean disk I thought it good opportunity. I guess the question becomes, does a installing from a 2.4 livecd, stage1 install have any disadvantages over using a 2.6 disc, when set on using a 2.6 kernel. As I alredy have a 2.4 disc burned, if it makes no difference, I would save my time and skip downloading a new disc. * Donnie Berkholz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [11-01-03 14:19]: > On Sat, 2003-11-01 at 06:16, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > Wondering if it is better to start from scratch with a 2.6 kernel > > live CD, or if it is possible to install gentoo, and a 2.6 kernel > > starting from one of the older CDs that I already have downloaded. > > If you want to install from 2.6, more power to you, but I don't really > see the point. Especially if you're just reinstalling because you want > to use a 2.6 kernel on the LiveCD. > > Same location on any mirror: > http://gentoo.oregonstate.edu/experimental/x86/livecd/livecd-2.6_10-23-2003.iso -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Live CD for 2.6 beta 9
On Sat, 2003-11-01 at 06:16, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Wondering if it is better to start from scratch with a 2.6 kernel > live CD, or if it is possible to install gentoo, and a 2.6 kernel > starting from one of the older CDs that I already have downloaded. If you want to install from 2.6, more power to you, but I don't really see the point. Especially if you're just reinstalling because you want to use a 2.6 kernel on the LiveCD. Same location on any mirror: http://gentoo.oregonstate.edu/experimental/x86/livecd/livecd-2.6_10-23-2003.iso signature.asc Description: This is a digitally signed message part
[gentoo-user] Live CD for 2.6 beta 9
Wondering if it is better to start from scratch with a 2.6 kernel live CD, or if it is possible to install gentoo, and a 2.6 kernel starting from one of the older CDs that I already have downloaded. -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list