On 27.06.2004 01:20, Christoph Wegscheider wrote:
Christian Eyrich [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
einen Kernel zu kompilieren und ein Archiv zu erstellen geht schön
einfach mit make-kpkg. Nur kann es wirlich sein, daß vor jedem Bau
make-kpkg clean gemacht werden muß?
Ich finde es einfach lästig
Hallo,
einen Kernel zu kompilieren und ein Archiv zu erstellen geht schön
einfach mit make-kpkg. Nur kann es wirlich sein, daß vor jedem Bau
make-kpkg clean gemacht werden muß?
Ich hab's ohne versucht und jedesmal trotz Änderungen an der .config den
exakt gleichen Kernel mit exakt den gleichen
On 18.06.2004 15:30, Kent West wrote:
Last I tried (and it's been more than a year), the Sid installer simply
didn't work. You might want to use the Sarge installer, and then upgrade
from there.
You might be right that Sid's installer is broken. Using the last weeks
Sarge Snapshot I had no
On 19.06.2004 18:20, Andreas Pakulat wrote:
Angesichts der Probleme unten, hol dir die woody netinst CD. Damit
installierst du ein woody Minimalsystem (das sollte auch auf neueren
Rechnern in den meisten Faellen klappen) und machst dann direkt ein
dist-upgrade auf sarge oder sid. Die
On 18.06.2004 03:30, Andreas Pakulat wrote:
und das ist alles. Kein Eintrag jetzt installieren oder so.
Wenn du sid benutzen willst sollte das eigentlich kein Problem sein
;-)
Es ist durchaus moeglich das der Installler der auf genau den CD's
drauf ist kaputt ist. Ist ja auch noch Beta.
Hi!
Im Debian-Installer Hauptmenü sehe ich
Choose language
Land wählen
Wählen Sie eine Tastaturbelegung aus
CD-ROM erkennen und einhängen
Installer-Komponenten von CD laden
Debconf-Priorität ändern
CD-ROM(s) überprüfen
Eine Shell ausführen
Installation abbrechen und neustarten
und das ist
Hi!
In the Debian installer main menu I get
Choose language
Choose country
Select a keyboard layout
Detect and mount CD-ROM
Load installer components from CD
Change debconf priority
Check the CD-ROM(s) integrity
Execute a shell
Abort the installation and reboot
and that's all. No entry where I
On 06.04.2004 04:30, Adam Aube wrote:
Christian Eyrich wrote:
dpkg-reconfigure etherconf
It asked me some questions which I answered - nice.
But it didn't change the /etc/network/interfaces
I know that using dpkg-reconfigure to reconfigure X doesn't work if you've
edited the X config
On 05.04.2004 19:00, Ralph Crongeyer wrote:
As I wrote I installed etherconf but don't know how to use it. There's
no tool called etherconf in the path.
Try:
dpkg-reconfigure etherconf
I did. It asked me some questions which I answered - nice.
But it didn't change the
On 07.04.2004 15:23, Ralph Crongeyer wrote:
On Wednesday 07 April 2004 08:59 am, Christian Eyrich wrote:
On 05.04.2004 19:00, Ralph Crongeyer wrote:
As I wrote I installed etherconf but don't know how to use it.
There's no tool called etherconf in the path.
Try:
dpkg-reconfigure
On 04.04.2004 02:50, Sridhar M.A. wrote:
On Sat, Apr 03, 2004 at 12:03:51PM -0800, mike wrote:
On Sat, 03 Apr 2004 21:15:02 +0200, Christian Eyrich wrote
I know how to do this manually (using route). But after rebooting
I've the old address again. I know I can edit
On 04.04.2004 05:30, Paul Johnson wrote:
Christian Eyrich [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I know how to do this manually (using route). But after rebooting I've
the old address again.
I know I can edit /etc/network/interfaces by hand, but there's this
warning etherconf DEBCONF AREA. DO NOT EDIT
On 05.04.2004 17:00, Ralph Crongeyer wrote:
It is put by the package etherconf. Run etherconf as root and it will
put the proper entries in /etc/network/interfaces.
As I wrote I installed etherconf but don't know how to use it. There's
no tool called etherconf in the path.
Try:
Hi,
my Debian system ran for months without problems. Now the address for
the router to the internet changed and I don't know how to tell the
system this permanently.
I know how to do this manually (using route). But after rebooting I've
the old address again.
I know I can edit
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