Matt Dalen wrote:
>
>> insmod is used for loading kernel modules. That means you need to be
>> in root mode and logged to /usr/src/linux and
>>
>> make mrproper
>> make deps
>> make modules install
>>
>> (and of course hello.c would have to be added to the kernel modules
>> source code and app
Matt Dalen wrote:
>I've been trying to compile a simple module, but I've been having
>trouble with GCC. I input:
>
>gcc -c hello.c
>insmod hello.o
>
>and it outputs an error message, saying that hello.o was compiled for
>kernel version 2.4.18, and that I'm using kernel version 2.4.18-6mdk.
>Does
The Mandrake 8.0 GCC is not the same as the unstable GCC used in Red
Hat 7.0 and 7.1. Unfortunately, for technical reasons, the Mandrake
developers decided to use the same version number as Red Hat used for
their GCC (2.96), creating heaps of confusion in the process. Mandrake
have been compil
I've heard and read rumors that the version of gcc included in Mandrake 8.0
is bad. As evidence I recently upgraded my nvidia video driver and had to
compile it about 50 times before the module would successfully load. Has
anyone else heard, read, or otherwise experienced the same?