initrd and initramfs are *VERY* different things.
They look very much alike and perform the same function, but they behave and
are created VERY differently.
initramfs will eventually supersede initrd.
Enrique
Eric Shubert writes:
> Mike Bushroe wrote:
>> My copy of Ubuntu was becoming unst
After a long battle with technology, Mike Bushroe wrote:
> My copy of Ubuntu was becoming unstable. First it would not read a CD-ROM,
> then it would not read a USB flash drive. In both cases, it claimed the
> file system was unknown. So I tried using modprobe to add iso9660 and vfat
> back into th
Mike Bushroe wrote:
> My copy of Ubuntu was becoming unstable. First it would not read a
> CD-ROM, then it would not read a USB flash drive. In both cases, it
> claimed the file system was unknown. So I tried using modprobe to add
> iso9660 and vfat back into the OS, only to find that modprobe w
My copy of Ubuntu was becoming unstable. First it would not read a CD-ROM,
then it would not read a USB flash drive. In both cases, it claimed the file
system was unknown. So I tried using modprobe to add iso9660 and vfat back
into the OS, only to find that modprobe was missing. So I tried to rebui