Hi Jerry
On Tue, 24 Apr 2001, Jerry Garrison wrote:
> I installed the rpm called 'kernel-source-2.2.17-14.i386.rpm'. I'm a newbie
> and I don't understand what you mean by 'build it yourself'. Does that
> happen automatically when I install the source rpm or is there something
> else I need to
On Tue, 24 Apr 2001 11:25:06 -0500, you wrote:
>So I still need the files called 'asm' and 'linux'. They aren't in the
>''linux-2.2.17-14' directory. 'net' is, but 'asm' and 'linux' aren't.
>
>I went to the Red Hat site and there are kernel 2.2.17-14 rpms for 'smp',
>'BOOT', 'pcmcia', 'ibcs', '
> When you upgraded your kernel, did you use an rom, or install the source
> rpm and build it yourself?
I installed the rpm called 'kernel-source-2.2.17-14.i386.rpm'. I'm a newbie
and I don't understand what you mean by 'build it yourself'. Does that
happen automatically when I install the sou
When you upgraded your kernel, did you use an rom, or install the source
rpm and build it yourself?
If you intalled the rpm, you need to install the kernel-headers rpm for
your version (2.2.17-14 it looks like) and you should find the files in
/usr/src/linux-2.2.17-14
If you built the kernel, t
I am trying to install VMware. It wants to know the location of the
'directory of C header files that match your running kernel'. In a later
prompt, it refers to the files it needs as 'the directory of kernel
headers'. The prompt suggests that the files may be in
/usr/src/linux/include. But th