Re: detecting changed hardware

2008-02-08 Thread Urs Beyerle
Steve Gaarder wrote: On Fri, 8 Feb 2008, Urs Beyerle wrote: Try to remove first /etc/sysconfig/hwconf and then run kudzu. # rm /etc/sysconfig/hwconf # kudzu It recreates hwconf, but it does not ask me any questions, and does not seem to do any reconfiguration (e.g. X11). ok, now try more

Re: detecting changed hardware

2008-02-08 Thread Steve Gaarder
On Fri, 8 Feb 2008, Urs Beyerle wrote: Try to remove first /etc/sysconfig/hwconf and then run kudzu. # rm /etc/sysconfig/hwconf # kudzu It recreates hwconf, but it does not ask me any questions, and does not seem to do any reconfiguration (e.g. X11). thanks, Steve Gaarder

Re: detecting changed hardware

2008-02-08 Thread Urs Beyerle
Steve Gaarder wrote: With Red Hat Enterprise 4, I normally set up new boxes by copying an entire installation from one machine to the other with tar. Then I tweaked the config files, set up grub, and started it up. Kudzu would wake up, find any different hardware, and reconfigure the system.

Re: detecting changed hardware

2008-02-08 Thread Connie Sieh
On Fri, 8 Feb 2008, Steve Gaarder wrote: With Red Hat Enterprise 4, I normally set up new boxes by copying an entire installation from one machine to the other with tar. Then I tweaked the config files, set up grub, and started it up. Kudzu would wake up, find any different hardware, and recon

detecting changed hardware

2008-02-08 Thread Steve Gaarder
With Red Hat Enterprise 4, I normally set up new boxes by copying an entire installation from one machine to the other with tar. Then I tweaked the config files, set up grub, and started it up. Kudzu would wake up, find any different hardware, and reconfigure the system. But with SL5, this d