Yes, indeedy John, you got it. Keep in mind that the sources are the base release so that if you tweak or modify it to your needs you are pretty much working on your own. Also other things are involved if you want to share whatever those changes are as stipulated in the GPL; procedures which could be tedious to the uninitiated.
It may be easier and more consistent in keeping with how the official releases and other changes by allowing yum to do updates and installs of modifications, etc. Although it is unlikely that any updates yum makes may conflict with any changes to the kernel source you make - in Linux, as in most things nothing is impossible. Just be aware that if something weird is going on you'll have to consider whatever modifications of the kernel you built as a potential culprit. It may not be, of course, but the complexity of Linux is such that this can never be completely ruled out. The advantage, and not a small one in my mind, of YDL is that it is managed by a company with a great track record of paying attention to these details and their releases work. However, when we, as individuals choose to change the source, we are very much on our own. To my mind this is the advantage of Linux in the first place. In past generations it was a source of pride and mastery to successfully repair, modify and enhance one's own car. Today, I believe this experience/expression of individual skill has passed onto exist within the realm of Linux. In my view one can make this into an Art, just as valued as the Arts of Music, Literature, etc. Years ago, when I was interested in making changes to the YDL kernel, and did so - I always kept this potential for something going wrong in mind. Maybe it remains an extreme view, but I find it useful to keep in mind especially when changing kernel services or adding new ones. I wish you the best success in your endeavors. All the best... John Frankish wrote: > Thanks, this seems to be it: > > http://mirror.anl.gov/yellowdog/releases/yellowdog-6.1/SRPMS/kernel-2.6.27-1.ydl61.4.src.rpm > > At 15:32 29-01-09, you wrote: > >> Hi John: >> >> Go to the list of mirrors which Fixstars Solutions provides via their >> website and choose the site closest to you. The next task is finding >> the actual sources. Under powerstation, you'll enter releases, then >> yellowdog 6.1. Then choose SRPMS, the kernel source is within that list. >> >> Here's one link to one of the mirrors: >> >> http://mirror.anl.gov/yellowdog/releases/yellowdog-6.1/SRPMS/ >> >> The other mirrors should have a similar directory structure if not >> exactly the same nomenclature. In any case, the sources are always >> listed under SRPMS; it may take a while to go through a particular >> mirror and find their exact location as there is some variance in how >> these respective organizations structure their listings. Now that you >> know what to look for you can whittle down that search time somewhat. >> >> All the best... >> >> John Frankish wrote: >> >>> Is the ydl-6.1 kernel source (i.e. the patched, modified one used to >>> build ydl-6.1) available for download somewhere? I'd like to use it >>> to compile the iscsi module. >>> >>> Note that I used "yum upgrade" to move from ydl-6.0 to ydl-6.1 do I >>> don't have the ydl-6.1 dvd with the kernel source on it. >>> >>> John >>> > > _______________________________________________ > yellowdog-general mailing list > yellowdog-general@lists.fixstars.com > http://lists.fixstars.com/mailman/listinfo/yellowdog-general > HINT: to Google archives, try '<keywords> site:terrasoftsolutions.com' > >
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_______________________________________________ yellowdog-general mailing list yellowdog-general@lists.fixstars.com http://lists.fixstars.com/mailman/listinfo/yellowdog-general HINT: to Google archives, try '<keywords> site:terrasoftsolutions.com'