On Wed, 2003-02-19 15:39:44 -0500, Bill Davidsen <davidsen@tmr.com>
wrote in message <Pine.LNX.3.96.1030219153452.11297B-100000@gatekeeper.tmr.com>:
> On Wed, 19 Feb 2003, Jan-Benedict Glaw wrote:
> > On Wed, 2003-02-19 13:00:39 -0500, Bill Davidsen <davidsen@tmr.com>
> > > Be aware that for Redhat and SuSE distributions (and mandrake??) "make
> > > install" will fail because mkinitrd doesn't know about the new modules
> > > format.
> > >
> > > So you can give up using modules for anything you want to use to boot,
> >
> > Which is what I prefer - I personally don't like initrd and I don't use
> > it.
>
> If you have simple needs that's fine. I build for multiple groups of
> machines, and with a working mkinitrd I can just build a file for the boot
> controller on each type of machine, and only build a single kernel which
> will run anywhere with the proper initrd file.
I do it the other way around - I've collected a number of .config files
(one for each machine) which includes everything the machine needs to
*boot*. Any additional features (LVM/DM, filesystems, iptables, ...)
ships as modules. Things which require a distinct order are placed into
/etc/modules (Debian's list of modules which need to be loaded in given
order), all the rest is done via alias/install lines in
modules.conf/modprobe.conf.
This is, you do keep a machine's local config in its initrd, I do keep
it on the machine itself.
MfG, JBG
-- Jan-Benedict Glaw jbglaw@lug-owl.de . +49-172-7608481 "Eine Freie Meinung in einem Freien Kopf | Gegen Zensur fuer einen Freien Staat voll Freier Bürger" | im Internet! Shell Script APT-Proxy: http://lug-owl.de/~jbglaw/software/ap2/
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