GNU/Linux Desktop Survival Guide by Graham Williams |
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A new IDE controller (Silicon Image CMD680) was installed delivering disks /dev/hde and /dev/hdg.
At the time of installing the CMD680 IDE controller chip kernel 2.4.19 (which supports this chip, but not kernel 2.4.18) was not available as a Debian package but had just been released. A kernel was compiled from source to get support for this new controller. The default .config (i.e., starting from no .config file) was the starting point. Below is recorded the specific configurations added.
# cd /usr/src # wget http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v2.4/linux-2.4.19.tar.gz # tar zxvf linux-2.4.19.tar.gz # cd linux-2.4.19 # make menuconfig Processor type and features Processor family CONFIG_MPENTIUM4=y Block devices RAM disk support CONFIG_BLK_DEV_RAM=y Initial RAM disk (initrd) support CONFIG_BLK_DEV_INITRD=y ATA/IDE/MFM/RLL support IDE, ATA and ATAPI Block devices CONFIG_BLK_DEV_CMD64X=y CONFIG_BLK_DEV_CMD680=y Sound CONFIG_SOUND_ICH=y # make-kpkg clean # make-kpkg --append-to-version -p4 --revision dha01 --initrd kernel_image # cd .. # wajig install kernel-image-2.4.19-p4_dha01_i386.deb |
This works just fine and all standard drivers (CDROM and NFS) were included by default. The resulting kernel is quite a bit smaller that the kernels supporting lots of hardware (700K initrd cf 2.4MB and 56K modules cf 20MB)!