It is not a matter of being hidden, the kernel source is just not included, so the standard methods will not work if you do not have the source. -- -- Steven http://www.glimasoutheast.org "Bogdan Nicolescu" <bo2k2 at yahoo.com> wrote in message news:20060401224636.3897.qmail at web84105.mail.dcn.yahoo.com... [sarcasm]And all this time, decade+, I though the ability to recompile especially the kernel was the main difference/advantage between a source based O.S. and a binary-only O.S. I don't know how you came out with the statistics but I have a funny feeling you are 100% wrong.[/sarcasm] Everybody should want to recompile the kernel, if not for the experience, but for removing the bloat. Does everybody really need every chipset compiled in the kernel! If the degree of dificulty of building a custom kernel on Centos change from the traditional method (make clean, make mrproper, make xconfig, etc) than say so, and point to an authoritative howto guide, if there is any. But whatever you do please don't insult by deciding for 98% of us what is and what is not "something you really want to do". I can only speak for myself, and I really want to be able to recompile the Centos kernel, otherwise I wouldn't waste my energy asking a zillion times how to compile Centos' kernel. Second irony (from second hand information) is that the vanila kernel compile just fine on Centos using the traditional method. --- Maciej ¯enczykowski <maze at cela.pl> wrote: > That's because 98% of the time recompiling the > kernel is not something you > really want to do, and the remaining 2% of the time > you just use > rpmbuild --rebuild kernel-.....src.rpm > > And if that doesn't work _then_ you're out of luck > (the above works for me > with a couple different kernels). Want to change > something? Unpack the > srpm into the appropriate directories (just install > the src.rpm) and edit > the spec file and configuration files and or add > kernel patches to the > spec file, etc... > > Of course you should do all the above as a non-root > user for safeties > sake, but that's a tad harder (need to have a good > macro file - here's > mine, although it's rather minimal and not all that > good: > ~/.rpmmacros: > %packager Maciej Zenczykowski > %distribution CentOS4 > %vendor TCS-II-UJ > %_signature gpg > %_gpg_name maze at tcs.ii.uj.edu.pl > %_gpg_path ~/.gnupg > > %_topdir /home/buildcentos/rpm > %_tmppath %{_topdir}/tmp > > #%_rpmtopdir %{_topdir}/%{name} > #%_builddir %{_rpmtopdir}/BUILD > #%_rpmdir %{_rpmtopdir}/RPMS > #%_sourcedir %{_rpmtopdir}/SOURCES > #%_specdir %{_rpmtopdir}/SPECS > #%_srcrpmdir %{_rpmtopdir}/SRPMS > > %disttag centos4 > %repotag maze > > # Change default RPM query format to show ARCH > %_query_all_fmt > %%{name}-%%{version}-%%{release}.%%{arch} > # %_query_all_fmt > %%{epoch}:%%{name}-%%{version}-%%{release}.%%{arch} > > Cheers, > MaZe. > > On Sat, 1 Apr 2006, Bogdan Nicolescu wrote: > > > Nick, > > > > The question of kernel compilation is a periodic > > question, and usually the answer will be anything > else > > except the process itself. I asked the same > question > > just a couple of days ago. Don't bother wasting > time > > waiting for an answer, and start searching the > web. > > rpmbuild seems to be part of the method required > for a > > custom kernel. > > > > The irony is that for a distributions which prides > > itself to be a recompilation of another > distribution > > (RH) (and we're all grateful for that), the > process of > > recompiling one of the integral part of the > > districtution, the kernel, is one of the best kept > > secrets. Why can't some just give a straight > answer > > or point to a page that has the answer? > > > > Anyway, I have searched, and found this guides > which > > might help: > > > > > http://fedora.redhat.com/docs/release-notes/fc4/errata/#sn-kernel > > > > and > > > > > http://www.mjmwired.net/resources/mjm-kernel-fc4.html > > > > Didn't have the time to try it out yet myself. > Next > > week sometimes. > > > > > > --- Nick Smith <nick.smith79 at gmail.com> wrote: > > > >> Im sorry if this is a newb question, but how do > you > >> recompile the > >> kernel in CentOS 4.3? I need to add reiserfs > support > >> (even though the > >> setup detected it) the kernel it gave me didnt > have > >> support for > >> reiserfs, and my entire fileserver is all > reiserfs. > >> I tried the > >> gentoo way, which im use to and it bombed. What > do > >> i need to do? does > >> it install kernel source by default? I couldnt > find > >> any good > >> documentation on the subject, and this is my > first > >> RH type install. > >> > >> thanks > >> > >> Nick > >> _______________________________________________ > >> CentOS mailing list > >> CentOS at centos.org > >> http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos > >> > > > > _______________________________________________ > > CentOS mailing list > > CentOS at centos.org > > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos > > > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos >