From: emellor@leeni.uk.xensource.com Date: Tue, 11 Apr 2006 11:46:39 +0000 (+0100) Subject: Fix KERNELS example, mkinitrd example. X-Git-Tag: archive/raspbian/4.8.0-1+rpi1~1^2~16158^2~6 X-Git-Url: https://dgit.raspbian.org/%22http://www.example.com/cgi/success//%22http:/www.example.com/cgi/success/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=0dc4b1f3011f0ac549d901f0746ab99a733f8283;p=xen.git Fix KERNELS example, mkinitrd example. Signed-off-by: Ewan Mellor --- diff --git a/README b/README index b3ab351f52..b295c300ed 100644 --- a/README +++ b/README @@ -132,16 +132,16 @@ On Linux: The make command line defaults to building the kernel vmlinuz-2.6.x-xen. You can override this default by specifying KERNELS=kernelname. For - example, you can make two kernels - linux-2.6.16-xen0 - and linux-2.6.16-xenU - which are smaller builds containing only selected - modules, intended primarilly for developers that don't like to wait + example, you can make two kernels - linux-2.6-xen0 + and linux-2.6-xenU - which are smaller builds containing only selected + modules, intended primarily for developers that don't like to wait for a full -xen kernel to build. The -xenU kernel is particularly small, as it does not contain any physical device drivers, and hence is only useful for guest domains. To make these two kernels, simply specify - KERNELS="linux-2.6.16-xen0 linux-2.6.16-xenU" + KERNELS="linux-2.6-xen0 linux-2.6-xenU" in the make command line. @@ -172,5 +172,5 @@ On Linux: Depending on your config, you may need to use 'mkinitrd' to create an initial ram disk, just like a native system e.g. - # depmod 2.6.12.6-xen - # mkinitrd -v -f --with=aacraid --with=sd_mod --with=scsi_mod initrd-2.6.12.6-xen.img 2.6.12.6-xen + # depmod 2.6.16-xen + # mkinitrd -v -f --with=aacraid --with=sd_mod --with=scsi_mod initrd-2.6.16-xen.img 2.6.16-xen