Update gentoo kernel: Difference between revisions
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== Post-kernel-installation Steps == | == Post-kernel-installation Steps == | ||
Since this involves video drivers, you probably have to do this outside X, so reboot and select a "softlevel=single" boot option. | |||
* install nvidia binary driver | |||
* install a new ivtv that matches the new kernel version | |||
You should be able to use the following to automatically reinstall kernel-dependent modules: | |||
module-rebuild rebuild | |||
A more manual approach: | |||
emerge nvidia-drivers | emerge nvidia-drivers | ||
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If you've done an emerge of media-video/nvidia-settings, you can run it to adjust the resolution, etc., dynamically in X. | If you've done an emerge of media-video/nvidia-settings, you can run it to adjust the resolution, etc., dynamically in X. | ||
Revision as of 01:57, 10 January 2007
In gentoo, everything gets updated via portage using "emerge". For the kernel, emerge only updates the source. You have to manually configure, compile, and install the kernel source into a kernel binary. This is to allow you to keep your kernel tuned for your machine.
Gentoo installs the source here:
/usr/src/linux-#kernelversion#-gentoo-#gentooreleaseversion#
Because I have defined the "symlink" USE flag for gentoo-sources in /etc/portage/package.use, it will also symlink the latest downloaded source (whether you want it to or not) to:
/usr/src/linux
So once you emerge a new kernel source, you ought to install it or change the symlink if you don't have the time to do the kernel install.
Steps To Install Kernel
- su -
- emerge sys-kernel/gentoo-sources
- cd /usr/src/linux
- make menuconfig (and configure - see Configure MythTV kernel)
- make && make modules_install
- ls /boot
- cp arch/x86_64/boot/bzImage /boot/kernel-genkernel-x86)64-#kernelversion#-gentoo-#gentooreleaseversion#_mdm-menuconfig
- emacs /boot/grub/grub.conf (and add your shiny new kernel to the default top of the list)
- reboot
Post-kernel-installation Steps
Since this involves video drivers, you probably have to do this outside X, so reboot and select a "softlevel=single" boot option.
- install nvidia binary driver
- install a new ivtv that matches the new kernel version
You should be able to use the following to automatically reinstall kernel-dependent modules:
module-rebuild rebuild
A more manual approach:
emerge nvidia-drivers lsmod | grep nvidia && rmmod nvidia # removes the previous module modprobe nvidia # loads the new module
If you've done an emerge of media-video/nvidia-settings, you can run it to adjust the resolution, etc., dynamically in X.