David Z Maze wrote: > I'm actually somewhat curious to hear how apt-src changes the world in > this case. My impression when it first came up was that it was > intended to people who run "stable with one unstable package" to track > the source for that package without having sid in their APT sources. > Would you use apt-src to get source for all of the kernel modules you > care about under $MODULE_LOC, and then use kernel-package as normal? You can do that, or you can tell apt-src where your kernel source is and if the module package supports apt-src natively (ie, linux-wlan-ng), you can use apt-src -b upgrade to rebuild debs of the modules anytime a new version is released. Or you can do some mixture of both. > Also, does approach make it easier or harder to come up with binary > modules for all of the Debian stock kernels? Unfortunatly it doesn't really help. -- see shy jo
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