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    |   xen-users
Re: [Xen-users] Xen packages availible for Ubuntu and Debian 
| There is no debian kernel-patch for the ASUS P5WD2 motherboard (Intel  
955 chipset + ASUS additions). I had to fetch ite it8212 IDE driver  
and manually patch the 2.6.11 kernel. Then had to manually modify one  
case statement (per http://www.solace.net/nash/p5wd2- 
premium.html) ... anyway, it works. 
I think I can modify your instructions below and do all that with  
debian kernel-source. But, don't I also need to apply the XeN kernel  
patch stuff too? Or will modifying /etc/xenkernels.conf below work? 
I've never heard of /etc/xenkernels.conf before.
On Aug 30, 2005, at 7:49 AM, ed despard wrote:
 The source packages for everything are also available, but what i  
think you really want are the kernel-patch packages.  Use apt-cache  
to find which kernel-patch-$VERSION-xen packages are available for  
stable or unstable.  Once you have the kernel patch and the  
upstream kernel source code, you can build your own kernel with  
whichever configuration you would like.  Then just add an entry to / 
etc/xenkernels.conf, and run update-grub-xen.
Edward Despard
On Aug 30, 2005, at 10:45 AM, Eric Brown wrote:
 It would be very nice if the source packages were available too.  
Newer hardware (like mine) sometimes needs kernel patching.
On Aug 29, 2005, at 10:03 AM, ed despard wrote:
 I would like to announce the availability of packages of xen  
stable, and unstable for both Ubuntu and Debian.
(for those who already saw the previous announcement on the xen- 
users list, see below for package changes)
The stable packages are from the most recent stable release,  
2.0.7, while the unstable packages are from a recent nightly  
snapshot.  Included are all the packages you will need to have a  
fully functional Xen installation.  This includes kernel packages  
built with the default Xen configurations, and also kernel  
patches that facilitate building kernels that more closely match  
your existing kernel configuration.  The kernel packages also  
include a configuration system that will determine (or if your  
priority is set to medium ask you) the necessary xen root device,  
and domain 0 memory allocations.  For more info on this system,  
see the man page for the included update-grub-xen, and the /etc/ 
xenkernels.conf file.  Especially of interest to many is the -- 
default option to update-grub-xen, which will take steps to write  
the xen entries as the default in your grub configuration file. 
These packages are available at mirror.clarkson.edu, by adding  
the appropriate lines to your sources file, and then installing  
the xen package, and optionally the appropriate kernel patch  
package.
    http://mirror.clarkson.edu/pub/distributions/xenophilia/ 
xendebs/debian xen-stable main
    http://mirror.clarkson.edu/pub/distributions/xenophilia/ 
xendebs/debian xen-unstable main
    http://mirror.clarkson.edu/pub/distributions/xenophilia/ 
xendebs/ubuntu xen-stable main
    http://mirror.clarkson.edu/pub/distributions/xenophilia/ 
xendebs/ubuntu xen-unstable main 
-- edward despard
Future goals with these packages:
consolidate xenu and xen0 kernel packages into single xen  
configuration
    make update-grub-xen script more robust, ie add better initrd  
detection to it? 
    autobuild unstable packages nightly
Changes from packages previously announced on xen-users:
    fixed python dependencies errors
    removed bashisms from update-grub-xen script
    added kernel patch packages
fixed bug in kernel config scripts when priority was set to  
high (bad assumptions on my part)
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