From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Received: from lists.gentoo.org ([140.105.134.102] helo=robin.gentoo.org) by nuthatch.gentoo.org with esmtp (Exim 4.43) id 1E51cz-0001jX-Pr for garchives@archives.gentoo.org; Tue, 16 Aug 2005 13:37:18 +0000 Received: from robin.gentoo.org (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by robin.gentoo.org (8.13.4/8.13.4) with SMTP id j7GDYW5c013021; Tue, 16 Aug 2005 13:34:32 GMT Received: from smtp18.wxs.nl (smtp18.wxs.nl [195.121.6.14]) by robin.gentoo.org (8.13.4/8.13.4) with ESMTP id j7GDUTC0017594 for ; Tue, 16 Aug 2005 13:30:29 GMT Received: from [10.0.0.150] (ip3e83ab52.speed.planet.nl [62.131.171.82]) by smtp18.wxs.nl (iPlanet Messaging Server 5.2 Patch 2 (built Jul 14 2004)) with ESMTP id <0ILB00J62HJWDR@smtp18.wxs.nl> for gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org; Tue, 16 Aug 2005 15:31:09 +0200 (CEST) Date: Tue, 16 Aug 2005 15:31:02 +0200 From: Holly Bostick Subject: Re: [gentoo-user] dual-linuxdistro-boot kernel question In-reply-to: To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org Message-id: <4301EA96.5080800@planet.nl> Precedence: bulk List-Post: List-Help: List-Unsubscribe: List-Subscribe: List-Id: Gentoo Linux mail X-BeenThere: gentoo-user@gentoo.org Reply-to: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org MIME-version: 1.0 Content-type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT X-Accept-Language: nl-NL, nl, en User-Agent: Mozilla Thunderbird 1.0.6 (X11/20050803) X-Enigmail-Version: 0.92.0.0 References: X-Archives-Salt: 22d1a6f2-6a15-4661-9da9-a76b756135ff X-Archives-Hash: 6dd5b6f325b626248b4373e881656e0b Fernando Meira schreef: > Hi, > I was told the following, which I don't agree, but in any case, I would > like to hear from someone that knows :) > - when having 2 different distro on 1 pc, do they have to use the same > kernel? > Even if they share the same swap partition and /boot is inside the root > of one of the distros (and not in a separate partition)... > > Cheers, > Fernando No, they do not-- in fact, I personally think it's weird for them to use the same kernel (I never heard of doing this before recently). Just to authenticate myself, I currently run Gentoo and SuSE on the same PC, and previously ran Gentoo, RedHat9, Morphix, CollegeLinux, and Mandrake (with Win 98 and Win2K) on the same PC. Especially when one of the distros in question is a binary distro (Mandrake, SuSE, RedHat/Fedora, and to some extent, Debian-based distros, and Gentoo), you wouldn't want them to use the same kernel anyway, as binary distros are well-known to patch their kernels for the distribution (as does Gentoo, but the Gentoo patches are not as 'essential' to the kernel's proper running as, say, SuSE's are if you're running SuSE). Naturally, I wouldn't expect the binary distro's kernel patches to be compatible with Gentoo, or vice-versa. Now, of course, you could use a vanilla kernel under both (or all) relevant distros, but that would probably be a problem for the binary distro (after all, if the kernel patches weren't necessary, they wouldn't put all the work in to patch the kernel, would they?). What I do is *copy* the binary distro's kernel to the /boot partition (which is a separate mounted partition under Gentoo, but is a folder under / in SuSE), so that way, both distros can use the kernel they expect to see, and it all works fine. Why you'd really want to have two or more distros using the same kernel at all, I really can't get, but maybe I'm dim :-) . Holly -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list