On 2/4/06, Brent Busby <brent@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > It's occured to me that installing the kernel from Demudi stable on > Debian might be a nice easy way to get all my kernel tweaks without even > needing to recompile. And thanks to the way the kernel and the userland > in Linux are so relatively version independant of one another (something > not so true on other UNIX flavors), that should be quite safe, too. > > It made me wonder though -- since Demudi is built from Debian, what > would be the issues with inporting lots of other packages useful to > musicians as well, while still keeping the system essentially Debian? > > Do a lot ("a lot" meaning a destabilizing amount) of non-music-related > packages from Debian get superceded by Demudi versions when you add the > Demudi Apt repositories to the sources.list of a sarge machine? Are any > of you currently doing something like that? Just wondering... I'm sure > that even as there have been many MIDI and recording apps in sarge that > surely would not have gotten there without Demudi, there are probably > still others that either never made it or have newer versions in Demudi > than what sarge gives you. > > I just don't want to make my system unmaintainable by mixing > distributions like that on a really massive scale though... Once you > get newer versions of really critical things, it can be almost like > committing yourself to running sid/unstable -- no easy way back. > > -- > + Brent A. Busby, UNIX Systems Admin + "It's like being + > + James Franck / Enrico Fermi Institute + blindsided by a + > + The University of Chicago + flying dwarf..." + > Well, that's one of the things I don't like too. I hate using 3rd party repositories for the same reason as you. But anyhow, just thought I'd let you know that I took the kernel from DeMuDi (unstable, but probably would work with stable too) and installed it on Ubuntu and it booted fine for me. I only did it to test though, and I didn't use it for long before uninstalling. But it should work for you on Debian, if all you want is the kernel. Dana