Morning all,
Hope you can help. Started playing with Debian after deciding it was
time I got upto speed with it. I've just gone for an 'apt-get update'
and 'apt-get upgrade' and received the following warning (see below).
Could anyone help decipher it for me. As far as I can see i'm running
kernel 2.4.18-1-386 already, so how come the apt-get upgrade command
wants to upgrade my kernel to the current version?
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Cheers, Nick
<snip>
You are attempting to install a kernel image (version 2.4.18-1-386)
However, the directory /lib/modules/2.4.18-1-386 still exists. If this
directory belongs to a previous kernel-image-2.4.18-1-386 package, and
if you have deselected some modules, or installed standalone modules
packages, this could be bad. However, if this directory exists because
you are also installing some stand alone modules right now, and they
got unpacked before I did, then this is pretty benign. Unfortunately,
I can't tell the difference.
If /lib/modules/2.4.18-1-386 belongs to a old install of
kenel-image-2.4.18-1-386, this is your last chance to abort the
installation of this kernel image (nothing has been changed yet).
If this directory is because of stand alone modules being installed
right now, or if it does belong to an older kernel-image-2.4.18-1-386
package but you know what you are doing, and if you feel that this
image should be installed despite this anomaly, Please answer n to the
question.
Otherwise, I suggest you move /lib/modules/2.4.18-1-386 out of the way,
perhaps to /lib/modules/2.4.18-1-386.old or something, and then try
re-installing this image.
</snip>
--
Nick Heppleston
07989 581766 | nickheppleston(a)gmx.co.uk