| roadnottaken  
 
 
 
 
 Group: Members
 Posts: 4
 Joined: Dec. 2007
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|  | Posted: Jan. 24 2008,03:52 |  |  I normally use Debian Gnu/Linux, but have gotten fed up at times with how applications tend to pull in all sorts of extra libraries and end up taking up several megabytes.  I fully realize that my hardware can handle many more programs easily, but I have found that I, too, have developed a distaste for software bloat.  I certainly like the way the people at Damn Small Linux think, and would love to switch over to this operating system.  My hardware, however, has different ideas.
 
 My computer is a Dell Vostro laptop, and I have to disable several types of hardware detection just to get DSL to boot successfully.  Even then, however, my computer usually freezes on shutdown.  I have also tried DSL-N, which cures most of these issues.  I have one problem, however, in both varients of DSL; my SATA hard drive fails to be detected.
 
 I assume that these problems stem from the kernel that is used in DSL, and that I will need to set up a remastering environment to upgrade the kernel.  My issue is this: all the documentation that I have found talks about remastering DSL from within a running instance of DSL, but I need to do this from a second OS, the Debian installation that I mentioned.  How should I go about this?  I expect to have to drop in a new custom kernel; where should I place the kernel, modules, and initrd to be sure that they will work properly? By the way, I do know about the kernel patch for DSL.
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