RH 6.2 Versus RH 7.2

Dawes, Stephen Stephen.Dawes at gov.calgary.ab.ca
Wed Jan 30 09:34:40 EST 2002


With Redhat 7.2, you are starting with a 2.4 series of kernel. 
I may be wrong, but kudzu was part of RedHat 6.2 as well, I remember
using it for quite some time.
kudzu is not only available at boot, or needed to be run as a service,
you can manually run it as well.
To take kudzu and anything out of your boot, run setup from the command
line, when logged in as root.
Setup will allow you to fine tune your boot to a certain point by giving
you the ability of saying what you want to start automatically on boot.
Setup is a nice utility that works well with speakup.
Redhat 7.2 will allow you to choose the file structure that you want to
use for your hard drive. It includes ext3, mentioned in Kirk's note, as
well as reiser fs. However, this is not a Redhat specific thing, it is a
kernel driven thing. So if you don't have the support built into the
kernel, you will not be able to use them.






-----Original Message-----
From: Kirk Wood [mailto:cpt.kirk at 1tree.net]
Sent: 2002 January 30 5:59 AM
To: speakup at braille.uwo.ca
Subject: Re: RH 6.2 Versus RH 7.2


> Well, I've noticed that slow down in spead myself. One way to help
spead
> things up is to use the ext3 fs which works much better than ext2.
> One major difference between 6.2 and 7.2 is that 7.2 comes with the
kudzu
> pnp hardware maniger. Kudzu tracks new and removed hardware, and
attempts to
> configure it for you.

Oh please tell me that this is not a representation of what is in store
for the linux comunity. Switching to an more effecient file system for
poor OS performance sounds like a m$ thing. 

As for Kudzu, from what I have seen it is more of a boot thing. You can
certainly turn it off and I would do so if you aren't adding and
subtracting hardware. I mean why run it? I suppose so that you could
avoid
a reboot after 65 days of adding no new hardware and deciding you wanted
something. Oh wait, you had to shut it down to connect it anyway. Or if
not, you could always restart the service midstream anyway.

=======
Kirk Wood
Cpt.Kirk at 1tree.net

Nowlan's Theory:
        He who hesitates is not only lost, but several miles from
        the next freeway exit.



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