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Yes.
There's only one common catch: the Debian C libraries are built with the most
recent stable releases of the kernel headers. If you
happen to need to compile a program with kernel headers newer than the ones
from the stable branch, then you should either upgrade the package containing
the headers (linux-libc-dev
), or use the new headers from an
unpacked tree of the newer kernel. That is, if the kernel sources are in
/usr/src/linux
, then you should add
-I/usr/src/linux/include/ to your command line when compiling.
Users who wish to (or must) build a custom kernel are encouraged to use the Debian package target included with recent versions of the kernel build system. After configuring the kernel, simply run the following command:
make deb-pkg
The new kernel package will be created in the directory one level above the kernel source tree, and it may be installed using dpkg -i.
Users must separately download the source code for the most recent kernel (or
the kernel of their choice) from their favorite Linux archive site, unless a
linux-source-version
package is available (where
version stands for the kernel version).
A configuration file containing modules to be manually loaded at boot time is
kept at /etc/modules
. However, editing this file is rarely
needed.
Other module configuration is kept in the /etc/modprobe.d/
directory. More information about the format of those files can be found in
the modprobe.conf(5)
manual page.
Yes. The linux-image-NNN.prerm
script checks to see
whether the kernel you are currently running is the same as the kernel you are
trying to de-install. Therefore you can remove unwanted kernel image packages
using this command:
dpkg --purge linux-image-NNN
(replace NNN with your kernel version and revision number, of course)
Further information is maintained in the Debian Linux Kernel
Handbook
.
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The Debian GNU/Linux FAQ
version 9.0, 17 November 2018