I need to rebuild the Fedora Kernel, something I haven't done for many years, to (hopefully) reduce the large number of xruns that I'm getting using jackd. The plan is to build a preemtable kernel. 1. It look like the file .config in the kernel-devel RPM contains the configuration parameters for the kernel that goes with that version of kernel-devel. For example, right now, I'm running kernel version 2.6.29.6-217.2.8.fc11.x86_64, so this would mean that /usr/src/kernels/2.6.29.6-217.2.3.fc11.x86_64/.config contains the configuration parameters for that kernel. 2. This .config file generates a kernel with voluntary preemption. Is this to avoid a bug or suchlike, or just to generate a kernel that's best for general use? 3. The natural way to build the new kernel would seem to be to unpack the kernel source, using $ rpm --install kernel-2.6.29.6-217.2.8.fc11.src.rpm copy in the .config file from the kernel-devel package, and then run rpmbuild -bb --short-circuit to generate the new kernel RPMs. Unfortunately the --short-circuit argument cannot be combined with the -bb argument. What's the best thing to do here? A truncated version of this message was sent to the list because of the (very treacherous) CTRL/NEWLINE shortcut in evolution. Sorry about that. Thanks - jon -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines