CONTENTS: base devs idekern scsikern sysvinit base: * Basic Linux filesystem package. base: base: Sets up the basic directory structure and adds a few important base: binaries such as GNU mtools 2.0.7 and fdisk. base: base: base: base: base: base: base: devs: Device files. devs: devs: This package creates special files in the /dev directory that devs: represent your system's hardware. devs: devs: devs: devs: devs: devs: devs: idekern: Linux kernel version 1.1.59, without SCSI support. idekern: idekern: A Linux kernel for computers that do not need SCSI support. You MUST idekern: install a kernel image in order for your system to boot. This kernel idekern: also contains UMSDOS and PPP. See the file 'config.in' for an exact idekern: list of included drivers. idekern: idekern: ***IMPORTANT***! If you have special hardware, such as a non-SCSI idekern: CD-ROM drive, you'll need to install a kernel from the Q series that idekern: supports it, or compile the support into your own custom kernel. idekern: scsikern: Linux kernel version 1.1.59, with SCSI + IDE support. scsikern: scsikern: This is a Linux kernel with full support for SCSI devices such as hard scsikern: drives, tape drives, and CD-ROM drives. This kernel also contains scsikern: UMSDOS and PPP. See the file 'config.in' for an exact list of scsikern: included drivers. scsikern: scsikern: ***IMPORTANT***! If you have special hardware, such as a non-SCSI scsikern: CD-ROM drive, you'll need to install a kernel from the Q series that scsikern: supports it, or compile the support into your own custom kernel. scsikern: sysvinit: * SysV style init v. 2.4 sysvinit: sysvinit: System V style init programs by Miquel van Smoorenburg that control sysvinit: the booting and shutdown of your system. These support a number of sysvinit: system runlevels, each with a specific set of utilities spawned. For sysvinit: example, the normal system runlevel is 5, which starts getty on sysvinit: virtual consoles tty1 - tty6. Runlevel 6 starts xdm. Runlevel 0 shuts sysvinit: the system down. See the documentation in /usr/doc/SysVinit-2.4 and sysvinit: the scripts in /etc/rc.d for more information. sysvinit: sysvinit: