For installation instructions see the Section called Installing Linux-2.4.22 in Chapter 8.
Linux (2.4.22):
ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/
(Last checked against version 2.4.18.)
The Linux kernel is at the core of every Linux system. It's what makes Linux tick. When a computer is turned on and boots a Linux system, the very first piece of Linux software that gets loaded is the kernel. The kernel initializes the system's hardware components: serial ports, parallel ports, sound cards, network cards, IDE controllers, SCSI controllers and a lot more. In a nutshell the kernel makes the hardware available so that the software can run.
Linux installs the following files:
kernel and kernel headers
(Last checked against version 2.4.18.)
The kernel is the engine of your GNU/Linux system. When switching on your box, the kernel is the first part of your operating system that gets loaded. It detects and initializes all the components of your computer's hardware, then makes these components available as a tree of files to the software, and turns a single CPU into a multi-tasking machine capable of running scores of programs seemingly at the same time.
The kernel headers define the interface to the services that the kernel provides. The headers in your system's include directory should always be the ones against which Glibc was compiled and should therefore not be replaced when upgrading the kernel.
(Last checked against version 2.4.17.)
Bash: sh
Binutils: ar, as, ld, nm, objcopy
Coreutils: basename, cat, cp, date, expr, ln, md5sum, mkdir, mv,
pwd, rm, sort, stty, tail, touch, uname, whoami, yes
Findutils: find, xargs
Gawk: awk
GCC: cc1, collect2, cpp0, gcc
Grep: grep
Gzip: gzip
Make: make
Modutils: depmod, genksyms
Net-tools: dnsdomainname, hostname
Sed: sed