On Fri, Feb 13, 2004 at 08:50:55AM +0100, Sven Luther wrote: > I understand your interest in selecting a range of kernels, but this > sounds like a hacky way to achieve that. It would be better to notice > that a kernel is composed of :
I won't dispute you. It was quick 'n dirty and it totally solved my problem for m68k. It also avoids having to hardcode version numbers since some subarchs can and may want to use both 2.4.x and 2.2.x kernels (I also think it's bad form to hardcode anything you don't have to). Finally, it was pretty non-invasive. > kernel-image (common part) > - > 2.4.22 (version number) > - > powerpc (build configuration or flavour) > - > chrp (powerpc subarch boot-loader format) > > And do some parsing to detect the version/flavours, which can be > intercheangeable, while the subarch flavor is determined by hardware > detection. kernel-image and powerpc will be constant in $kernels on your arch by definition. As stated, I wanted to avoid the version number. All that's left is the subarch bit (or whatever) on the end. I don't see any reason to bother with parsing anything else. You are of course welcome to improve or replace the code that's there, that's all I did. :-) -- Stephen R. Marenka If life's not fun, you're not doing it right! <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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