Le 19/11/2018 à 23:57, Rick Moen a écrit :
Quoting Didier Kryn (k...@in2p3.fr):
Very nice. Congratulations. Do I understand well if I
understand your scripts read the config of the Debian kernel and
customize it to compile your own kernel?
I must beg your pardon, Didier, but I don't fully understand your
question.
In general terms: I've long ago gotten used to the idea that, on the
rare occasions when it's desirable to change a system's kernel, I just
am used to carrying forward the existing .config file and using
make-kpkg(1). It's too infrequent an operation to fully script, at
least in my use-case. It's not necessary or useful for any scripting to
parse the kernal .config, as far as I'm aware.
Well, AFAIU, you compile your own kernel, with device drivers in
the kernel, instead of modules (not possible for all), and don't use the
packaged kernel/initrd provided by Debian. It is absolutely possible to
live like this, but it discards apt-controlled kernel updates (typically
once per month). Do you perform kernel updates, and how? And what kernel
source do you use, kernel.org or Debian?
Didier
_______________________________________________
Dng mailing list
Dng@lists.dyne.org
https://mailinglists.dyne.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/dng