On Mon, Aug 1, 2011 at 21:09, Grant Edwards <grant.b.edwa...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On 2011-08-01, Pandu Poluan <pa...@poluan.info> wrote:
>> Let's say I have a .config from an older kernel version (for example,
>> 2.6.38), and now I want to install a newer kernel (let's say, 3.0).
>>
>> Is it necessary to first do `make oldconfig`, or is it safe to go
>> directly to `make menuconfig`?
>
> It's always safe to do 'make menuconfig', and always has been (at
> least since the 0.97 days when I started running Linux).  You just
> have to select all the options correctly.
>
> All that 'make oldconfig' does is start you out with something as
> close to your old kernel configuration as possible.
>

Sorry for the misunderstanding, my bad.

What I meant was:

If I want a kernel config as close as possible to the older kernel,
can I just use `make menuconfig`, or do I have to first run `make
oldconfig`.

Again, sorry for the confusion.

Rgds,
-- 
Pandu E Poluan
~ IT Optimizer ~

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