On 2011 Dec 01 (Thu) at 09:44:25 +0100 (+0100), T. Valent wrote:
:> You have been told several times already: strip GENERIC down to what
:> will fit on your system. Start with things you definitely do not need
:> (sound? wifi?), then continue with the rest. If things break, put
:> the last thing that you removed back there. It is a way to arrive
:> at the smallest possible kernel that works for you. Isn't it?
:
:That's the way I've done it in the past (since OpenBSD 3.5).

Please compare the values you used in the previous release (I'm guessing
4.9), vs what you are attempting in this release.

Since users (and developers) pretty much /only/ use GENERIC, there are
many "options" which are not optional.  We don't look for them, and many
of them are required for proper use.

Essentially, you are one of the very very few that does this.  The only
advice we can give is to do the top-down method of stripping out
options.  I know you don't want to do it, but it is what it is.



-- 
Adolescence, n.:
        The stage between puberty and adultery.

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