Il gio 4 mag 2023, 14:56 Fabiano Rosas <faro...@suse.de> ha scritto: > > It's a bit hard to maintain the original intention with just > documentation. Couldn't we require that --without-default-devices always > be accompanied by --with-devices?
Maybe, but why would it be bad to just patch the default .mak file? And more to the point of Peter's > question, couldn't we just leave the defaults off unconditionally when > --without-default-devices is passed without --with-devices? > No, for example RHEL adds a lot of devices and is perfectly usable without --nodefaults, but we still use --without-default-devices because we want any new config to be opt in, unless it's always needed. The coupling of -nodefaults with --without-default-devices is a bit > redundant. If we're choosing to not build some devices, then the QEMU > binary should already know that. > --without-default-devices is not about choosing to not build some devices; it is about making non-selected devices opt-in rather than opt-out. Paolo > Just to be clear, -nodefaults by itself still makes sense because we can > have a simple command line for those using QEMU directly while allowing > the management layer to fine tune the devices. > > In the long run, I think we need to add some configure option that gives > us pure allnoconfig so we can have that in the CI and catch these CONFIG > issues before merging. There's no reason to merge a new CONFIG if it > will then be impossible to turn it off. > >