Julian writes:
> it is however a good way to get mismatching kernel and userland
> but that's not what we are discussing.
The method recommended on
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/kernelconfig-building.html
"# make buildkernel KERNCONF=MYKERNEL"
is also a good way to get
Hi!
I have a couple of questions about USB.
I recently bought a new USB keyboard, a Logitech K120. When attaching
this to a FreeBSD system, however, it is detected as a hid device
(attaching to uhid) rather than a keyboard (attaching to ukbd). The
keyboard works fine, but I'm just curious as
On 11/22/12 1:17 PM, Garrett Cooper wrote:
On Wed, Nov 21, 2012 at 5:58 PM, Eitan Adler wrote:
I've been working on removing obsolete information various documents.
While going through older articles I noticed a few references to the
"old style" kernel configuration involving running config(1)
On 23 November 2012 12:48, Wojciech Puchar
wrote:
>>
>>For new/non-advanced users, this shouldn't necessarily be exposed
>> except as an implementation detail and a historical artifact; more
Lets kill this thread now.
I have the answers to
- should we keep the documentation
and
- what are th
For new/non-advanced users, this shouldn't necessarily be exposed
except as an implementation detail and a historical artifact; more
why?
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I do buy the argument that B is simpler than A, despite the fact that B
requires more commands than A. B can be thought-of as
simpler because I only have to memorize three things to get a kernel: (1) start
with a config file, (2) run config with said file
(3) follow the instructions that config
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