On 01/25/13 06:44 PM, Peter Hutterer wrote: > On Fri, Jan 25, 2013 at 07:50:51PM -0500, Dennis Clarke wrote: >> >> >>> >>> build.sh takes a --modfile arg listing all the modules you want to build. >> >> awesome. >> >> I looked in there and saw the tseng driver for an IBM PS/2 from 1994 I >> think. Not needed. >> >> Well, at the moment the only trouble spot I seem to hit was something called >> a newport driver, so I commented that out in the build.sh script :
Newport was a video board for SGI Indy/Indigo2 workstations (more details can be found in it's README file for the morbidly curious), not likely to be found anywhere near most PC's. >> Fire off a rebuild and see : >> aster $ ./util/modular/build.sh --clone --autoresume built.modules /opt/xorg >> Building to run Linux / x86_64 () >> Fri Jan 25 19:46:35 EST 2013 >> Skipping util module component macros... > > skipping means it didn't build it, so judging by the output you skipped all > modules. I thought there was a build.sh flag to output the default mod list, but I don't see it or remember it. The file I pass to --modfile has a the modules listed as: util/macros font/util doc/xorg-sgml-doctools doc/xorg-docs proto/bigreqsproto and so on. Of course, I also run it with the -n flag to keep on going after error, since I'm usually just using it to see which modules build cleanly and which I now need to fix to build on Solaris for some reason. -- -Alan Coopersmith- alan.coopersm...@oracle.com Oracle Solaris Engineering - http://blogs.oracle.com/alanc _______________________________________________ xorg@lists.x.org: X.Org support Archives: http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/xorg Info: http://lists.x.org/mailman/listinfo/xorg Your subscription address: arch...@mail-archive.com