if [ "$CONFIG_SOUND_OSS" = "y" -o "$CONFIG_SOUND_OSS" = "m" ]; then
bool ' Verbose initialisation' CONFIG_SOUND_TRACEINIT
bool ' Persistent DMA buffers' CONFIG_SOUND_DMAP
The YMFPCI option was in the body of the above if statement, so I had
to move it out of there to be able to enable it without enabling
CONFIG_SOUND_OSS. I hope this is what you meant.
>
> I use monolithic kernels on 2.4, but on 2.5 it is officially
> discouraged, so I gave up on it.
To what granularity? I use the hardware as a rule of thumb: if the
the hardware supported is fixed, then I put it in the kernel.
Should I compile everything as modules?
However, I did hear something about everything being a module in 2.6
because the kernel will eventually use initramfs or something...
Anyway, this is a different thread. But I would like to hear your rule
of thumb for when you compile things as a module...
> I do not see ANYTHING in 2.5.4 Makefiles that depended on
> CONFIG_SOUND_GAMEPORT. This option only works to restric
> some configurations choices, but it does not control any
> compilations. Seems like a deadwood to me. Just kill it too.
I kill it but make oldconfig enables it right back :).
I'll look through Config.in in a bit.
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/