[RULE] compiling kernels (sort of long...)
Richard Kweskin
rkwesk at mail.ariadne-t.gr
Sat Aug 30 12:24:47 EEST 2003
On 29 Aug 2003 10:34:47 +0200
C David Rigby <cdrigby at 9online.fr> wrote:
> Indeed, "cutting too much" often seems to be a problem. It varies
> depending on the kernel-source being used, as well. As a concrete
> example, I installed kernel-source-2.4.20-20.9.i386.rpm on my desktop
> system and attempted to create a kernel for one of my notebooks which
> does not have a PCI bus in it (it is in the testing farm as runaway, but
> it now has only an 800MB hard drive). Despite various adjustments of
> this or that driver, I could never figure out how to successfully
> compile a kernel using that source which DID NOT have PCI support.
> Compilation always failed if "PCI support" was turned off under "General
> setup." Being still relatively C-ignorant, I did not try to reason my
> way through the kernel source to find out why this was the case.
>
> On the other hand, the plain-vanilla linux-2.4.22 from www.kernel.org
> happily compiled without PCI support. So, some of RedHat's
> optimizations of their kernel source seem to include the assumption of
> PCI support in the kernel. Of course, the tertiary version numbers of
> the sources are different, so I can be accused of "comparing apples and
> oranges." But I would be surprised if such a small change in version
> number led to such a significant change in the configuration of the
> kernel. Someone with more experience can certainly tell me how wrong I
> am.
>
> So after much trial-and-error, I have a functional, 486-optimized
> vmlinuz-2.4.20-20.9custom kernel based on RedHat sources that is 667,677
> bytes in size, and a functional, 486-optimized vmlinuz-2.4.22runaway
> kernel based on vanilla sources that is 601,941 bytes in size. The
> difference is the existence of PCI support in the RedHat kernel.
>
> This may seem like a lot of effort, but I think it is significant for a
> machine with only 16MB of RAM. The stock vmlinuz-2.4.20-8RULE kernel
> for 386 and 486 machines is 1,183,221 bytes.
Thank you, David, for verifying that, indeed, some kernel sources "require" certain kernel config options.
> I will keep both kernels on the machine and experiment to see if I can
> break any software as a result of using the vanilla sources.
Here is a case of only being able to prove it cannot work (if a broken thing surfaces) but without many others also trying the same...
> Obviously this is moderately inefficient in the case where one is trying
> to compile a kernel for someone that has unusual hardware, such as the
> sbpcd CD-ROM that we discussed earlier. Multiple iterations of compile
> & test might be needed to get it right. We may be better-served to
> create a kernel + modules set for the slinky installer that can handle
> every conceivable combination of older hardware. If that ends up being
> too large for a floppy disk, possibly an on-line repository of modules
> would be a better solution?
Or even a selection of config files that *do* successfully compile with one or two different kernel sources so that we can download a minimum of stuff, compile on some local box and use the resulting kernel accordingly.
Richard
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