kernel-5.15/kernel-i586.config

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Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Automatically generated file; DO NOT EDIT.
# Linux/x86 4.10.x-nrj-desktop Kernel Configuration
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# CONFIG_64BIT is not set
CONFIG_X86_32=y
CONFIG_X86=y
CONFIG_INSTRUCTION_DECODER=y
CONFIG_OUTPUT_FORMAT="elf32-i386"
CONFIG_LOCKDEP_SUPPORT=y
CONFIG_STACKTRACE_SUPPORT=y
CONFIG_MMU=y
CONFIG_NEED_DMA_MAP_STATE=y
CONFIG_NEED_SG_DMA_LENGTH=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_ISA_DMA=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_BUG=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_HWEIGHT=y
CONFIG_RWSEM_XCHGADD_ALGORITHM=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_CALIBRATE_DELAY=y
CONFIG_NEED_PER_CPU_EMBED_FIRST_CHUNK=y
CONFIG_NEED_PER_CPU_PAGE_FIRST_CHUNK=y
CONFIG_X86_32_SMP=y
CONFIG_X86_32_LAZY_GS=y
CONFIG_FIX_EARLYCON_MEM=y
CONFIG_DEBUG_RODATA=y
CONFIG_PGTABLE_LEVELS=3
CONFIG_DEFCONFIG_LIST="/lib/modules/$UNAME_RELEASE/.config"
CONFIG_IRQ_WORK=y
CONFIG_BUILDTIME_EXTABLE_SORT=y
#
# General setup
#
CONFIG_INIT_ENV_ARG_LIMIT=32
CONFIG_CROSS_COMPILE=""
# CONFIG_COMPILE_TEST is not set
CONFIG_LOCALVERSION=""
# CONFIG_LOCALVERSION_AUTO is not set
# CONFIG_KERNEL_GZIP is not set
# CONFIG_KERNEL_BZIP2 is not set
# CONFIG_KERNEL_LZMA is not set
CONFIG_KERNEL_XZ=y
# CONFIG_KERNEL_LZO is not set
# CONFIG_KERNEL_LZ4 is not set
CONFIG_DEFAULT_HOSTNAME="(none)"
CONFIG_SWAP=y
CONFIG_SYSVIPC=y
CONFIG_SYSVIPC_SYSCTL=y
CONFIG_POSIX_MQUEUE=y
CONFIG_POSIX_MQUEUE_SYSCTL=y
CONFIG_CROSS_MEMORY_ATTACH=y
CONFIG_FHANDLE=y
# CONFIG_USELIB is not set
CONFIG_AUDIT=y
CONFIG_AUDITSYSCALL=y
CONFIG_AUDIT_WATCH=y
CONFIG_AUDIT_TREE=y
#
# IRQ subsystem
#
CONFIG_GENERIC_IRQ_PROBE=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_IRQ_SHOW=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_PENDING_IRQ=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_IRQ_CHIP=y
CONFIG_IRQ_DOMAIN=y
CONFIG_IRQ_DOMAIN_HIERARCHY=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_MSI_IRQ=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_MSI_IRQ_DOMAIN=y
# CONFIG_IRQ_DOMAIN_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_IRQ_FORCED_THREADING=y
CONFIG_SPARSE_IRQ=y
CONFIG_CLOCKSOURCE_WATCHDOG=y
CONFIG_CLOCKSOURCE_VALIDATE_LAST_CYCLE=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_TIME_VSYSCALL=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_CLOCKEVENTS=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_CLOCKEVENTS_BROADCAST=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_CLOCKEVENTS_MIN_ADJUST=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_CMOS_UPDATE=y
#
# Timers subsystem
#
CONFIG_TICK_ONESHOT=y
CONFIG_NO_HZ_COMMON=y
# CONFIG_HZ_PERIODIC is not set
CONFIG_NO_HZ_IDLE=y
CONFIG_NO_HZ=y
CONFIG_HIGH_RES_TIMERS=y
#
# CPU/Task time and stats accounting
#
CONFIG_TICK_CPU_ACCOUNTING=y
# CONFIG_IRQ_TIME_ACCOUNTING is not set
CONFIG_BSD_PROCESS_ACCT=y
CONFIG_BSD_PROCESS_ACCT_V3=y
CONFIG_TASKSTATS=y
CONFIG_TASK_DELAY_ACCT=y
CONFIG_TASK_XACCT=y
CONFIG_TASK_IO_ACCOUNTING=y
#
# RCU Subsystem
#
CONFIG_PREEMPT_RCU=y
# CONFIG_RCU_EXPERT is not set
CONFIG_SRCU=y
# CONFIG_TASKS_RCU is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_RCU_STALL_COMMON=y
# CONFIG_TREE_RCU_TRACE is not set
# CONFIG_RCU_EXPEDITE_BOOT is not set
CONFIG_BUILD_BIN2C=y
CONFIG_IKCONFIG=y
CONFIG_IKCONFIG_PROC=y
CONFIG_LOG_BUF_SHIFT=18
CONFIG_LOG_CPU_MAX_BUF_SHIFT=12
CONFIG_NMI_LOG_BUF_SHIFT=13
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CGROUPS=y
CONFIG_PAGE_COUNTER=y
CONFIG_MEMCG=y
CONFIG_MEMCG_SWAP=y
# CONFIG_MEMCG_SWAP_ENABLED is not set
CONFIG_BLK_CGROUP=y
# CONFIG_DEBUG_BLK_CGROUP is not set
CONFIG_CGROUP_WRITEBACK=y
CONFIG_CGROUP_SCHED=y
CONFIG_FAIR_GROUP_SCHED=y
CONFIG_CFS_BANDWIDTH=y
# CONFIG_RT_GROUP_SCHED is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CGROUP_PIDS=y
CONFIG_CGROUP_FREEZER=y
CONFIG_CGROUP_HUGETLB=y
CONFIG_CPUSETS=y
CONFIG_PROC_PID_CPUSET=y
CONFIG_CGROUP_DEVICE=y
CONFIG_CGROUP_CPUACCT=y
CONFIG_CGROUP_PERF=y
CONFIG_CGROUP_BPF=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_CGROUP_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_SOCK_CGROUP_DATA=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CHECKPOINT_RESTORE=y
CONFIG_NAMESPACES=y
CONFIG_UTS_NS=y
CONFIG_IPC_NS=y
CONFIG_USER_NS=y
CONFIG_PID_NS=y
CONFIG_NET_NS=y
CONFIG_SCHED_AUTOGROUP=y
# CONFIG_SYSFS_DEPRECATED is not set
CONFIG_RELAY=y
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_INITRD=y
CONFIG_INITRAMFS_SOURCE=""
CONFIG_RD_GZIP=y
CONFIG_RD_BZIP2=y
CONFIG_RD_LZMA=y
CONFIG_RD_XZ=y
CONFIG_RD_LZO=y
CONFIG_RD_LZ4=y
CONFIG_CC_OPTIMIZE_FOR_PERFORMANCE=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_CC_OPTIMIZE_FOR_SIZE is not set
CONFIG_SYSCTL=y
CONFIG_ANON_INODES=y
CONFIG_SYSCTL_EXCEPTION_TRACE=y
CONFIG_BPF=y
CONFIG_EXPERT=y
CONFIG_UID16=y
CONFIG_MULTIUSER=y
CONFIG_SGETMASK_SYSCALL=y
CONFIG_SYSFS_SYSCALL=y
CONFIG_SYSCTL_SYSCALL=y
CONFIG_POSIX_TIMERS=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_KALLSYMS=y
CONFIG_KALLSYMS_ALL=y
# CONFIG_KALLSYMS_ABSOLUTE_PERCPU is not set
CONFIG_KALLSYMS_BASE_RELATIVE=y
CONFIG_PRINTK=y
CONFIG_PRINTK_NMI=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_BUG=y
CONFIG_ELF_CORE=y
CONFIG_PCSPKR_PLATFORM=y
CONFIG_BASE_FULL=y
CONFIG_FUTEX=y
CONFIG_EPOLL=y
CONFIG_SIGNALFD=y
CONFIG_TIMERFD=y
CONFIG_EVENTFD=y
CONFIG_BPF_SYSCALL=y
CONFIG_SHMEM=y
CONFIG_AIO=y
CONFIG_ADVISE_SYSCALLS=y
CONFIG_USERFAULTFD=y
CONFIG_PCI_QUIRKS=y
CONFIG_MEMBARRIER=y
# CONFIG_EMBEDDED is not set
#
# Kernel Performance Events And Counters
#
CONFIG_PERF_EVENTS=y
# CONFIG_DEBUG_PERF_USE_VMALLOC is not set
CONFIG_VM_EVENT_COUNTERS=y
CONFIG_SLUB_DEBUG=y
# CONFIG_COMPAT_BRK is not set
# CONFIG_SLAB is not set
CONFIG_SLUB=y
# CONFIG_SLOB is not set
# CONFIG_SLAB_FREELIST_RANDOM is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SLUB_CPU_PARTIAL=y
# CONFIG_SYSTEM_DATA_VERIFICATION is not set
CONFIG_PROFILING=y
CONFIG_TRACEPOINTS=y
CONFIG_KEXEC_CORE=y
CONFIG_OPROFILE=m
# CONFIG_OPROFILE_EVENT_MULTIPLEX is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_OPROFILE_NMI_TIMER=y
CONFIG_KPROBES=y
CONFIG_JUMP_LABEL=y
# CONFIG_STATIC_KEYS_SELFTEST is not set
CONFIG_KPROBES_ON_FTRACE=y
CONFIG_UPROBES=y
CONFIG_KRETPROBES=y
CONFIG_USER_RETURN_NOTIFIER=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_SMP_IDLE_THREAD=y
CONFIG_SECCOMP_FILTER=y
# CONFIG_GCC_PLUGINS is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_CC_STACKPROTECTOR is not set
CONFIG_CC_STACKPROTECTOR_NONE=y
# CONFIG_CC_STACKPROTECTOR_REGULAR is not set
# CONFIG_CC_STACKPROTECTOR_STRONG is not set
CONFIG_MODULES_USE_ELF_REL=y
CONFIG_ARCH_MMAP_RND_BITS=8
CONFIG_ISA_BUS_API=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CLONE_BACKWARDS=y
CONFIG_OLD_SIGSUSPEND3=y
CONFIG_OLD_SIGACTION=y
#
# GCOV-based kernel profiling
#
# CONFIG_GCOV_KERNEL is not set
CONFIG_SLABINFO=y
CONFIG_RT_MUTEXES=y
CONFIG_BASE_SMALL=0
CONFIG_MODULES=y
CONFIG_MODULE_FORCE_LOAD=y
CONFIG_MODULE_UNLOAD=y
CONFIG_MODULE_FORCE_UNLOAD=y
CONFIG_MODVERSIONS=y
CONFIG_MODULE_SRCVERSION_ALL=y
# CONFIG_MODULE_SIG is not set
# CONFIG_MODULE_COMPRESS is not set
CONFIG_MODULES_TREE_LOOKUP=y
CONFIG_BLOCK=y
CONFIG_LBDAF=y
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_BSG=y
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_BSGLIB=y
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_INTEGRITY=y
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_ZONED=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_THROTTLING=y
# CONFIG_BLK_CMDLINE_PARSER is not set
CONFIG_BLK_WBT=y
# CONFIG_BLK_WBT_SQ is not set
CONFIG_BLK_WBT_MQ=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Partition Types
#
CONFIG_PARTITION_ADVANCED=y
# CONFIG_ACORN_PARTITION is not set
# CONFIG_AIX_PARTITION is not set
# CONFIG_OSF_PARTITION is not set
# CONFIG_AMIGA_PARTITION is not set
# CONFIG_ATARI_PARTITION is not set
CONFIG_MAC_PARTITION=y
CONFIG_MSDOS_PARTITION=y
CONFIG_BSD_DISKLABEL=y
CONFIG_MINIX_SUBPARTITION=y
CONFIG_SOLARIS_X86_PARTITION=y
CONFIG_UNIXWARE_DISKLABEL=y
CONFIG_LDM_PARTITION=y
# CONFIG_LDM_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_SGI_PARTITION=y
# CONFIG_ULTRIX_PARTITION is not set
CONFIG_SUN_PARTITION=y
CONFIG_KARMA_PARTITION=y
CONFIG_EFI_PARTITION=y
# CONFIG_SYSV68_PARTITION is not set
# CONFIG_CMDLINE_PARTITION is not set
CONFIG_BLK_MQ_PCI=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# IO Schedulers
#
CONFIG_IOSCHED_NOOP=y
CONFIG_IOSCHED_DEADLINE=y
CONFIG_IOSCHED_CFQ=y
CONFIG_CFQ_GROUP_IOSCHED=y
CONFIG_IOSCHED_BFQ=y
CONFIG_BFQ_GROUP_IOSCHED=y
# CONFIG_DEFAULT_DEADLINE is not set
# CONFIG_DEFAULT_CFQ is not set
CONFIG_DEFAULT_BFQ=y
# CONFIG_DEFAULT_NOOP is not set
CONFIG_DEFAULT_IOSCHED="bfq"
CONFIG_PREEMPT_NOTIFIERS=y
CONFIG_PADATA=y
CONFIG_ASN1=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_UNINLINE_SPIN_UNLOCK=y
CONFIG_MUTEX_SPIN_ON_OWNER=y
CONFIG_RWSEM_SPIN_ON_OWNER=y
CONFIG_LOCK_SPIN_ON_OWNER=y
CONFIG_QUEUED_SPINLOCKS=y
CONFIG_QUEUED_RWLOCKS=y
CONFIG_FREEZER=y
#
# Processor type and features
#
CONFIG_ZONE_DMA=y
CONFIG_SMP=y
CONFIG_X86_FEATURE_NAMES=y
CONFIG_X86_FAST_FEATURE_TESTS=y
CONFIG_X86_MPPARSE=y
CONFIG_X86_BIGSMP=y
# CONFIG_GOLDFISH is not set
CONFIG_INTEL_RDT_A=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_X86_EXTENDED_PLATFORM=y
# CONFIG_X86_GOLDFISH is not set
# CONFIG_X86_INTEL_MID is not set
# CONFIG_X86_INTEL_QUARK is not set
CONFIG_X86_INTEL_LPSS=y
CONFIG_X86_AMD_PLATFORM_DEVICE=y
CONFIG_IOSF_MBI=y
# CONFIG_IOSF_MBI_DEBUG is not set
# CONFIG_X86_RDC321X is not set
# CONFIG_X86_32_NON_STANDARD is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_X86_32_IRIS=m
CONFIG_SCHED_OMIT_FRAME_POINTER=y
CONFIG_HYPERVISOR_GUEST=y
CONFIG_PARAVIRT=y
# CONFIG_PARAVIRT_DEBUG is not set
# CONFIG_PARAVIRT_SPINLOCKS is not set
# CONFIG_XEN is not set
CONFIG_KVM_GUEST=y
# CONFIG_KVM_DEBUG_FS is not set
# CONFIG_LGUEST_GUEST is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_PARAVIRT_TIME_ACCOUNTING is not set
CONFIG_PARAVIRT_CLOCK=y
CONFIG_NO_BOOTMEM=y
# CONFIG_M486 is not set
# CONFIG_M586 is not set
# CONFIG_M586TSC is not set
# CONFIG_M586MMX is not set
CONFIG_M686=y
# CONFIG_MPENTIUMII is not set
# CONFIG_MPENTIUMIII is not set
# CONFIG_MPENTIUMM is not set
# CONFIG_MPENTIUM4 is not set
# CONFIG_MK6 is not set
# CONFIG_MK7 is not set
# CONFIG_MK8 is not set
# CONFIG_MCRUSOE is not set
# CONFIG_MEFFICEON is not set
# CONFIG_MWINCHIPC6 is not set
# CONFIG_MWINCHIP3D is not set
# CONFIG_MELAN is not set
# CONFIG_MGEODEGX1 is not set
# CONFIG_MGEODE_LX is not set
# CONFIG_MCYRIXIII is not set
# CONFIG_MVIAC3_2 is not set
# CONFIG_MVIAC7 is not set
# CONFIG_MCORE2 is not set
# CONFIG_MATOM is not set
CONFIG_X86_GENERIC=y
CONFIG_X86_INTERNODE_CACHE_SHIFT=6
CONFIG_X86_L1_CACHE_SHIFT=6
CONFIG_X86_PPRO_FENCE=y
CONFIG_X86_INTEL_USERCOPY=y
CONFIG_X86_USE_PPRO_CHECKSUM=y
CONFIG_X86_TSC=y
CONFIG_X86_CMPXCHG64=y
CONFIG_X86_CMOV=y
CONFIG_X86_MINIMUM_CPU_FAMILY=5
CONFIG_X86_DEBUGCTLMSR=y
# CONFIG_PROCESSOR_SELECT is not set
CONFIG_CPU_SUP_INTEL=y
CONFIG_CPU_SUP_CYRIX_32=y
CONFIG_CPU_SUP_AMD=y
CONFIG_CPU_SUP_CENTAUR=y
CONFIG_CPU_SUP_TRANSMETA_32=y
CONFIG_CPU_SUP_UMC_32=y
CONFIG_HPET_TIMER=y
CONFIG_HPET_EMULATE_RTC=y
CONFIG_DMI=y
CONFIG_SWIOTLB=y
CONFIG_IOMMU_HELPER=y
CONFIG_NR_CPUS=32
CONFIG_SCHED_SMT=y
CONFIG_SCHED_MC=y
CONFIG_SCHED_MC_PRIO=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_PREEMPT_NONE is not set
# CONFIG_PREEMPT_VOLUNTARY is not set
CONFIG_PREEMPT=y
CONFIG_PREEMPT_COUNT=y
CONFIG_X86_LOCAL_APIC=y
CONFIG_X86_IO_APIC=y
CONFIG_X86_REROUTE_FOR_BROKEN_BOOT_IRQS=y
CONFIG_X86_MCE=y
CONFIG_X86_MCE_INTEL=y
CONFIG_X86_MCE_AMD=y
# CONFIG_X86_ANCIENT_MCE is not set
CONFIG_X86_MCE_THRESHOLD=y
# CONFIG_X86_MCE_INJECT is not set
CONFIG_X86_THERMAL_VECTOR=y
#
# Performance monitoring
#
CONFIG_PERF_EVENTS_INTEL_UNCORE=y
CONFIG_PERF_EVENTS_INTEL_RAPL=y
CONFIG_PERF_EVENTS_INTEL_CSTATE=y
CONFIG_PERF_EVENTS_AMD_POWER=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_X86_LEGACY_VM86 is not set
# CONFIG_VM86 is not set
CONFIG_X86_16BIT=y
CONFIG_X86_ESPFIX32=y
# CONFIG_TOSHIBA is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_I8K=m
CONFIG_X86_REBOOTFIXUPS=y
CONFIG_MICROCODE=y
CONFIG_MICROCODE_INTEL=y
CONFIG_MICROCODE_AMD=y
CONFIG_MICROCODE_OLD_INTERFACE=y
CONFIG_X86_MSR=m
CONFIG_X86_CPUID=m
# CONFIG_NOHIGHMEM is not set
# CONFIG_HIGHMEM4G is not set
CONFIG_HIGHMEM64G=y
CONFIG_VMSPLIT_3G=y
# CONFIG_VMSPLIT_2G is not set
# CONFIG_VMSPLIT_1G is not set
CONFIG_PAGE_OFFSET=0xC0000000
CONFIG_HIGHMEM=y
CONFIG_X86_PAE=y
# CONFIG_NUMA is not set
CONFIG_ILLEGAL_POINTER_VALUE=0
CONFIG_SELECT_MEMORY_MODEL=y
CONFIG_FLATMEM_MANUAL=y
# CONFIG_SPARSEMEM_MANUAL is not set
CONFIG_FLATMEM=y
CONFIG_FLAT_NODE_MEM_MAP=y
CONFIG_SPARSEMEM_STATIC=y
CONFIG_MEMORY_ISOLATION=y
CONFIG_SPLIT_PTLOCK_CPUS=4
CONFIG_MEMORY_BALLOON=y
CONFIG_BALLOON_COMPACTION=y
CONFIG_COMPACTION=y
CONFIG_MIGRATION=y
CONFIG_PHYS_ADDR_T_64BIT=y
CONFIG_BOUNCE=y
CONFIG_VIRT_TO_BUS=y
CONFIG_MMU_NOTIFIER=y
CONFIG_KSM=y
CONFIG_DEFAULT_MMAP_MIN_ADDR=65536
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MEMORY_FAILURE=y
# CONFIG_HWPOISON_INJECT is not set
CONFIG_TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE=y
# CONFIG_TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE_ALWAYS is not set
CONFIG_TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE_MADVISE=y
CONFIG_TRANSPARENT_HUGE_PAGECACHE=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CLEANCACHE=y
CONFIG_FRONTSWAP=y
CONFIG_CMA=y
# CONFIG_CMA_DEBUG is not set
# CONFIG_CMA_DEBUGFS is not set
CONFIG_CMA_AREAS=7
CONFIG_ZSWAP=y
CONFIG_ZPOOL=y
CONFIG_ZBUD=y
CONFIG_Z3FOLD=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_ZSMALLOC=y
# CONFIG_PGTABLE_MAPPING is not set
# CONFIG_ZSMALLOC_STAT is not set
CONFIG_GENERIC_EARLY_IOREMAP=y
# CONFIG_IDLE_PAGE_TRACKING is not set
CONFIG_FRAME_VECTOR=y
# CONFIG_X86_PMEM_LEGACY is not set
# CONFIG_HIGHPTE is not set
CONFIG_X86_CHECK_BIOS_CORRUPTION=y
# CONFIG_X86_BOOTPARAM_MEMORY_CORRUPTION_CHECK is not set
CONFIG_X86_RESERVE_LOW=64
# CONFIG_MATH_EMULATION is not set
CONFIG_MTRR=y
CONFIG_MTRR_SANITIZER=y
CONFIG_MTRR_SANITIZER_ENABLE_DEFAULT=0
CONFIG_MTRR_SANITIZER_SPARE_REG_NR_DEFAULT=1
CONFIG_X86_PAT=y
CONFIG_ARCH_RANDOM=y
CONFIG_X86_SMAP=y
# CONFIG_X86_INTEL_MPX is not set
CONFIG_EFI=y
CONFIG_EFI_STUB=y
CONFIG_SECCOMP=y
# CONFIG_HZ_100 is not set
# CONFIG_HZ_250 is not set
CONFIG_SCHED_HRTICK=y
CONFIG_KEXEC=y
CONFIG_CRASH_DUMP=y
CONFIG_KEXEC_JUMP=y
CONFIG_PHYSICAL_START=0x100000
CONFIG_RELOCATABLE=y
# CONFIG_RANDOMIZE_BASE is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_X86_NEED_RELOCS=y
CONFIG_PHYSICAL_ALIGN=0x100000
CONFIG_HOTPLUG_CPU=y
# CONFIG_BOOTPARAM_HOTPLUG_CPU0 is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_HOTPLUG_CPU0 is not set
# CONFIG_COMPAT_VDSO is not set
# CONFIG_CMDLINE_BOOL is not set
CONFIG_MODIFY_LDT_SYSCALL=y
#
# Power management and ACPI options
#
CONFIG_SUSPEND=y
CONFIG_SUSPEND_FREEZER=y
# CONFIG_SUSPEND_SKIP_SYNC is not set
CONFIG_HIBERNATE_CALLBACKS=y
CONFIG_HIBERNATION=y
CONFIG_PM_STD_PARTITION=""
CONFIG_PM_SLEEP=y
CONFIG_PM_SLEEP_SMP=y
# CONFIG_PM_AUTOSLEEP is not set
# CONFIG_PM_WAKELOCKS is not set
CONFIG_PM=y
CONFIG_PM_DEBUG=y
# CONFIG_PM_ADVANCED_DEBUG is not set
# CONFIG_PM_TEST_SUSPEND is not set
CONFIG_PM_SLEEP_DEBUG=y
# CONFIG_DPM_WATCHDOG is not set
CONFIG_PM_TRACE=y
CONFIG_PM_TRACE_RTC=y
CONFIG_PM_CLK=y
CONFIG_PM_GENERIC_DOMAINS=y
# CONFIG_WQ_POWER_EFFICIENT_DEFAULT is not set
CONFIG_PM_GENERIC_DOMAINS_SLEEP=y
CONFIG_ACPI=y
CONFIG_ACPI_LEGACY_TABLES_LOOKUP=y
CONFIG_ACPI_SYSTEM_POWER_STATES_SUPPORT=y
# CONFIG_ACPI_DEBUGGER is not set
CONFIG_ACPI_SLEEP=y
# CONFIG_ACPI_PROCFS_POWER is not set
CONFIG_ACPI_REV_OVERRIDE_POSSIBLE=y
# CONFIG_ACPI_EC_DEBUGFS is not set
CONFIG_ACPI_AC=y
CONFIG_ACPI_BATTERY=y
CONFIG_ACPI_BUTTON=y
CONFIG_ACPI_VIDEO=m
CONFIG_ACPI_FAN=y
CONFIG_ACPI_DOCK=y
CONFIG_ACPI_CPU_FREQ_PSS=y
CONFIG_ACPI_PROCESSOR_CSTATE=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_ACPI_PROCESSOR_IDLE=y
CONFIG_ACPI_PROCESSOR=y
CONFIG_ACPI_IPMI=m
CONFIG_ACPI_HOTPLUG_CPU=y
CONFIG_ACPI_PROCESSOR_AGGREGATOR=m
CONFIG_ACPI_THERMAL=y
CONFIG_ACPI_CUSTOM_DSDT_FILE=""
# CONFIG_ACPI_CUSTOM_DSDT is not set
CONFIG_ACPI_TABLE_UPGRADE=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_ACPI_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_ACPI_PCI_SLOT=y
CONFIG_X86_PM_TIMER=y
CONFIG_ACPI_CONTAINER=y
CONFIG_ACPI_HOTPLUG_IOAPIC=y
CONFIG_ACPI_SBS=m
CONFIG_ACPI_HED=y
# CONFIG_ACPI_CUSTOM_METHOD is not set
CONFIG_ACPI_BGRT=y
# CONFIG_ACPI_REDUCED_HARDWARE_ONLY is not set
CONFIG_ACPI_NFIT=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_ACPI_NFIT_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_ACPI_APEI=y
CONFIG_ACPI_APEI_GHES=y
CONFIG_ACPI_APEI_PCIEAER=y
CONFIG_ACPI_APEI_MEMORY_FAILURE=y
CONFIG_ACPI_APEI_EINJ=m
# CONFIG_ACPI_APEI_ERST_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_DPTF_POWER=m
CONFIG_ACPI_WATCHDOG=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_ACPI_EXTLOG=m
CONFIG_PMIC_OPREGION=y
CONFIG_CRC_PMIC_OPREGION=y
# CONFIG_BXT_WC_PMIC_OPREGION is not set
CONFIG_ACPI_CONFIGFS=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SFI=y
CONFIG_X86_APM_BOOT=y
CONFIG_APM=y
# CONFIG_APM_IGNORE_USER_SUSPEND is not set
# CONFIG_APM_DO_ENABLE is not set
# CONFIG_APM_CPU_IDLE is not set
# CONFIG_APM_DISPLAY_BLANK is not set
# CONFIG_APM_ALLOW_INTS is not set
#
# CPU Frequency scaling
#
CONFIG_CPU_FREQ=y
CONFIG_CPU_FREQ_GOV_ATTR_SET=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CPU_FREQ_GOV_COMMON=y
# CONFIG_CPU_FREQ_STAT is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_CPU_FREQ_DEFAULT_GOV_PERFORMANCE is not set
# CONFIG_CPU_FREQ_DEFAULT_GOV_POWERSAVE is not set
# CONFIG_CPU_FREQ_DEFAULT_GOV_USERSPACE is not set
CONFIG_CPU_FREQ_DEFAULT_GOV_ONDEMAND=y
# CONFIG_CPU_FREQ_DEFAULT_GOV_CONSERVATIVE is not set
# CONFIG_CPU_FREQ_DEFAULT_GOV_SCHEDUTIL is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CPU_FREQ_GOV_PERFORMANCE=y
CONFIG_CPU_FREQ_GOV_POWERSAVE=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CPU_FREQ_GOV_USERSPACE=y
CONFIG_CPU_FREQ_GOV_ONDEMAND=y
CONFIG_CPU_FREQ_GOV_CONSERVATIVE=y
CONFIG_CPU_FREQ_GOV_SCHEDUTIL=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# CPU frequency scaling drivers
#
CONFIG_X86_INTEL_PSTATE=y
CONFIG_X86_PCC_CPUFREQ=y
CONFIG_X86_ACPI_CPUFREQ=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_X86_ACPI_CPUFREQ_CPB=y
CONFIG_X86_SFI_CPUFREQ=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_X86_POWERNOW_K6=m
CONFIG_X86_POWERNOW_K7=m
CONFIG_X86_POWERNOW_K7_ACPI=y
CONFIG_X86_POWERNOW_K8=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_X86_AMD_FREQ_SENSITIVITY=m
CONFIG_X86_GX_SUSPMOD=m
CONFIG_X86_SPEEDSTEP_CENTRINO=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_X86_SPEEDSTEP_CENTRINO_TABLE=y
CONFIG_X86_SPEEDSTEP_ICH=y
CONFIG_X86_SPEEDSTEP_SMI=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_X86_P4_CLOCKMOD=m
CONFIG_X86_CPUFREQ_NFORCE2=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_X86_LONGRUN=m
CONFIG_X86_LONGHAUL=m
# CONFIG_X86_E_POWERSAVER is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# shared options
#
CONFIG_X86_SPEEDSTEP_LIB=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_X86_SPEEDSTEP_RELAXED_CAP_CHECK=y
#
# CPU Idle
#
CONFIG_CPU_IDLE=y
CONFIG_CPU_IDLE_GOV_LADDER=y
CONFIG_CPU_IDLE_GOV_MENU=y
CONFIG_INTEL_IDLE=y
#
# Bus options (PCI etc.)
#
CONFIG_PCI=y
# CONFIG_PCI_GOBIOS is not set
# CONFIG_PCI_GOMMCONFIG is not set
# CONFIG_PCI_GODIRECT is not set
CONFIG_PCI_GOANY=y
CONFIG_PCI_BIOS=y
CONFIG_PCI_DIRECT=y
CONFIG_PCI_MMCONFIG=y
CONFIG_PCI_DOMAINS=y
# CONFIG_PCI_CNB20LE_QUIRK is not set
CONFIG_PCIEPORTBUS=y
CONFIG_HOTPLUG_PCI_PCIE=y
CONFIG_PCIEAER=y
# CONFIG_PCIE_ECRC is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_PCIEAER_INJECT is not set
CONFIG_PCIEASPM=y
# CONFIG_PCIEASPM_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_PCIEASPM_DEFAULT=y
# CONFIG_PCIEASPM_POWERSAVE is not set
# CONFIG_PCIEASPM_PERFORMANCE is not set
CONFIG_PCIE_PME=y
CONFIG_PCIE_DPC=y
CONFIG_PCIE_PTM=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_PCI_BUS_ADDR_T_64BIT=y
CONFIG_PCI_MSI=y
CONFIG_PCI_MSI_IRQ_DOMAIN=y
# CONFIG_PCI_DEBUG is not set
# CONFIG_PCI_REALLOC_ENABLE_AUTO is not set
CONFIG_PCI_STUB=m
CONFIG_HT_IRQ=y
CONFIG_PCI_ATS=y
CONFIG_PCI_IOV=y
CONFIG_PCI_PRI=y
CONFIG_PCI_PASID=y
CONFIG_PCI_LABEL=y
CONFIG_HOTPLUG_PCI=y
CONFIG_HOTPLUG_PCI_COMPAQ=m
CONFIG_HOTPLUG_PCI_COMPAQ_NVRAM=y
CONFIG_HOTPLUG_PCI_IBM=m
CONFIG_HOTPLUG_PCI_ACPI=y
CONFIG_HOTPLUG_PCI_ACPI_IBM=m
CONFIG_HOTPLUG_PCI_CPCI=y
CONFIG_HOTPLUG_PCI_CPCI_ZT5550=m
CONFIG_HOTPLUG_PCI_CPCI_GENERIC=m
CONFIG_HOTPLUG_PCI_SHPC=m
#
# PCI host controller drivers
#
# CONFIG_PCIE_DW_PLAT is not set
# CONFIG_ISA_BUS is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_ISA_DMA_API=y
CONFIG_ISA=y
# CONFIG_EISA is not set
CONFIG_SCx200=m
CONFIG_SCx200HR_TIMER=m
CONFIG_ALIX=y
CONFIG_NET5501=y
CONFIG_GEOS=y
CONFIG_AMD_NB=y
CONFIG_PCCARD=m
CONFIG_PCMCIA=m
CONFIG_PCMCIA_LOAD_CIS=y
CONFIG_CARDBUS=y
#
# PC-card bridges
#
CONFIG_YENTA=m
CONFIG_YENTA_O2=y
CONFIG_YENTA_RICOH=y
CONFIG_YENTA_TI=y
CONFIG_YENTA_ENE_TUNE=y
CONFIG_YENTA_TOSHIBA=y
CONFIG_PD6729=m
CONFIG_I82092=m
CONFIG_I82365=m
CONFIG_TCIC=m
CONFIG_PCMCIA_PROBE=y
CONFIG_PCCARD_NONSTATIC=y
CONFIG_RAPIDIO=y
CONFIG_RAPIDIO_TSI721=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_RAPIDIO_DISC_TIMEOUT=30
# CONFIG_RAPIDIO_ENABLE_RX_TX_PORTS is not set
CONFIG_RAPIDIO_DMA_ENGINE=y
# CONFIG_RAPIDIO_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_RAPIDIO_ENUM_BASIC=m
CONFIG_RAPIDIO_CHMAN=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_RAPIDIO_MPORT_CDEV=m
#
# RapidIO Switch drivers
#
CONFIG_RAPIDIO_TSI57X=m
CONFIG_RAPIDIO_CPS_XX=m
CONFIG_RAPIDIO_TSI568=m
CONFIG_RAPIDIO_CPS_GEN2=m
CONFIG_RAPIDIO_RXS_GEN3=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_X86_SYSFB is not set
#
# Executable file formats / Emulations
#
CONFIG_BINFMT_ELF=y
CONFIG_ELFCORE=y
CONFIG_CORE_DUMP_DEFAULT_ELF_HEADERS=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_BINFMT_SCRIPT=y
CONFIG_BINFMT_AOUT=m
CONFIG_BINFMT_MISC=m
CONFIG_COREDUMP=y
CONFIG_X86_DEV_DMA_OPS=y
CONFIG_X86_DMA_REMAP=y
CONFIG_PMC_ATOM=y
CONFIG_NET=y
CONFIG_NET_INGRESS=y
CONFIG_NET_EGRESS=y
#
# Networking options
#
CONFIG_PACKET=m
CONFIG_PACKET_DIAG=m
CONFIG_UNIX=y
CONFIG_UNIX_DIAG=m
CONFIG_XFRM=y
CONFIG_XFRM_ALGO=m
CONFIG_XFRM_USER=m
# CONFIG_XFRM_SUB_POLICY is not set
# CONFIG_XFRM_MIGRATE is not set
CONFIG_XFRM_STATISTICS=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_XFRM_IPCOMP=m
CONFIG_NET_KEY=m
# CONFIG_NET_KEY_MIGRATE is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_INET=y
CONFIG_IP_MULTICAST=y
CONFIG_IP_ADVANCED_ROUTER=y
CONFIG_IP_FIB_TRIE_STATS=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_IP_MULTIPLE_TABLES=y
CONFIG_IP_ROUTE_MULTIPATH=y
CONFIG_IP_ROUTE_VERBOSE=y
CONFIG_IP_ROUTE_CLASSID=y
# CONFIG_IP_PNP is not set
CONFIG_NET_IPIP=m
CONFIG_NET_IPGRE_DEMUX=m
CONFIG_NET_IP_TUNNEL=m
CONFIG_NET_IPGRE=m
CONFIG_NET_IPGRE_BROADCAST=y
CONFIG_IP_MROUTE=y
# CONFIG_IP_MROUTE_MULTIPLE_TABLES is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_IP_PIMSM_V1=y
CONFIG_IP_PIMSM_V2=y
CONFIG_SYN_COOKIES=y
CONFIG_NET_IPVTI=m
CONFIG_NET_UDP_TUNNEL=m
CONFIG_NET_FOU=m
CONFIG_NET_FOU_IP_TUNNELS=y
CONFIG_INET_AH=m
CONFIG_INET_ESP=m
CONFIG_INET_IPCOMP=m
CONFIG_INET_XFRM_TUNNEL=m
CONFIG_INET_TUNNEL=m
CONFIG_INET_XFRM_MODE_TRANSPORT=m
CONFIG_INET_XFRM_MODE_TUNNEL=m
CONFIG_INET_XFRM_MODE_BEET=m
CONFIG_INET_DIAG=m
CONFIG_INET_TCP_DIAG=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_INET_UDP_DIAG=m
CONFIG_INET_RAW_DIAG=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_INET_DIAG_DESTROY is not set
CONFIG_TCP_CONG_ADVANCED=y
CONFIG_TCP_CONG_BIC=m
CONFIG_TCP_CONG_CUBIC=y
CONFIG_TCP_CONG_WESTWOOD=m
CONFIG_TCP_CONG_HTCP=m
CONFIG_TCP_CONG_HSTCP=m
CONFIG_TCP_CONG_HYBLA=m
CONFIG_TCP_CONG_VEGAS=m
CONFIG_TCP_CONG_NV=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_TCP_CONG_SCALABLE=m
CONFIG_TCP_CONG_LP=m
CONFIG_TCP_CONG_VENO=m
CONFIG_TCP_CONG_YEAH=m
CONFIG_TCP_CONG_ILLINOIS=m
CONFIG_TCP_CONG_DCTCP=m
CONFIG_TCP_CONG_CDG=m
CONFIG_TCP_CONG_BBR=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_DEFAULT_CUBIC=y
# CONFIG_DEFAULT_RENO is not set
CONFIG_DEFAULT_TCP_CONG="cubic"
# CONFIG_TCP_MD5SIG is not set
CONFIG_IPV6=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_IPV6_ROUTER_PREF=y
CONFIG_IPV6_ROUTE_INFO=y
# CONFIG_IPV6_OPTIMISTIC_DAD is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_INET6_AH=m
CONFIG_INET6_ESP=m
CONFIG_INET6_IPCOMP=m
CONFIG_IPV6_MIP6=m
CONFIG_IPV6_ILA=m
CONFIG_INET6_XFRM_TUNNEL=m
CONFIG_INET6_TUNNEL=m
CONFIG_INET6_XFRM_MODE_TRANSPORT=m
CONFIG_INET6_XFRM_MODE_TUNNEL=m
CONFIG_INET6_XFRM_MODE_BEET=m
CONFIG_INET6_XFRM_MODE_ROUTEOPTIMIZATION=m
CONFIG_IPV6_VTI=m
CONFIG_IPV6_SIT=m
# CONFIG_IPV6_SIT_6RD is not set
CONFIG_IPV6_NDISC_NODETYPE=y
CONFIG_IPV6_TUNNEL=m
CONFIG_IPV6_GRE=m
CONFIG_IPV6_FOU=m
CONFIG_IPV6_FOU_TUNNEL=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_IPV6_MULTIPLE_TABLES=y
CONFIG_IPV6_SUBTREES=y
CONFIG_IPV6_MROUTE=y
CONFIG_IPV6_MROUTE_MULTIPLE_TABLES=y
CONFIG_IPV6_PIMSM_V2=y
CONFIG_IPV6_SEG6_LWTUNNEL=y
CONFIG_IPV6_SEG6_INLINE=y
CONFIG_IPV6_SEG6_HMAC=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NETLABEL=y
CONFIG_NETWORK_SECMARK=y
CONFIG_NET_PTP_CLASSIFY=y
# CONFIG_NETWORK_PHY_TIMESTAMPING is not set
CONFIG_NETFILTER=y
# CONFIG_NETFILTER_DEBUG is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NETFILTER_ADVANCED=y
CONFIG_BRIDGE_NETFILTER=m
#
# Core Netfilter Configuration
#
CONFIG_NETFILTER_INGRESS=y
CONFIG_NETFILTER_NETLINK=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_NETLINK_ACCT=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_NETLINK_QUEUE=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_NETLINK_LOG=m
CONFIG_NF_CONNTRACK=m
CONFIG_NF_LOG_COMMON=m
CONFIG_NF_LOG_NETDEV=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NF_CONNTRACK_MARK=y
CONFIG_NF_CONNTRACK_SECMARK=y
CONFIG_NF_CONNTRACK_ZONES=y
# CONFIG_NF_CONNTRACK_PROCFS is not set
CONFIG_NF_CONNTRACK_EVENTS=y
CONFIG_NF_CONNTRACK_TIMEOUT=y
CONFIG_NF_CONNTRACK_TIMESTAMP=y
CONFIG_NF_CONNTRACK_LABELS=y
CONFIG_NF_CT_PROTO_DCCP=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NF_CT_PROTO_GRE=m
CONFIG_NF_CT_PROTO_SCTP=y
CONFIG_NF_CT_PROTO_UDPLITE=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NF_CONNTRACK_AMANDA=m
CONFIG_NF_CONNTRACK_FTP=m
CONFIG_NF_CONNTRACK_H323=m
CONFIG_NF_CONNTRACK_IRC=m
CONFIG_NF_CONNTRACK_BROADCAST=m
CONFIG_NF_CONNTRACK_NETBIOS_NS=m
CONFIG_NF_CONNTRACK_SNMP=m
CONFIG_NF_CONNTRACK_PPTP=m
CONFIG_NF_CONNTRACK_SANE=m
CONFIG_NF_CONNTRACK_SIP=m
CONFIG_NF_CONNTRACK_TFTP=m
CONFIG_NF_CT_NETLINK=m
CONFIG_NF_CT_NETLINK_TIMEOUT=m
CONFIG_NF_CT_NETLINK_HELPER=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_NETLINK_GLUE_CT=y
CONFIG_NF_NAT=m
CONFIG_NF_NAT_NEEDED=y
CONFIG_NF_NAT_PROTO_DCCP=y
CONFIG_NF_NAT_PROTO_UDPLITE=y
CONFIG_NF_NAT_PROTO_SCTP=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NF_NAT_AMANDA=m
CONFIG_NF_NAT_FTP=m
CONFIG_NF_NAT_IRC=m
CONFIG_NF_NAT_SIP=m
CONFIG_NF_NAT_TFTP=m
CONFIG_NF_NAT_REDIRECT=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_SYNPROXY=m
CONFIG_NF_TABLES=m
CONFIG_NF_TABLES_INET=m
CONFIG_NF_TABLES_NETDEV=m
CONFIG_NFT_EXTHDR=m
CONFIG_NFT_META=m
CONFIG_NFT_RT=m
CONFIG_NFT_NUMGEN=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NFT_CT=m
CONFIG_NFT_SET_RBTREE=m
CONFIG_NFT_SET_HASH=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NFT_COUNTER=m
CONFIG_NFT_LOG=m
CONFIG_NFT_LIMIT=m
CONFIG_NFT_MASQ=m
CONFIG_NFT_REDIR=m
CONFIG_NFT_NAT=m
CONFIG_NFT_OBJREF=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NFT_QUEUE=m
CONFIG_NFT_QUOTA=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NFT_REJECT=m
CONFIG_NFT_REJECT_INET=m
CONFIG_NFT_COMPAT=m
CONFIG_NFT_HASH=m
CONFIG_NFT_FIB=m
CONFIG_NFT_FIB_INET=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NF_DUP_NETDEV=m
CONFIG_NFT_DUP_NETDEV=m
CONFIG_NFT_FWD_NETDEV=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XTABLES=m
#
# Xtables combined modules
#
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MARK=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_CONNMARK=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_SET=m
#
# Xtables targets
#
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_AUDIT=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_CHECKSUM=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_CLASSIFY=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_CONNMARK=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_CONNSECMARK=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_CT=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_DSCP=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_HL=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_HMARK=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_IDLETIMER=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_LED=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_LOG=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_MARK=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_NAT=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_NETMAP=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_NFLOG=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_NFQUEUE=m
# CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_NOTRACK is not set
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_RATEEST=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_REDIRECT=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_TEE=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_TPROXY=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_TRACE=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_SECMARK=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_TCPMSS=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_TARGET_TCPOPTSTRIP=m
#
# Xtables matches
#
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_ADDRTYPE=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_BPF=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_CGROUP=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_CLUSTER=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_COMMENT=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_CONNBYTES=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_CONNLABEL=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_CONNLIMIT=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_CONNMARK=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_CONNTRACK=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_CPU=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_DCCP=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_DEVGROUP=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_DSCP=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_ECN=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_ESP=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_HASHLIMIT=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_HELPER=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_HL=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_IPCOMP=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_IPRANGE=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_IPVS=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_L2TP=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_LENGTH=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_LIMIT=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_MAC=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_MARK=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_MULTIPORT=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_NFACCT=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_OSF=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_OWNER=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_POLICY=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_PHYSDEV=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_PKTTYPE=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_QUOTA=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_RATEEST=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_REALM=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_RECENT=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_SCTP=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_SOCKET=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_STATE=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_STATISTIC=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_STRING=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_TCPMSS=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_TIME=m
CONFIG_NETFILTER_XT_MATCH_U32=m
CONFIG_IP_SET=m
CONFIG_IP_SET_MAX=256
CONFIG_IP_SET_BITMAP_IP=m
CONFIG_IP_SET_BITMAP_IPMAC=m
CONFIG_IP_SET_BITMAP_PORT=m
CONFIG_IP_SET_HASH_IP=m
CONFIG_IP_SET_HASH_IPMARK=m
CONFIG_IP_SET_HASH_IPPORT=m
CONFIG_IP_SET_HASH_IPPORTIP=m
CONFIG_IP_SET_HASH_IPPORTNET=m
CONFIG_IP_SET_HASH_IPMAC=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_IP_SET_HASH_MAC=m
CONFIG_IP_SET_HASH_NETPORTNET=m
CONFIG_IP_SET_HASH_NET=m
CONFIG_IP_SET_HASH_NETNET=m
CONFIG_IP_SET_HASH_NETPORT=m
CONFIG_IP_SET_HASH_NETIFACE=m
CONFIG_IP_SET_LIST_SET=m
CONFIG_IP_VS=m
CONFIG_IP_VS_IPV6=y
# CONFIG_IP_VS_DEBUG is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_IP_VS_TAB_BITS=12
#
# IPVS transport protocol load balancing support
#
CONFIG_IP_VS_PROTO_TCP=y
CONFIG_IP_VS_PROTO_UDP=y
CONFIG_IP_VS_PROTO_AH_ESP=y
CONFIG_IP_VS_PROTO_ESP=y
CONFIG_IP_VS_PROTO_AH=y
CONFIG_IP_VS_PROTO_SCTP=y
#
# IPVS scheduler
#
CONFIG_IP_VS_RR=m
CONFIG_IP_VS_WRR=m
CONFIG_IP_VS_LC=m
CONFIG_IP_VS_WLC=m
CONFIG_IP_VS_FO=m
CONFIG_IP_VS_OVF=m
CONFIG_IP_VS_LBLC=m
CONFIG_IP_VS_LBLCR=m
CONFIG_IP_VS_DH=m
CONFIG_IP_VS_SH=m
CONFIG_IP_VS_SED=m
CONFIG_IP_VS_NQ=m
#
# IPVS SH scheduler
#
CONFIG_IP_VS_SH_TAB_BITS=8
#
# IPVS application helper
#
CONFIG_IP_VS_FTP=m
CONFIG_IP_VS_NFCT=y
CONFIG_IP_VS_PE_SIP=m
#
# IP: Netfilter Configuration
#
CONFIG_NF_DEFRAG_IPV4=m
CONFIG_NF_CONNTRACK_IPV4=m
CONFIG_NF_SOCKET_IPV4=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NF_TABLES_IPV4=m
CONFIG_NFT_CHAIN_ROUTE_IPV4=m
CONFIG_NFT_REJECT_IPV4=m
CONFIG_NFT_DUP_IPV4=m
CONFIG_NFT_FIB_IPV4=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NF_TABLES_ARP=m
CONFIG_NF_DUP_IPV4=m
CONFIG_NF_LOG_ARP=m
CONFIG_NF_LOG_IPV4=m
CONFIG_NF_REJECT_IPV4=m
CONFIG_NF_NAT_IPV4=m
CONFIG_NFT_CHAIN_NAT_IPV4=m
CONFIG_NF_NAT_MASQUERADE_IPV4=m
CONFIG_NFT_MASQ_IPV4=m
CONFIG_NFT_REDIR_IPV4=m
CONFIG_NF_NAT_SNMP_BASIC=m
CONFIG_NF_NAT_PROTO_GRE=m
CONFIG_NF_NAT_PPTP=m
CONFIG_NF_NAT_H323=m
CONFIG_IP_NF_IPTABLES=m
CONFIG_IP_NF_MATCH_AH=m
CONFIG_IP_NF_MATCH_ECN=m
CONFIG_IP_NF_MATCH_RPFILTER=m
CONFIG_IP_NF_MATCH_TTL=m
CONFIG_IP_NF_FILTER=m
CONFIG_IP_NF_TARGET_REJECT=m
CONFIG_IP_NF_TARGET_SYNPROXY=m
CONFIG_IP_NF_NAT=m
CONFIG_IP_NF_TARGET_MASQUERADE=m
CONFIG_IP_NF_TARGET_NETMAP=m
CONFIG_IP_NF_TARGET_REDIRECT=m
CONFIG_IP_NF_MANGLE=m
CONFIG_IP_NF_TARGET_CLUSTERIP=m
CONFIG_IP_NF_TARGET_ECN=m
CONFIG_IP_NF_TARGET_TTL=m
CONFIG_IP_NF_RAW=m
CONFIG_IP_NF_SECURITY=m
CONFIG_IP_NF_ARPTABLES=m
CONFIG_IP_NF_ARPFILTER=m
CONFIG_IP_NF_ARP_MANGLE=m
#
# IPv6: Netfilter Configuration
#
CONFIG_NF_DEFRAG_IPV6=m
CONFIG_NF_CONNTRACK_IPV6=m
CONFIG_NF_SOCKET_IPV6=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NF_TABLES_IPV6=m
CONFIG_NFT_CHAIN_ROUTE_IPV6=m
CONFIG_NFT_REJECT_IPV6=m
CONFIG_NFT_DUP_IPV6=m
CONFIG_NFT_FIB_IPV6=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NF_DUP_IPV6=m
CONFIG_NF_REJECT_IPV6=m
CONFIG_NF_LOG_IPV6=m
CONFIG_NF_NAT_IPV6=m
CONFIG_NFT_CHAIN_NAT_IPV6=m
CONFIG_NF_NAT_MASQUERADE_IPV6=m
CONFIG_NFT_MASQ_IPV6=m
CONFIG_NFT_REDIR_IPV6=m
CONFIG_IP6_NF_IPTABLES=m
CONFIG_IP6_NF_MATCH_AH=m
CONFIG_IP6_NF_MATCH_EUI64=m
CONFIG_IP6_NF_MATCH_FRAG=m
CONFIG_IP6_NF_MATCH_OPTS=m
CONFIG_IP6_NF_MATCH_HL=m
CONFIG_IP6_NF_MATCH_IPV6HEADER=m
CONFIG_IP6_NF_MATCH_MH=m
CONFIG_IP6_NF_MATCH_RPFILTER=m
CONFIG_IP6_NF_MATCH_RT=m
CONFIG_IP6_NF_TARGET_HL=m
CONFIG_IP6_NF_FILTER=m
CONFIG_IP6_NF_TARGET_REJECT=m
CONFIG_IP6_NF_TARGET_SYNPROXY=m
CONFIG_IP6_NF_MANGLE=m
CONFIG_IP6_NF_RAW=m
CONFIG_IP6_NF_SECURITY=m
CONFIG_IP6_NF_NAT=m
CONFIG_IP6_NF_TARGET_MASQUERADE=m
CONFIG_IP6_NF_TARGET_NPT=m
#
# DECnet: Netfilter Configuration
#
CONFIG_DECNET_NF_GRABULATOR=m
CONFIG_NF_TABLES_BRIDGE=m
CONFIG_NFT_BRIDGE_META=m
CONFIG_NFT_BRIDGE_REJECT=m
CONFIG_NF_LOG_BRIDGE=m
CONFIG_BRIDGE_NF_EBTABLES=m
CONFIG_BRIDGE_EBT_BROUTE=m
CONFIG_BRIDGE_EBT_T_FILTER=m
CONFIG_BRIDGE_EBT_T_NAT=m
CONFIG_BRIDGE_EBT_802_3=m
CONFIG_BRIDGE_EBT_AMONG=m
CONFIG_BRIDGE_EBT_ARP=m
CONFIG_BRIDGE_EBT_IP=m
CONFIG_BRIDGE_EBT_IP6=m
CONFIG_BRIDGE_EBT_LIMIT=m
CONFIG_BRIDGE_EBT_MARK=m
CONFIG_BRIDGE_EBT_PKTTYPE=m
CONFIG_BRIDGE_EBT_STP=m
CONFIG_BRIDGE_EBT_VLAN=m
CONFIG_BRIDGE_EBT_ARPREPLY=m
CONFIG_BRIDGE_EBT_DNAT=m
CONFIG_BRIDGE_EBT_MARK_T=m
CONFIG_BRIDGE_EBT_REDIRECT=m
CONFIG_BRIDGE_EBT_SNAT=m
CONFIG_BRIDGE_EBT_LOG=m
CONFIG_BRIDGE_EBT_NFLOG=m
CONFIG_IP_DCCP=m
CONFIG_INET_DCCP_DIAG=m
#
# DCCP CCIDs Configuration
#
# CONFIG_IP_DCCP_CCID2_DEBUG is not set
# CONFIG_IP_DCCP_CCID3 is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# DCCP Kernel Hacking
#
# CONFIG_IP_DCCP_DEBUG is not set
# CONFIG_NET_DCCPPROBE is not set
CONFIG_IP_SCTP=m
CONFIG_NET_SCTPPROBE=m
# CONFIG_SCTP_DBG_OBJCNT is not set
# CONFIG_SCTP_DEFAULT_COOKIE_HMAC_MD5 is not set
CONFIG_SCTP_DEFAULT_COOKIE_HMAC_SHA1=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_SCTP_DEFAULT_COOKIE_HMAC_NONE is not set
CONFIG_SCTP_COOKIE_HMAC_MD5=y
CONFIG_SCTP_COOKIE_HMAC_SHA1=y
CONFIG_INET_SCTP_DIAG=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_RDS=m
CONFIG_RDS_TCP=m
# CONFIG_RDS_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_TIPC=m
CONFIG_TIPC_MEDIA_UDP=y
CONFIG_ATM=m
CONFIG_ATM_CLIP=m
# CONFIG_ATM_CLIP_NO_ICMP is not set
CONFIG_ATM_LANE=m
CONFIG_ATM_MPOA=m
CONFIG_ATM_BR2684=m
# CONFIG_ATM_BR2684_IPFILTER is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_L2TP=m
CONFIG_L2TP_DEBUGFS=m
CONFIG_L2TP_V3=y
CONFIG_L2TP_IP=m
CONFIG_L2TP_ETH=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_STP=m
CONFIG_GARP=m
CONFIG_MRP=m
CONFIG_BRIDGE=m
CONFIG_BRIDGE_IGMP_SNOOPING=y
CONFIG_BRIDGE_VLAN_FILTERING=y
CONFIG_NET_DSA=m
CONFIG_NET_DSA_HWMON=y
CONFIG_NET_DSA_TAG_BRCM=y
CONFIG_NET_DSA_TAG_DSA=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NET_DSA_TAG_EDSA=y
CONFIG_NET_DSA_TAG_TRAILER=y
CONFIG_NET_DSA_TAG_QCA=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_VLAN_8021Q=m
CONFIG_VLAN_8021Q_GVRP=y
CONFIG_VLAN_8021Q_MVRP=y
CONFIG_DECNET=m
# CONFIG_DECNET_ROUTER is not set
CONFIG_LLC=m
CONFIG_LLC2=m
CONFIG_IPX=m
# CONFIG_IPX_INTERN is not set
CONFIG_ATALK=m
CONFIG_DEV_APPLETALK=m
CONFIG_LTPC=m
CONFIG_COPS=m
CONFIG_COPS_DAYNA=y
CONFIG_COPS_TANGENT=y
# CONFIG_IPDDP is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_X25=m
CONFIG_LAPB=m
CONFIG_PHONET=m
CONFIG_6LOWPAN=m
# CONFIG_6LOWPAN_DEBUGFS is not set
CONFIG_6LOWPAN_NHC=m
CONFIG_6LOWPAN_NHC_DEST=m
CONFIG_6LOWPAN_NHC_FRAGMENT=m
CONFIG_6LOWPAN_NHC_HOP=m
CONFIG_6LOWPAN_NHC_IPV6=m
CONFIG_6LOWPAN_NHC_MOBILITY=m
CONFIG_6LOWPAN_NHC_ROUTING=m
CONFIG_6LOWPAN_NHC_UDP=m
# CONFIG_6LOWPAN_GHC_EXT_HDR_HOP is not set
# CONFIG_6LOWPAN_GHC_UDP is not set
# CONFIG_6LOWPAN_GHC_ICMPV6 is not set
# CONFIG_6LOWPAN_GHC_EXT_HDR_DEST is not set
# CONFIG_6LOWPAN_GHC_EXT_HDR_FRAG is not set
# CONFIG_6LOWPAN_GHC_EXT_HDR_ROUTE is not set
CONFIG_IEEE802154=m
# CONFIG_IEEE802154_NL802154_EXPERIMENTAL is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_IEEE802154_SOCKET=m
CONFIG_IEEE802154_6LOWPAN=m
CONFIG_MAC802154=m
CONFIG_NET_SCHED=y
#
# Queueing/Scheduling
#
CONFIG_NET_SCH_CBQ=m
CONFIG_NET_SCH_HTB=m
CONFIG_NET_SCH_HFSC=m
CONFIG_NET_SCH_ATM=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NET_SCH_PRIO=m
CONFIG_NET_SCH_MULTIQ=m
CONFIG_NET_SCH_RED=m
CONFIG_NET_SCH_SFB=m
CONFIG_NET_SCH_SFQ=m
CONFIG_NET_SCH_TEQL=m
CONFIG_NET_SCH_TBF=m
CONFIG_NET_SCH_GRED=m
CONFIG_NET_SCH_DSMARK=m
CONFIG_NET_SCH_NETEM=m
CONFIG_NET_SCH_DRR=m
CONFIG_NET_SCH_MQPRIO=m
CONFIG_NET_SCH_CHOKE=m
CONFIG_NET_SCH_QFQ=m
CONFIG_NET_SCH_CODEL=m
CONFIG_NET_SCH_FQ_CODEL=m
CONFIG_NET_SCH_FQ=m
CONFIG_NET_SCH_HHF=m
CONFIG_NET_SCH_PIE=m
CONFIG_NET_SCH_INGRESS=m
CONFIG_NET_SCH_PLUG=m
#
# Classification
#
CONFIG_NET_CLS=y
CONFIG_NET_CLS_BASIC=m
CONFIG_NET_CLS_TCINDEX=m
CONFIG_NET_CLS_ROUTE4=m
CONFIG_NET_CLS_FW=m
CONFIG_NET_CLS_U32=m
# CONFIG_CLS_U32_PERF is not set
CONFIG_CLS_U32_MARK=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NET_CLS_RSVP=m
CONFIG_NET_CLS_RSVP6=m
CONFIG_NET_CLS_FLOW=m
CONFIG_NET_CLS_CGROUP=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NET_CLS_BPF=m
CONFIG_NET_CLS_FLOWER=m
CONFIG_NET_CLS_MATCHALL=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NET_EMATCH=y
CONFIG_NET_EMATCH_STACK=32
CONFIG_NET_EMATCH_CMP=m
CONFIG_NET_EMATCH_NBYTE=m
CONFIG_NET_EMATCH_U32=m
CONFIG_NET_EMATCH_META=m
CONFIG_NET_EMATCH_TEXT=m
CONFIG_NET_EMATCH_CANID=m
CONFIG_NET_EMATCH_IPSET=m
CONFIG_NET_CLS_ACT=y
CONFIG_NET_ACT_POLICE=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NET_ACT_GACT=m
CONFIG_GACT_PROB=y
CONFIG_NET_ACT_MIRRED=m
CONFIG_NET_ACT_IPT=m
CONFIG_NET_ACT_NAT=m
CONFIG_NET_ACT_PEDIT=m
CONFIG_NET_ACT_SIMP=m
CONFIG_NET_ACT_SKBEDIT=m
CONFIG_NET_ACT_CSUM=m
CONFIG_NET_ACT_VLAN=m
CONFIG_NET_ACT_BPF=m
CONFIG_NET_ACT_CONNMARK=m
CONFIG_NET_ACT_SKBMOD=m
# CONFIG_NET_ACT_IFE is not set
CONFIG_NET_ACT_TUNNEL_KEY=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_NET_CLS_IND is not set
CONFIG_NET_SCH_FIFO=y
CONFIG_DCB=y
CONFIG_DNS_RESOLVER=y
# CONFIG_BATMAN_ADV is not set
CONFIG_OPENVSWITCH=m
CONFIG_OPENVSWITCH_GRE=m
CONFIG_OPENVSWITCH_VXLAN=m
CONFIG_OPENVSWITCH_GENEVE=m
CONFIG_VSOCKETS=m
CONFIG_VMWARE_VMCI_VSOCKETS=m
CONFIG_VIRTIO_VSOCKETS=m
CONFIG_VIRTIO_VSOCKETS_COMMON=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NETLINK_DIAG=m
CONFIG_MPLS=y
CONFIG_NET_MPLS_GSO=m
CONFIG_MPLS_ROUTING=m
CONFIG_MPLS_IPTUNNEL=m
CONFIG_HSR=m
CONFIG_NET_SWITCHDEV=y
CONFIG_NET_L3_MASTER_DEV=y
CONFIG_NET_NCSI=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_RPS=y
CONFIG_RFS_ACCEL=y
CONFIG_XPS=y
CONFIG_CGROUP_NET_PRIO=y
CONFIG_CGROUP_NET_CLASSID=y
CONFIG_NET_RX_BUSY_POLL=y
CONFIG_BQL=y
CONFIG_NET_FLOW_LIMIT=y
#
# Network testing
#
CONFIG_NET_PKTGEN=m
CONFIG_NET_TCPPROBE=m
CONFIG_NET_DROP_MONITOR=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_HAMRADIO=y
#
# Packet Radio protocols
#
CONFIG_AX25=m
CONFIG_AX25_DAMA_SLAVE=y
CONFIG_NETROM=m
CONFIG_ROSE=m
#
# AX.25 network device drivers
#
CONFIG_MKISS=m
CONFIG_6PACK=m
CONFIG_BPQETHER=m
CONFIG_SCC=m
# CONFIG_SCC_DELAY is not set
# CONFIG_SCC_TRXECHO is not set
CONFIG_BAYCOM_SER_FDX=m
CONFIG_BAYCOM_SER_HDX=m
CONFIG_BAYCOM_PAR=m
CONFIG_BAYCOM_EPP=m
CONFIG_YAM=m
CONFIG_CAN=m
CONFIG_CAN_RAW=m
CONFIG_CAN_BCM=m
CONFIG_CAN_GW=m
#
# CAN Device Drivers
#
CONFIG_CAN_VCAN=m
CONFIG_CAN_SLCAN=m
CONFIG_CAN_DEV=m
# CONFIG_CAN_CALC_BITTIMING is not set
CONFIG_CAN_LEDS=y
CONFIG_CAN_JANZ_ICAN3=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_PCH_CAN=m
CONFIG_CAN_C_CAN=m
CONFIG_CAN_C_CAN_PLATFORM=m
CONFIG_CAN_C_CAN_PCI=m
CONFIG_CAN_CC770=m
CONFIG_CAN_CC770_ISA=m
CONFIG_CAN_CC770_PLATFORM=m
CONFIG_CAN_IFI_CANFD=m
CONFIG_CAN_M_CAN=m
CONFIG_CAN_SJA1000=m
CONFIG_CAN_SJA1000_ISA=m
# CONFIG_CAN_SJA1000_PLATFORM is not set
CONFIG_CAN_EMS_PCMCIA=m
CONFIG_CAN_EMS_PCI=m
CONFIG_CAN_PEAK_PCMCIA=m
CONFIG_CAN_PEAK_PCI=m
CONFIG_CAN_PEAK_PCIEC=y
CONFIG_CAN_KVASER_PCI=m
CONFIG_CAN_PLX_PCI=m
CONFIG_CAN_TSCAN1=m
CONFIG_CAN_SOFTING=m
CONFIG_CAN_SOFTING_CS=m
#
# CAN SPI interfaces
#
CONFIG_CAN_MCP251X=m
#
# CAN USB interfaces
#
CONFIG_CAN_EMS_USB=m
CONFIG_CAN_ESD_USB2=m
CONFIG_CAN_GS_USB=m
CONFIG_CAN_KVASER_USB=m
CONFIG_CAN_PEAK_USB=m
CONFIG_CAN_8DEV_USB=m
# CONFIG_CAN_DEBUG_DEVICES is not set
CONFIG_IRDA=m
#
# IrDA protocols
#
CONFIG_IRLAN=m
CONFIG_IRNET=m
CONFIG_IRCOMM=m
CONFIG_IRDA_ULTRA=y
#
# IrDA options
#
CONFIG_IRDA_CACHE_LAST_LSAP=y
CONFIG_IRDA_FAST_RR=y
# CONFIG_IRDA_DEBUG is not set
#
# Infrared-port device drivers
#
#
# SIR device drivers
#
CONFIG_IRTTY_SIR=m
#
# Dongle support
#
CONFIG_DONGLE=y
CONFIG_ESI_DONGLE=m
CONFIG_ACTISYS_DONGLE=m
CONFIG_TEKRAM_DONGLE=m
CONFIG_TOIM3232_DONGLE=m
CONFIG_LITELINK_DONGLE=m
CONFIG_MA600_DONGLE=m
CONFIG_GIRBIL_DONGLE=m
CONFIG_MCP2120_DONGLE=m
CONFIG_OLD_BELKIN_DONGLE=m
CONFIG_ACT200L_DONGLE=m
CONFIG_KINGSUN_DONGLE=m
CONFIG_KSDAZZLE_DONGLE=m
CONFIG_KS959_DONGLE=m
#
# FIR device drivers
#
CONFIG_USB_IRDA=m
CONFIG_SIGMATEL_FIR=m
CONFIG_NSC_FIR=m
CONFIG_WINBOND_FIR=m
CONFIG_TOSHIBA_FIR=m
CONFIG_SMC_IRCC_FIR=m
CONFIG_ALI_FIR=m
CONFIG_VLSI_FIR=m
CONFIG_VIA_FIR=m
CONFIG_MCS_FIR=m
CONFIG_BT=m
CONFIG_BT_BREDR=y
CONFIG_BT_RFCOMM=m
CONFIG_BT_RFCOMM_TTY=y
CONFIG_BT_BNEP=m
CONFIG_BT_BNEP_MC_FILTER=y
CONFIG_BT_BNEP_PROTO_FILTER=y
CONFIG_BT_CMTP=m
CONFIG_BT_HIDP=m
CONFIG_BT_HS=y
CONFIG_BT_LE=y
CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN=m
# CONFIG_BT_LEDS is not set
# CONFIG_BT_SELFTEST is not set
CONFIG_BT_DEBUGFS=y
#
# Bluetooth device drivers
#
CONFIG_BT_INTEL=m
CONFIG_BT_BCM=m
CONFIG_BT_RTL=m
CONFIG_BT_QCA=m
CONFIG_BT_HCIBTUSB=m
CONFIG_BT_HCIBTUSB_BCM=y
CONFIG_BT_HCIBTUSB_RTL=y
CONFIG_BT_HCIBTSDIO=m
CONFIG_BT_HCIUART=m
CONFIG_BT_HCIUART_H4=y
CONFIG_BT_HCIUART_BCSP=y
CONFIG_BT_HCIUART_ATH3K=y
CONFIG_BT_HCIUART_LL=y
CONFIG_BT_HCIUART_3WIRE=y
CONFIG_BT_HCIUART_INTEL=y
CONFIG_BT_HCIUART_BCM=y
CONFIG_BT_HCIUART_QCA=y
CONFIG_BT_HCIUART_AG6XX=y
CONFIG_BT_HCIUART_MRVL=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_BT_HCIBCM203X=m
CONFIG_BT_HCIBPA10X=m
CONFIG_BT_HCIBFUSB=m
CONFIG_BT_HCIDTL1=m
CONFIG_BT_HCIBT3C=m
CONFIG_BT_HCIBLUECARD=m
CONFIG_BT_HCIBTUART=m
CONFIG_BT_HCIVHCI=m
CONFIG_BT_MRVL=m
CONFIG_BT_MRVL_SDIO=m
CONFIG_BT_ATH3K=m
CONFIG_BT_WILINK=m
CONFIG_AF_RXRPC=m
CONFIG_AF_RXRPC_IPV6=y
# CONFIG_AF_RXRPC_INJECT_LOSS is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_AF_RXRPC_DEBUG is not set
# CONFIG_RXKAD is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_AF_KCM=m
CONFIG_STREAM_PARSER=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_FIB_RULES=y
CONFIG_WIRELESS=y
CONFIG_WIRELESS_EXT=y
CONFIG_WEXT_CORE=y
CONFIG_WEXT_PROC=y
CONFIG_WEXT_SPY=y
CONFIG_WEXT_PRIV=y
CONFIG_CFG80211=m
# CONFIG_NL80211_TESTMODE is not set
# CONFIG_CFG80211_DEVELOPER_WARNINGS is not set
# CONFIG_CFG80211_CERTIFICATION_ONUS is not set
CONFIG_CFG80211_DEFAULT_PS=y
# CONFIG_CFG80211_DEBUGFS is not set
# CONFIG_CFG80211_INTERNAL_REGDB is not set
CONFIG_CFG80211_CRDA_SUPPORT=y
CONFIG_CFG80211_WEXT=y
CONFIG_CFG80211_WEXT_EXPORT=y
CONFIG_LIB80211=m
CONFIG_LIB80211_CRYPT_WEP=m
CONFIG_LIB80211_CRYPT_CCMP=m
CONFIG_LIB80211_CRYPT_TKIP=m
# CONFIG_LIB80211_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_MAC80211=m
CONFIG_MAC80211_HAS_RC=y
CONFIG_MAC80211_RC_MINSTREL=y
CONFIG_MAC80211_RC_MINSTREL_HT=y
CONFIG_MAC80211_RC_MINSTREL_VHT=y
CONFIG_MAC80211_RC_DEFAULT_MINSTREL=y
CONFIG_MAC80211_RC_DEFAULT="minstrel_ht"
CONFIG_MAC80211_MESH=y
CONFIG_MAC80211_LEDS=y
# CONFIG_MAC80211_DEBUGFS is not set
# CONFIG_MAC80211_MESSAGE_TRACING is not set
# CONFIG_MAC80211_DEBUG_MENU is not set
CONFIG_MAC80211_STA_HASH_MAX_SIZE=0
CONFIG_WIMAX=m
CONFIG_WIMAX_DEBUG_LEVEL=8
CONFIG_RFKILL=m
CONFIG_RFKILL_LEDS=y
CONFIG_RFKILL_INPUT=y
CONFIG_RFKILL_GPIO=m
CONFIG_NET_9P=m
CONFIG_NET_9P_VIRTIO=m
# CONFIG_NET_9P_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_CAIF=m
# CONFIG_CAIF_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_CAIF_NETDEV=m
CONFIG_CAIF_USB=m
CONFIG_CEPH_LIB=m
# CONFIG_CEPH_LIB_PRETTYDEBUG is not set
# CONFIG_CEPH_LIB_USE_DNS_RESOLVER is not set
CONFIG_NFC=m
CONFIG_NFC_DIGITAL=m
CONFIG_NFC_NCI=m
CONFIG_NFC_NCI_SPI=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NFC_NCI_UART=m
CONFIG_NFC_HCI=m
CONFIG_NFC_SHDLC=y
#
# Near Field Communication (NFC) devices
#
CONFIG_NFC_WILINK=m
CONFIG_NFC_TRF7970A=m
CONFIG_NFC_MEI_PHY=m
CONFIG_NFC_SIM=m
CONFIG_NFC_PORT100=m
CONFIG_NFC_FDP=m
CONFIG_NFC_FDP_I2C=m
CONFIG_NFC_PN544=m
CONFIG_NFC_PN544_I2C=m
CONFIG_NFC_PN544_MEI=m
CONFIG_NFC_PN533=m
CONFIG_NFC_PN533_USB=m
CONFIG_NFC_PN533_I2C=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NFC_MICROREAD=m
CONFIG_NFC_MICROREAD_I2C=m
CONFIG_NFC_MICROREAD_MEI=m
CONFIG_NFC_MRVL=m
CONFIG_NFC_MRVL_USB=m
CONFIG_NFC_MRVL_UART=m
CONFIG_NFC_MRVL_I2C=m
CONFIG_NFC_MRVL_SPI=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NFC_ST21NFCA=m
CONFIG_NFC_ST21NFCA_I2C=m
CONFIG_NFC_ST_NCI=m
CONFIG_NFC_ST_NCI_I2C=m
CONFIG_NFC_ST_NCI_SPI=m
CONFIG_NFC_NXP_NCI=m
CONFIG_NFC_NXP_NCI_I2C=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NFC_S3FWRN5=m
CONFIG_NFC_S3FWRN5_I2C=m
CONFIG_NFC_ST95HF=m
CONFIG_LWTUNNEL=y
CONFIG_LWTUNNEL_BPF=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_DST_CACHE=y
CONFIG_NET_DEVLINK=m
CONFIG_MAY_USE_DEVLINK=m
#
# Device Drivers
#
#
# Generic Driver Options
#
# CONFIG_UEVENT_HELPER is not set
CONFIG_DEVTMPFS=y
# CONFIG_DEVTMPFS_MOUNT is not set
# CONFIG_STANDALONE is not set
CONFIG_PREVENT_FIRMWARE_BUILD=y
CONFIG_FW_LOADER=y
CONFIG_FIRMWARE_IN_KERNEL=y
CONFIG_EXTRA_FIRMWARE=""
CONFIG_FW_LOADER_USER_HELPER=y
# CONFIG_FW_LOADER_USER_HELPER_FALLBACK is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_WANT_DEV_COREDUMP=y
CONFIG_ALLOW_DEV_COREDUMP=y
CONFIG_DEV_COREDUMP=y
# CONFIG_DEBUG_DRIVER is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_DEVRES is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_TEST_DRIVER_REMOVE is not set
# CONFIG_TEST_ASYNC_DRIVER_PROBE is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_SYS_HYPERVISOR is not set
# CONFIG_GENERIC_CPU_DEVICES is not set
CONFIG_GENERIC_CPU_AUTOPROBE=y
CONFIG_REGMAP=y
CONFIG_REGMAP_I2C=y
CONFIG_REGMAP_SPI=y
CONFIG_REGMAP_SPMI=m
CONFIG_REGMAP_MMIO=y
CONFIG_REGMAP_IRQ=y
CONFIG_DMA_SHARED_BUFFER=y
# CONFIG_DMA_FENCE_TRACE is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_DMA_CMA is not set
#
# Bus devices
#
CONFIG_CONNECTOR=m
CONFIG_MTD=m
CONFIG_MTD_TESTS=m
CONFIG_MTD_REDBOOT_PARTS=m
CONFIG_MTD_REDBOOT_DIRECTORY_BLOCK=-1
# CONFIG_MTD_REDBOOT_PARTS_UNALLOCATED is not set
# CONFIG_MTD_REDBOOT_PARTS_READONLY is not set
# CONFIG_MTD_CMDLINE_PARTS is not set
CONFIG_MTD_AR7_PARTS=m
#
# User Modules And Translation Layers
#
CONFIG_MTD_BLKDEVS=m
CONFIG_MTD_BLOCK=m
CONFIG_MTD_BLOCK_RO=m
CONFIG_FTL=m
CONFIG_NFTL=m
# CONFIG_NFTL_RW is not set
CONFIG_INFTL=m
CONFIG_RFD_FTL=m
CONFIG_SSFDC=m
CONFIG_SM_FTL=m
CONFIG_MTD_OOPS=m
CONFIG_MTD_SWAP=m
# CONFIG_MTD_PARTITIONED_MASTER is not set
#
# RAM/ROM/Flash chip drivers
#
CONFIG_MTD_CFI=m
CONFIG_MTD_JEDECPROBE=m
CONFIG_MTD_GEN_PROBE=m
# CONFIG_MTD_CFI_ADV_OPTIONS is not set
CONFIG_MTD_MAP_BANK_WIDTH_1=y
CONFIG_MTD_MAP_BANK_WIDTH_2=y
CONFIG_MTD_MAP_BANK_WIDTH_4=y
# CONFIG_MTD_MAP_BANK_WIDTH_8 is not set
# CONFIG_MTD_MAP_BANK_WIDTH_16 is not set
# CONFIG_MTD_MAP_BANK_WIDTH_32 is not set
CONFIG_MTD_CFI_I1=y
CONFIG_MTD_CFI_I2=y
# CONFIG_MTD_CFI_I4 is not set
# CONFIG_MTD_CFI_I8 is not set
CONFIG_MTD_CFI_INTELEXT=m
CONFIG_MTD_CFI_AMDSTD=m
CONFIG_MTD_CFI_STAA=m
CONFIG_MTD_CFI_UTIL=m
CONFIG_MTD_RAM=m
CONFIG_MTD_ROM=m
CONFIG_MTD_ABSENT=m
#
# Mapping drivers for chip access
#
# CONFIG_MTD_COMPLEX_MAPPINGS is not set
# CONFIG_MTD_PHYSMAP is not set
CONFIG_MTD_SCx200_DOCFLASH=m
CONFIG_MTD_AMD76XROM=m
CONFIG_MTD_ICHXROM=m
CONFIG_MTD_ESB2ROM=m
CONFIG_MTD_CK804XROM=m
CONFIG_MTD_SCB2_FLASH=m
CONFIG_MTD_NETtel=m
CONFIG_MTD_L440GX=m
CONFIG_MTD_INTEL_VR_NOR=m
# CONFIG_MTD_PLATRAM is not set
#
# Self-contained MTD device drivers
#
CONFIG_MTD_PMC551=m
# CONFIG_MTD_PMC551_BUGFIX is not set
# CONFIG_MTD_PMC551_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_MTD_DATAFLASH=m
# CONFIG_MTD_DATAFLASH_WRITE_VERIFY is not set
# CONFIG_MTD_DATAFLASH_OTP is not set
CONFIG_MTD_M25P80=m
CONFIG_MTD_SST25L=m
CONFIG_MTD_SLRAM=m
CONFIG_MTD_PHRAM=m
CONFIG_MTD_MTDRAM=m
CONFIG_MTDRAM_TOTAL_SIZE=4096
CONFIG_MTDRAM_ERASE_SIZE=128
CONFIG_MTD_BLOCK2MTD=m
#
# Disk-On-Chip Device Drivers
#
CONFIG_MTD_DOCG3=m
CONFIG_BCH_CONST_M=14
CONFIG_BCH_CONST_T=4
CONFIG_MTD_NAND_ECC=m
# CONFIG_MTD_NAND_ECC_SMC is not set
CONFIG_MTD_NAND=m
CONFIG_MTD_NAND_BCH=m
CONFIG_MTD_NAND_ECC_BCH=y
CONFIG_MTD_SM_COMMON=m
CONFIG_MTD_NAND_DENALI=m
CONFIG_MTD_NAND_DENALI_PCI=m
CONFIG_MTD_NAND_DENALI_SCRATCH_REG_ADDR=0xFF108018
CONFIG_MTD_NAND_GPIO=m
# CONFIG_MTD_NAND_OMAP_BCH_BUILD is not set
CONFIG_MTD_NAND_IDS=m
CONFIG_MTD_NAND_RICOH=m
CONFIG_MTD_NAND_DISKONCHIP=m
# CONFIG_MTD_NAND_DISKONCHIP_PROBE_ADVANCED is not set
CONFIG_MTD_NAND_DISKONCHIP_PROBE_ADDRESS=0
# CONFIG_MTD_NAND_DISKONCHIP_BBTWRITE is not set
CONFIG_MTD_NAND_DOCG4=m
CONFIG_MTD_NAND_CAFE=m
CONFIG_MTD_NAND_CS553X=m
CONFIG_MTD_NAND_NANDSIM=m
CONFIG_MTD_NAND_PLATFORM=m
CONFIG_MTD_NAND_OXNAS=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MTD_NAND_HISI504=m
CONFIG_MTD_NAND_MTK=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MTD_ONENAND=m
CONFIG_MTD_ONENAND_VERIFY_WRITE=y
CONFIG_MTD_ONENAND_GENERIC=m
# CONFIG_MTD_ONENAND_OTP is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MTD_ONENAND_2X_PROGRAM=y
#
# LPDDR & LPDDR2 PCM memory drivers
#
CONFIG_MTD_LPDDR=m
CONFIG_MTD_QINFO_PROBE=m
CONFIG_MTD_SPI_NOR=m
CONFIG_MTD_MT81xx_NOR=m
CONFIG_MTD_SPI_NOR_USE_4K_SECTORS=y
CONFIG_MTD_UBI=m
CONFIG_MTD_UBI_WL_THRESHOLD=4096
CONFIG_MTD_UBI_BEB_LIMIT=20
# CONFIG_MTD_UBI_FASTMAP is not set
# CONFIG_MTD_UBI_GLUEBI is not set
# CONFIG_MTD_UBI_BLOCK is not set
# CONFIG_OF is not set
CONFIG_PARPORT=m
CONFIG_PARPORT_PC=m
CONFIG_PARPORT_SERIAL=m
CONFIG_PARPORT_PC_FIFO=y
# CONFIG_PARPORT_PC_SUPERIO is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_PARPORT_PC_PCMCIA=m
# CONFIG_PARPORT_GSC is not set
CONFIG_PARPORT_AX88796=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_PARPORT_1284=y
CONFIG_PARPORT_NOT_PC=y
CONFIG_PNP=y
# CONFIG_PNP_DEBUG_MESSAGES is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Protocols
#
CONFIG_ISAPNP=y
CONFIG_PNPBIOS=y
CONFIG_PNPBIOS_PROC_FS=y
CONFIG_PNPACPI=y
CONFIG_BLK_DEV=y
# CONFIG_BLK_DEV_NULL_BLK is not set
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_FD=m
CONFIG_PARIDE=m
#
# Parallel IDE high-level drivers
#
CONFIG_PARIDE_PD=m
CONFIG_PARIDE_PCD=m
CONFIG_PARIDE_PF=m
CONFIG_PARIDE_PT=m
CONFIG_PARIDE_PG=m
#
# Parallel IDE protocol modules
#
CONFIG_PARIDE_ATEN=m
CONFIG_PARIDE_BPCK=m
CONFIG_PARIDE_BPCK6=m
CONFIG_PARIDE_COMM=m
CONFIG_PARIDE_DSTR=m
CONFIG_PARIDE_FIT2=m
CONFIG_PARIDE_FIT3=m
CONFIG_PARIDE_EPAT=m
CONFIG_PARIDE_EPATC8=y
CONFIG_PARIDE_EPIA=m
CONFIG_PARIDE_FRIQ=m
CONFIG_PARIDE_FRPW=m
CONFIG_PARIDE_KBIC=m
CONFIG_PARIDE_KTTI=m
CONFIG_PARIDE_ON20=m
CONFIG_PARIDE_ON26=m
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_PCIESSD_MTIP32XX=m
CONFIG_ZRAM=m
CONFIG_BLK_CPQ_CISS_DA=m
CONFIG_CISS_SCSI_TAPE=y
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_DAC960=m
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_UMEM=m
# CONFIG_BLK_DEV_COW_COMMON is not set
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_LOOP=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_LOOP_MIN_COUNT=8
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_CRYPTOLOOP=m
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_NBD=m
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_OSD=m
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_SX8=m
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_RAM=y
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_RAM_COUNT=16
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_RAM_SIZE=65536
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_RAM_DAX=y
CONFIG_CDROM_PKTCDVD=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CDROM_PKTCDVD_BUFFERS=8
# CONFIG_CDROM_PKTCDVD_WCACHE is not set
CONFIG_ATA_OVER_ETH=m
CONFIG_VIRTIO_BLK=m
# CONFIG_BLK_DEV_HD is not set
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_RBD=m
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_RSXX=m
CONFIG_NVME_CORE=m
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_NVME=m
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_NVME_SCSI=y
CONFIG_NVME_FABRICS=m
CONFIG_NVME_FC=m
CONFIG_NVME_TARGET_FC=m
# CONFIG_NVME_TARGET_FCLOOP is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Misc devices
#
CONFIG_SENSORS_LIS3LV02D=m
# CONFIG_AD525X_DPOT is not set
CONFIG_DUMMY_IRQ=m
CONFIG_IBM_ASM=m
CONFIG_PHANTOM=m
CONFIG_SGI_IOC4=m
CONFIG_TIFM_CORE=m
CONFIG_TIFM_7XX1=m
CONFIG_ICS932S401=m
CONFIG_ENCLOSURE_SERVICES=m
CONFIG_CS5535_MFGPT=m
CONFIG_CS5535_MFGPT_DEFAULT_IRQ=7
CONFIG_CS5535_CLOCK_EVENT_SRC=m
CONFIG_HP_ILO=m
CONFIG_APDS9802ALS=m
# CONFIG_ISL29003 is not set
CONFIG_ISL29020=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_TSL2550=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_BH1770=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_APDS990X=m
CONFIG_HMC6352=m
CONFIG_DS1682=m
CONFIG_TI_DAC7512=m
CONFIG_VMWARE_BALLOON=m
CONFIG_PCH_PHUB=m
CONFIG_USB_SWITCH_FSA9480=m
CONFIG_LATTICE_ECP3_CONFIG=m
CONFIG_SRAM=y
CONFIG_PANEL=m
CONFIG_PANEL_PARPORT=0
CONFIG_PANEL_PROFILE=5
# CONFIG_PANEL_CHANGE_MESSAGE is not set
CONFIG_C2PORT=m
CONFIG_C2PORT_DURAMAR_2150=m
#
# EEPROM support
#
# CONFIG_EEPROM_AT24 is not set
CONFIG_EEPROM_AT25=m
CONFIG_EEPROM_LEGACY=m
CONFIG_EEPROM_MAX6875=m
CONFIG_EEPROM_93CX6=m
CONFIG_EEPROM_93XX46=m
CONFIG_CB710_CORE=m
# CONFIG_CB710_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_CB710_DEBUG_ASSUMPTIONS=y
#
# Texas Instruments shared transport line discipline
#
CONFIG_TI_ST=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LIS3_I2C=m
#
# Altera FPGA firmware download module
#
CONFIG_ALTERA_STAPL=m
CONFIG_INTEL_MEI=m
CONFIG_INTEL_MEI_ME=m
CONFIG_INTEL_MEI_TXE=m
CONFIG_VMWARE_VMCI=m
#
# Intel MIC Bus Driver
#
#
# SCIF Bus Driver
#
#
# VOP Bus Driver
#
#
# Intel MIC Host Driver
#
#
# Intel MIC Card Driver
#
#
# SCIF Driver
#
#
# Intel MIC Coprocessor State Management (COSM) Drivers
#
#
# VOP Driver
#
CONFIG_VHOST_RING=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_ECHO=m
# CONFIG_CXL_BASE is not set
# CONFIG_CXL_AFU_DRIVER_OPS is not set
CONFIG_HAVE_IDE=y
# CONFIG_IDE is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# SCSI device support
#
CONFIG_SCSI_MOD=y
CONFIG_RAID_ATTRS=m
CONFIG_SCSI=y
CONFIG_SCSI_DMA=y
CONFIG_SCSI_NETLINK=y
# CONFIG_SCSI_MQ_DEFAULT is not set
CONFIG_SCSI_PROC_FS=y
#
# SCSI support type (disk, tape, CD-ROM)
#
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_SD=y
CONFIG_CHR_DEV_ST=m
CONFIG_CHR_DEV_OSST=m
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_SR=y
# CONFIG_BLK_DEV_SR_VENDOR is not set
CONFIG_CHR_DEV_SG=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CHR_DEV_SCH=m
CONFIG_SCSI_ENCLOSURE=m
CONFIG_SCSI_CONSTANTS=y
CONFIG_SCSI_LOGGING=y
CONFIG_SCSI_SCAN_ASYNC=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# SCSI Transports
#
CONFIG_SCSI_SPI_ATTRS=m
CONFIG_SCSI_FC_ATTRS=m
CONFIG_SCSI_ISCSI_ATTRS=m
CONFIG_SCSI_SAS_ATTRS=m
CONFIG_SCSI_SAS_LIBSAS=m
CONFIG_SCSI_SAS_ATA=y
CONFIG_SCSI_SAS_HOST_SMP=y
CONFIG_SCSI_SRP_ATTRS=m
CONFIG_SCSI_LOWLEVEL=y
CONFIG_ISCSI_TCP=m
CONFIG_ISCSI_BOOT_SYSFS=m
CONFIG_SCSI_CXGB3_ISCSI=m
CONFIG_SCSI_CXGB4_ISCSI=m
CONFIG_SCSI_BNX2_ISCSI=m
CONFIG_SCSI_BNX2X_FCOE=m
CONFIG_BE2ISCSI=m
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_3W_XXXX_RAID=m
CONFIG_SCSI_HPSA=m
CONFIG_SCSI_3W_9XXX=m
CONFIG_SCSI_3W_SAS=m
CONFIG_SCSI_ACARD=m
CONFIG_SCSI_AHA152X=m
CONFIG_SCSI_AHA1542=m
CONFIG_SCSI_AHA1740=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SCSI_AACRAID=m
CONFIG_SCSI_AIC7XXX=m
CONFIG_AIC7XXX_CMDS_PER_DEVICE=253
CONFIG_AIC7XXX_RESET_DELAY_MS=15000
# CONFIG_AIC7XXX_DEBUG_ENABLE is not set
CONFIG_AIC7XXX_DEBUG_MASK=0
CONFIG_AIC7XXX_REG_PRETTY_PRINT=y
CONFIG_SCSI_AIC79XX=m
CONFIG_AIC79XX_CMDS_PER_DEVICE=32
CONFIG_AIC79XX_RESET_DELAY_MS=15000
# CONFIG_AIC79XX_DEBUG_ENABLE is not set
CONFIG_AIC79XX_DEBUG_MASK=0
CONFIG_AIC79XX_REG_PRETTY_PRINT=y
CONFIG_SCSI_AIC94XX=m
# CONFIG_AIC94XX_DEBUG is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SCSI_MVSAS=m
# CONFIG_SCSI_MVSAS_DEBUG is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_SCSI_MVSAS_TASKLET is not set
CONFIG_SCSI_MVUMI=m
CONFIG_SCSI_DPT_I2O=m
CONFIG_SCSI_ADVANSYS=m
CONFIG_SCSI_ARCMSR=m
CONFIG_SCSI_ESAS2R=m
CONFIG_MEGARAID_NEWGEN=y
CONFIG_MEGARAID_MM=m
CONFIG_MEGARAID_MAILBOX=m
CONFIG_MEGARAID_LEGACY=m
CONFIG_MEGARAID_SAS=m
CONFIG_SCSI_MPT3SAS=m
CONFIG_SCSI_MPT2SAS_MAX_SGE=128
CONFIG_SCSI_MPT3SAS_MAX_SGE=128
CONFIG_SCSI_MPT2SAS=m
CONFIG_SCSI_SMARTPQI=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SCSI_UFSHCD=m
CONFIG_SCSI_UFSHCD_PCI=m
CONFIG_SCSI_UFS_DWC_TC_PCI=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SCSI_UFSHCD_PLATFORM=m
CONFIG_SCSI_UFS_DWC_TC_PLATFORM=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SCSI_HPTIOP=m
CONFIG_SCSI_BUSLOGIC=m
CONFIG_SCSI_FLASHPOINT=y
CONFIG_VMWARE_PVSCSI=m
CONFIG_HYPERV_STORAGE=m
CONFIG_LIBFC=m
CONFIG_LIBFCOE=m
CONFIG_FCOE=m
CONFIG_FCOE_FNIC=m
CONFIG_SCSI_SNIC=m
# CONFIG_SCSI_SNIC_DEBUG_FS is not set
CONFIG_SCSI_DMX3191D=m
CONFIG_SCSI_EATA=m
CONFIG_SCSI_EATA_TAGGED_QUEUE=y
CONFIG_SCSI_EATA_LINKED_COMMANDS=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SCSI_EATA_MAX_TAGS=16
CONFIG_SCSI_FUTURE_DOMAIN=m
CONFIG_SCSI_GDTH=m
CONFIG_SCSI_ISCI=m
CONFIG_SCSI_GENERIC_NCR5380=m
CONFIG_SCSI_IPS=m
CONFIG_SCSI_INITIO=m
CONFIG_SCSI_INIA100=m
CONFIG_SCSI_PPA=m
CONFIG_SCSI_IMM=m
# CONFIG_SCSI_IZIP_EPP16 is not set
# CONFIG_SCSI_IZIP_SLOW_CTR is not set
CONFIG_SCSI_NCR53C406A=m
CONFIG_SCSI_STEX=m
CONFIG_SCSI_SYM53C8XX_2=m
CONFIG_SCSI_SYM53C8XX_DMA_ADDRESSING_MODE=1
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SCSI_SYM53C8XX_DEFAULT_TAGS=16
CONFIG_SCSI_SYM53C8XX_MAX_TAGS=64
CONFIG_SCSI_SYM53C8XX_MMIO=y
CONFIG_SCSI_IPR=m
# CONFIG_SCSI_IPR_TRACE is not set
# CONFIG_SCSI_IPR_DUMP is not set
CONFIG_SCSI_QLOGIC_FAS=m
CONFIG_SCSI_QLOGIC_1280=m
CONFIG_SCSI_QLA_FC=m
CONFIG_TCM_QLA2XXX=m
# CONFIG_TCM_QLA2XXX_DEBUG is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SCSI_QLA_ISCSI=m
CONFIG_QEDI=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SCSI_LPFC=m
# CONFIG_SCSI_LPFC_DEBUG_FS is not set
CONFIG_SCSI_SIM710=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SCSI_SYM53C416=m
CONFIG_SCSI_DC395x=m
CONFIG_SCSI_AM53C974=m
CONFIG_SCSI_NSP32=m
CONFIG_SCSI_WD719X=m
CONFIG_SCSI_DEBUG=m
CONFIG_SCSI_PMCRAID=m
CONFIG_SCSI_PM8001=m
CONFIG_SCSI_BFA_FC=m
CONFIG_SCSI_VIRTIO=m
CONFIG_SCSI_CHELSIO_FCOE=m
CONFIG_SCSI_LOWLEVEL_PCMCIA=y
CONFIG_PCMCIA_AHA152X=m
CONFIG_PCMCIA_FDOMAIN=m
CONFIG_PCMCIA_NINJA_SCSI=m
CONFIG_PCMCIA_QLOGIC=m
CONFIG_PCMCIA_SYM53C500=m
CONFIG_SCSI_DH=y
CONFIG_SCSI_DH_RDAC=m
CONFIG_SCSI_DH_HP_SW=m
CONFIG_SCSI_DH_EMC=m
CONFIG_SCSI_DH_ALUA=m
CONFIG_SCSI_OSD_INITIATOR=m
CONFIG_SCSI_OSD_ULD=m
CONFIG_SCSI_OSD_DPRINT_SENSE=1
# CONFIG_SCSI_OSD_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_ATA=y
# CONFIG_ATA_NONSTANDARD is not set
CONFIG_ATA_VERBOSE_ERROR=y
CONFIG_ATA_ACPI=y
CONFIG_SATA_ZPODD=y
CONFIG_SATA_PMP=y
#
# Controllers with non-SFF native interface
#
CONFIG_SATA_AHCI=y
CONFIG_SATA_AHCI_PLATFORM=y
CONFIG_SATA_INIC162X=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SATA_ACARD_AHCI=m
CONFIG_SATA_SIL24=m
CONFIG_ATA_SFF=y
#
# SFF controllers with custom DMA interface
#
CONFIG_PDC_ADMA=m
CONFIG_SATA_QSTOR=m
CONFIG_SATA_SX4=m
CONFIG_ATA_BMDMA=y
#
# SATA SFF controllers with BMDMA
#
CONFIG_ATA_PIIX=y
CONFIG_SATA_DWC=m
# CONFIG_SATA_DWC_OLD_DMA is not set
# CONFIG_SATA_DWC_DEBUG is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SATA_MV=m
CONFIG_SATA_NV=m
CONFIG_SATA_PROMISE=m
CONFIG_SATA_SIL=m
CONFIG_SATA_SIS=m
CONFIG_SATA_SVW=m
CONFIG_SATA_ULI=m
CONFIG_SATA_VIA=m
CONFIG_SATA_VITESSE=m
#
# PATA SFF controllers with BMDMA
#
CONFIG_PATA_ALI=m
CONFIG_PATA_AMD=m
CONFIG_PATA_ARTOP=m
CONFIG_PATA_ATIIXP=m
CONFIG_PATA_ATP867X=m
CONFIG_PATA_CMD64X=m
CONFIG_PATA_CS5520=m
CONFIG_PATA_CS5530=m
CONFIG_PATA_CS5535=m
CONFIG_PATA_CS5536=m
CONFIG_PATA_CYPRESS=m
CONFIG_PATA_EFAR=m
CONFIG_PATA_HPT366=m
CONFIG_PATA_HPT37X=m
CONFIG_PATA_HPT3X2N=m
CONFIG_PATA_HPT3X3=m
# CONFIG_PATA_HPT3X3_DMA is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_PATA_IT8213=m
CONFIG_PATA_IT821X=m
CONFIG_PATA_JMICRON=m
CONFIG_PATA_MARVELL=m
CONFIG_PATA_NETCELL=m
CONFIG_PATA_NINJA32=m
CONFIG_PATA_NS87415=m
CONFIG_PATA_OLDPIIX=m
CONFIG_PATA_OPTIDMA=m
CONFIG_PATA_PDC2027X=m
CONFIG_PATA_PDC_OLD=m
CONFIG_PATA_RADISYS=m
CONFIG_PATA_RDC=m
CONFIG_PATA_SC1200=m
CONFIG_PATA_SCH=m
CONFIG_PATA_SERVERWORKS=m
CONFIG_PATA_SIL680=m
CONFIG_PATA_SIS=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_PATA_TOSHIBA=m
CONFIG_PATA_TRIFLEX=m
CONFIG_PATA_VIA=m
CONFIG_PATA_WINBOND=m
#
# PIO-only SFF controllers
#
CONFIG_PATA_CMD640_PCI=m
CONFIG_PATA_ISAPNP=m
CONFIG_PATA_MPIIX=m
CONFIG_PATA_NS87410=m
CONFIG_PATA_OPTI=m
CONFIG_PATA_PCMCIA=m
CONFIG_PATA_PLATFORM=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_PATA_QDI=m
CONFIG_PATA_RZ1000=m
CONFIG_PATA_WINBOND_VLB=m
#
# Generic fallback / legacy drivers
#
CONFIG_PATA_ACPI=m
CONFIG_ATA_GENERIC=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_PATA_LEGACY=m
CONFIG_MD=y
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_MD=y
CONFIG_MD_AUTODETECT=y
CONFIG_MD_LINEAR=m
CONFIG_MD_RAID0=m
CONFIG_MD_RAID1=m
CONFIG_MD_RAID10=m
CONFIG_MD_RAID456=m
CONFIG_MD_MULTIPATH=m
# CONFIG_MD_FAULTY is not set
CONFIG_MD_CLUSTER=m
CONFIG_BCACHE=m
# CONFIG_BCACHE_DEBUG is not set
# CONFIG_BCACHE_CLOSURES_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_DM_BUILTIN=y
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_DM=y
# CONFIG_DM_MQ_DEFAULT is not set
# CONFIG_DM_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_DM_BUFIO=m
# CONFIG_DM_DEBUG_BLOCK_MANAGER_LOCKING is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_DM_BIO_PRISON=m
CONFIG_DM_PERSISTENT_DATA=m
CONFIG_DM_CRYPT=m
CONFIG_DM_SNAPSHOT=m
CONFIG_DM_THIN_PROVISIONING=m
CONFIG_DM_CACHE=m
CONFIG_DM_CACHE_SMQ=m
CONFIG_DM_CACHE_CLEANER=m
CONFIG_DM_ERA=m
CONFIG_DM_MIRROR=m
CONFIG_DM_LOG_USERSPACE=m
CONFIG_DM_RAID=m
CONFIG_DM_ZERO=m
CONFIG_DM_MULTIPATH=m
CONFIG_DM_MULTIPATH_QL=m
CONFIG_DM_MULTIPATH_ST=m
# CONFIG_DM_DELAY is not set
CONFIG_DM_UEVENT=y
CONFIG_DM_FLAKEY=m
CONFIG_DM_VERITY=m
# CONFIG_DM_VERITY_FEC is not set
CONFIG_DM_SWITCH=m
CONFIG_DM_LOG_WRITES=m
CONFIG_TARGET_CORE=m
CONFIG_TCM_IBLOCK=m
CONFIG_TCM_FILEIO=m
CONFIG_TCM_PSCSI=m
CONFIG_TCM_USER2=m
CONFIG_LOOPBACK_TARGET=m
CONFIG_TCM_FC=m
CONFIG_ISCSI_TARGET=m
CONFIG_ISCSI_TARGET_CXGB4=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SBP_TARGET=m
#
# IEEE 1394 (FireWire) support
#
CONFIG_FIREWIRE=m
CONFIG_FIREWIRE_OHCI=m
CONFIG_FIREWIRE_SBP2=m
CONFIG_FIREWIRE_NET=m
CONFIG_FIREWIRE_NOSY=m
CONFIG_MACINTOSH_DRIVERS=y
CONFIG_MAC_EMUMOUSEBTN=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NETDEVICES=y
CONFIG_MII=m
CONFIG_NET_CORE=y
CONFIG_BONDING=m
CONFIG_DUMMY=m
CONFIG_EQUALIZER=m
CONFIG_NET_FC=y
CONFIG_IFB=m
CONFIG_NET_TEAM=m
CONFIG_NET_TEAM_MODE_BROADCAST=m
CONFIG_NET_TEAM_MODE_ROUNDROBIN=m
CONFIG_NET_TEAM_MODE_RANDOM=m
CONFIG_NET_TEAM_MODE_ACTIVEBACKUP=m
CONFIG_NET_TEAM_MODE_LOADBALANCE=m
CONFIG_MACVLAN=m
CONFIG_MACVTAP=m
CONFIG_IPVLAN=m
CONFIG_VXLAN=m
CONFIG_GENEVE=m
CONFIG_GTP=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MACSEC=m
CONFIG_NETCONSOLE=m
CONFIG_NETCONSOLE_DYNAMIC=y
CONFIG_NETPOLL=y
CONFIG_NET_POLL_CONTROLLER=y
CONFIG_NTB_NETDEV=m
CONFIG_RIONET=m
CONFIG_RIONET_TX_SIZE=128
CONFIG_RIONET_RX_SIZE=128
CONFIG_TUN=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_TUN_VNET_CROSS_LE is not set
CONFIG_VETH=m
CONFIG_VIRTIO_NET=m
CONFIG_NLMON=m
CONFIG_NET_VRF=m
CONFIG_SUNGEM_PHY=m
#
# CAIF transport drivers
#
CONFIG_CAIF_TTY=m
CONFIG_CAIF_SPI_SLAVE=m
# CONFIG_CAIF_SPI_SYNC is not set
CONFIG_CAIF_HSI=m
CONFIG_CAIF_VIRTIO=m
#
# Distributed Switch Architecture drivers
#
CONFIG_NET_DSA_MV88E6060=m
CONFIG_NET_DSA_BCM_SF2=m
CONFIG_B53=m
CONFIG_B53_SPI_DRIVER=m
CONFIG_B53_MDIO_DRIVER=m
CONFIG_B53_MMAP_DRIVER=m
CONFIG_B53_SRAB_DRIVER=m
CONFIG_NET_DSA_MV88E6XXX=m
CONFIG_NET_DSA_MV88E6XXX_GLOBAL2=y
CONFIG_NET_DSA_QCA8K=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_ETHERNET=y
CONFIG_MDIO=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_3COM=y
CONFIG_EL3=m
CONFIG_3C515=m
CONFIG_PCMCIA_3C574=m
CONFIG_PCMCIA_3C589=m
CONFIG_VORTEX=m
CONFIG_TYPHOON=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_ADAPTEC=y
CONFIG_ADAPTEC_STARFIRE=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_AGERE=y
CONFIG_ET131X=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_ALACRITECH=y
CONFIG_SLICOSS=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_ALTEON=y
CONFIG_ACENIC=m
# CONFIG_ACENIC_OMIT_TIGON_I is not set
CONFIG_ALTERA_TSE=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_AMAZON=y
CONFIG_ENA_ETHERNET=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_AMD=y
CONFIG_AMD8111_ETH=m
CONFIG_LANCE=m
CONFIG_PCNET32=m
CONFIG_PCMCIA_NMCLAN=m
CONFIG_NI65=m
CONFIG_AMD_XGBE=m
CONFIG_AMD_XGBE_DCB=y
CONFIG_AMD_XGBE_HAVE_ECC=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_ARC=y
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_ATHEROS=y
CONFIG_ATL2=m
CONFIG_ATL1=m
CONFIG_ATL1E=m
CONFIG_ATL1C=m
CONFIG_ALX=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_AURORA=y
CONFIG_AURORA_NB8800=m
CONFIG_NET_CADENCE=y
# CONFIG_MACB is not set
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_BROADCOM=y
CONFIG_B44=m
CONFIG_B44_PCI_AUTOSELECT=y
CONFIG_B44_PCICORE_AUTOSELECT=y
CONFIG_B44_PCI=y
CONFIG_BCMGENET=m
CONFIG_BNX2=m
CONFIG_CNIC=m
CONFIG_TIGON3=m
CONFIG_BNX2X=m
CONFIG_BNX2X_SRIOV=y
CONFIG_BNXT=m
CONFIG_BNXT_SRIOV=y
CONFIG_BNXT_DCB=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_BROCADE=y
CONFIG_BNA=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_CAVIUM=y
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_CHELSIO=y
CONFIG_CHELSIO_T1=m
CONFIG_CHELSIO_T1_1G=y
CONFIG_CHELSIO_T3=m
CONFIG_CHELSIO_T4=m
CONFIG_CHELSIO_T4_DCB=y
CONFIG_CHELSIO_T4_FCOE=y
CONFIG_CHELSIO_T4VF=m
CONFIG_CHELSIO_LIB=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_CIRRUS=y
CONFIG_CS89x0=m
# CONFIG_CS89x0_PLATFORM is not set
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_CISCO=y
CONFIG_ENIC=m
CONFIG_CX_ECAT=m
# CONFIG_DNET is not set
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_DEC=y
CONFIG_NET_TULIP=y
CONFIG_DE2104X=m
CONFIG_DE2104X_DSL=0
CONFIG_TULIP=m
# CONFIG_TULIP_MWI is not set
# CONFIG_TULIP_MMIO is not set
# CONFIG_TULIP_NAPI is not set
CONFIG_DE4X5=m
CONFIG_WINBOND_840=m
CONFIG_DM9102=m
CONFIG_ULI526X=m
CONFIG_PCMCIA_XIRCOM=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_DLINK=y
CONFIG_DL2K=m
CONFIG_SUNDANCE=m
# CONFIG_SUNDANCE_MMIO is not set
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_EMULEX=y
CONFIG_BE2NET=m
CONFIG_BE2NET_HWMON=y
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_EZCHIP=y
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_EXAR=y
CONFIG_S2IO=m
CONFIG_VXGE=m
# CONFIG_VXGE_DEBUG_TRACE_ALL is not set
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_FUJITSU=y
CONFIG_PCMCIA_FMVJ18X=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_HP=y
CONFIG_HP100=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_INTEL=y
CONFIG_E100=m
CONFIG_E1000=m
CONFIG_E1000E=m
CONFIG_E1000E_HWTS=y
CONFIG_IGB=m
CONFIG_IGB_HWMON=y
CONFIG_IGBVF=m
CONFIG_IXGB=m
CONFIG_IXGBE=m
CONFIG_IXGBE_HWMON=y
CONFIG_IXGBE_DCB=y
CONFIG_IXGBEVF=m
CONFIG_I40E=m
CONFIG_I40E_DCB=y
CONFIG_I40E_FCOE=y
CONFIG_I40EVF=m
CONFIG_FM10K=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_I825XX=y
CONFIG_JME=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_MARVELL=y
CONFIG_MVMDIO=m
# CONFIG_MVNETA_BM is not set
CONFIG_SKGE=m
# CONFIG_SKGE_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_SKGE_GENESIS=y
CONFIG_SKY2=m
# CONFIG_SKY2_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_MELLANOX=y
CONFIG_MLX4_EN=m
CONFIG_MLX4_EN_DCB=y
CONFIG_MLX4_CORE=m
# CONFIG_MLX4_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_MLX5_CORE=m
CONFIG_MLX5_CORE_EN=y
CONFIG_MLX5_CORE_EN_DCB=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MLXSW_CORE=m
CONFIG_MLXSW_CORE_HWMON=y
CONFIG_MLXSW_CORE_THERMAL=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MLXSW_PCI=m
CONFIG_MLXSW_I2C=m
CONFIG_MLXSW_SWITCHIB=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MLXSW_SWITCHX2=m
CONFIG_MLXSW_SPECTRUM=m
CONFIG_MLXSW_SPECTRUM_DCB=y
CONFIG_MLXSW_MINIMAL=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_MICREL=y
CONFIG_KS8842=m
CONFIG_KS8851=m
CONFIG_KS8851_MLL=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_KSZ884X_PCI=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_MICROCHIP=y
CONFIG_ENC28J60=m
# CONFIG_ENC28J60_WRITEVERIFY is not set
CONFIG_ENCX24J600=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_MYRI=y
CONFIG_MYRI10GE=m
CONFIG_FEALNX=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_NATSEMI=y
CONFIG_NATSEMI=m
CONFIG_NS83820=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_NETRONOME=y
CONFIG_NFP_NETVF=m
# CONFIG_NFP_NET_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_8390=y
CONFIG_PCMCIA_AXNET=m
CONFIG_NE2000=m
CONFIG_NE2K_PCI=m
CONFIG_PCMCIA_PCNET=m
CONFIG_ULTRA=m
CONFIG_WD80x3=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_NVIDIA=y
CONFIG_FORCEDETH=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_OKI=y
CONFIG_PCH_GBE=m
CONFIG_ETHOC=m
CONFIG_NET_PACKET_ENGINE=y
CONFIG_HAMACHI=m
CONFIG_YELLOWFIN=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_QLOGIC=y
CONFIG_QLA3XXX=m
CONFIG_QLCNIC=m
CONFIG_QLCNIC_SRIOV=y
CONFIG_QLCNIC_DCB=y
CONFIG_QLCNIC_HWMON=y
CONFIG_QLGE=m
CONFIG_NETXEN_NIC=m
CONFIG_QED=m
CONFIG_QED_LL2=y
CONFIG_QED_SRIOV=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_QEDE=m
CONFIG_QED_ISCSI=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_QUALCOMM=y
CONFIG_QCOM_EMAC=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_REALTEK=y
CONFIG_ATP=m
CONFIG_8139CP=m
CONFIG_8139TOO=m
# CONFIG_8139TOO_PIO is not set
# CONFIG_8139TOO_TUNE_TWISTER is not set
CONFIG_8139TOO_8129=y
# CONFIG_8139_OLD_RX_RESET is not set
CONFIG_R8169=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_RENESAS=y
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_RDC=y
CONFIG_R6040=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_ROCKER=y
# CONFIG_ROCKER is not set
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_SAMSUNG=y
CONFIG_SXGBE_ETH=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_SEEQ=y
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_SILAN=y
CONFIG_SC92031=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_SIS=y
CONFIG_SIS900=m
CONFIG_SIS190=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_SOLARFLARE=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SFC=m
CONFIG_SFC_MTD=y
CONFIG_SFC_MCDI_MON=y
CONFIG_SFC_SRIOV=y
CONFIG_SFC_MCDI_LOGGING=y
CONFIG_SFC_FALCON=m
CONFIG_SFC_FALCON_MTD=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_SMSC=y
CONFIG_SMC9194=m
CONFIG_PCMCIA_SMC91C92=m
CONFIG_EPIC100=m
CONFIG_SMSC911X=m
# CONFIG_SMSC911X_ARCH_HOOKS is not set
CONFIG_SMSC9420=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_STMICRO=y
CONFIG_STMMAC_ETH=m
CONFIG_STMMAC_PLATFORM=m
CONFIG_DWMAC_GENERIC=m
# CONFIG_STMMAC_PCI is not set
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_SUN=y
CONFIG_HAPPYMEAL=m
CONFIG_SUNGEM=m
CONFIG_CASSINI=m
CONFIG_NIU=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_SYNOPSYS=y
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_TEHUTI=y
CONFIG_TEHUTI=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_TI=y
# CONFIG_TI_CPSW_ALE is not set
CONFIG_TLAN=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_VIA=y
CONFIG_VIA_RHINE=m
CONFIG_VIA_RHINE_MMIO=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_VIA_VELOCITY=m
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_WIZNET=y
CONFIG_WIZNET_W5100=m
CONFIG_WIZNET_W5300=m
# CONFIG_WIZNET_BUS_DIRECT is not set
# CONFIG_WIZNET_BUS_INDIRECT is not set
CONFIG_WIZNET_BUS_ANY=y
CONFIG_WIZNET_W5100_SPI=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_XIRCOM=y
CONFIG_PCMCIA_XIRC2PS=m
CONFIG_NET_SB1000=m
CONFIG_PHYLIB=y
CONFIG_SWPHY=y
CONFIG_LED_TRIGGER_PHY=y
#
# MDIO bus device drivers
#
CONFIG_MDIO_BCM_UNIMAC=m
CONFIG_MDIO_BITBANG=m
CONFIG_MDIO_GPIO=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# MII PHY device drivers
#
CONFIG_AMD_PHY=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_AQUANTIA_PHY=m
CONFIG_AT803X_PHY=m
CONFIG_BCM7XXX_PHY=m
CONFIG_BCM87XX_PHY=m
CONFIG_BCM_NET_PHYLIB=m
CONFIG_BROADCOM_PHY=m
CONFIG_CICADA_PHY=m
CONFIG_DAVICOM_PHY=m
CONFIG_DP83848_PHY=m
CONFIG_DP83867_PHY=m
CONFIG_FIXED_PHY=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_ICPLUS_PHY=m
CONFIG_INTEL_XWAY_PHY=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_LSI_ET1011C_PHY=m
CONFIG_LXT_PHY=m
CONFIG_MARVELL_PHY=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MICREL_PHY=m
CONFIG_MICROCHIP_PHY=m
CONFIG_MICROSEMI_PHY=m
CONFIG_NATIONAL_PHY=m
CONFIG_QSEMI_PHY=m
CONFIG_REALTEK_PHY=m
CONFIG_SMSC_PHY=m
CONFIG_STE10XP=m
CONFIG_TERANETICS_PHY=m
CONFIG_VITESSE_PHY=m
CONFIG_XILINX_GMII2RGMII=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MICREL_KS8995MA=m
CONFIG_PLIP=m
CONFIG_PPP=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_PPP_BSDCOMP=m
CONFIG_PPP_DEFLATE=m
CONFIG_PPP_FILTER=y
CONFIG_PPP_MPPE=m
CONFIG_PPP_MULTILINK=y
CONFIG_PPPOATM=m
CONFIG_PPPOE=m
CONFIG_PPTP=m
CONFIG_PPPOL2TP=m
CONFIG_PPP_ASYNC=m
CONFIG_PPP_SYNC_TTY=m
CONFIG_SLIP=m
CONFIG_SLHC=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SLIP_COMPRESSED=y
CONFIG_SLIP_SMART=y
CONFIG_SLIP_MODE_SLIP6=y
CONFIG_USB_NET_DRIVERS=m
CONFIG_USB_CATC=m
CONFIG_USB_KAWETH=m
CONFIG_USB_PEGASUS=m
CONFIG_USB_RTL8150=m
CONFIG_USB_RTL8152=m
CONFIG_USB_LAN78XX=m
CONFIG_USB_USBNET=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_AX8817X=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_AX88179_178A=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_CDCETHER=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_CDC_EEM=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_CDC_NCM=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_HUAWEI_CDC_NCM=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_CDC_MBIM=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_DM9601=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_SR9700=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_SR9800=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_SMSC75XX=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_SMSC95XX=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_GL620A=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_NET1080=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_PLUSB=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_MCS7830=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_RNDIS_HOST=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_CDC_SUBSET_ENABLE=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_CDC_SUBSET=m
CONFIG_USB_ALI_M5632=y
CONFIG_USB_AN2720=y
CONFIG_USB_BELKIN=y
CONFIG_USB_ARMLINUX=y
CONFIG_USB_EPSON2888=y
CONFIG_USB_KC2190=y
CONFIG_USB_NET_ZAURUS=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_CX82310_ETH=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_KALMIA=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_QMI_WWAN=m
CONFIG_USB_HSO=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_INT51X1=m
CONFIG_USB_CDC_PHONET=m
CONFIG_USB_IPHETH=m
CONFIG_USB_SIERRA_NET=m
CONFIG_USB_VL600=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_CH9200=m
CONFIG_WLAN=y
# CONFIG_WIRELESS_WDS is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_WLAN_VENDOR_ADMTEK=y
CONFIG_ADM8211=m
CONFIG_ATH_COMMON=m
CONFIG_WLAN_VENDOR_ATH=y
# CONFIG_ATH_DEBUG is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_ATH5K=m
# CONFIG_ATH5K_DEBUG is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_ATH5K_TRACER is not set
CONFIG_ATH5K_PCI=y
CONFIG_ATH9K_HW=m
CONFIG_ATH9K_COMMON=m
CONFIG_ATH9K_BTCOEX_SUPPORT=y
CONFIG_ATH9K=m
CONFIG_ATH9K_PCI=y
CONFIG_ATH9K_AHB=y
# CONFIG_ATH9K_DEBUGFS is not set
# CONFIG_ATH9K_DYNACK is not set
CONFIG_ATH9K_WOW=y
CONFIG_ATH9K_RFKILL=y
# CONFIG_ATH9K_CHANNEL_CONTEXT is not set
CONFIG_ATH9K_PCOEM=y
CONFIG_ATH9K_HTC=m
# CONFIG_ATH9K_HTC_DEBUGFS is not set
CONFIG_ATH9K_HWRNG=y
CONFIG_CARL9170=m
CONFIG_CARL9170_LEDS=y
# CONFIG_CARL9170_DEBUGFS is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CARL9170_WPC=y
CONFIG_CARL9170_HWRNG=y
CONFIG_ATH6KL=m
CONFIG_ATH6KL_SDIO=m
CONFIG_ATH6KL_USB=m
# CONFIG_ATH6KL_DEBUG is not set
# CONFIG_ATH6KL_TRACING is not set
CONFIG_AR5523=m
CONFIG_WIL6210=m
CONFIG_WIL6210_ISR_COR=y
CONFIG_WIL6210_TRACING=y
CONFIG_ATH10K=m
CONFIG_ATH10K_PCI=m
# CONFIG_ATH10K_DEBUG is not set
# CONFIG_ATH10K_DEBUGFS is not set
# CONFIG_ATH10K_TRACING is not set
CONFIG_WCN36XX=m
# CONFIG_WCN36XX_DEBUGFS is not set
CONFIG_WLAN_VENDOR_ATMEL=y
CONFIG_ATMEL=m
CONFIG_PCI_ATMEL=m
CONFIG_PCMCIA_ATMEL=m
CONFIG_AT76C50X_USB=m
CONFIG_WLAN_VENDOR_BROADCOM=y
CONFIG_B43=m
CONFIG_B43_BCMA=y
CONFIG_B43_SSB=y
CONFIG_B43_BUSES_BCMA_AND_SSB=y
# CONFIG_B43_BUSES_BCMA is not set
# CONFIG_B43_BUSES_SSB is not set
CONFIG_B43_PCI_AUTOSELECT=y
CONFIG_B43_PCICORE_AUTOSELECT=y
CONFIG_B43_SDIO=y
CONFIG_B43_BCMA_PIO=y
CONFIG_B43_PIO=y
CONFIG_B43_PHY_G=y
CONFIG_B43_PHY_N=y
CONFIG_B43_PHY_LP=y
CONFIG_B43_PHY_HT=y
CONFIG_B43_LEDS=y
CONFIG_B43_HWRNG=y
# CONFIG_B43_DEBUG is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_B43LEGACY=m
CONFIG_B43LEGACY_PCI_AUTOSELECT=y
CONFIG_B43LEGACY_PCICORE_AUTOSELECT=y
CONFIG_B43LEGACY_LEDS=y
CONFIG_B43LEGACY_HWRNG=y
# CONFIG_B43LEGACY_DEBUG is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_B43LEGACY_DMA=y
CONFIG_B43LEGACY_PIO=y
CONFIG_B43LEGACY_DMA_AND_PIO_MODE=y
# CONFIG_B43LEGACY_DMA_MODE is not set
# CONFIG_B43LEGACY_PIO_MODE is not set
CONFIG_BRCMUTIL=m
CONFIG_BRCMSMAC=m
CONFIG_BRCMFMAC=m
CONFIG_BRCMFMAC_PROTO_BCDC=y
CONFIG_BRCMFMAC_PROTO_MSGBUF=y
CONFIG_BRCMFMAC_SDIO=y
CONFIG_BRCMFMAC_USB=y
CONFIG_BRCMFMAC_PCIE=y
# CONFIG_BRCM_TRACING is not set
# CONFIG_BRCMDBG is not set
CONFIG_WLAN_VENDOR_CISCO=y
CONFIG_AIRO=m
CONFIG_AIRO_CS=m
CONFIG_WLAN_VENDOR_INTEL=y
CONFIG_IPW2100=m
CONFIG_IPW2100_MONITOR=y
# CONFIG_IPW2100_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_IPW2200=m
CONFIG_IPW2200_MONITOR=y
CONFIG_IPW2200_RADIOTAP=y
CONFIG_IPW2200_PROMISCUOUS=y
CONFIG_IPW2200_QOS=y
# CONFIG_IPW2200_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_LIBIPW=m
# CONFIG_LIBIPW_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_IWLEGACY=m
CONFIG_IWL4965=m
CONFIG_IWL3945=m
#
# iwl3945 / iwl4965 Debugging Options
#
# CONFIG_IWLEGACY_DEBUG is not set
# CONFIG_IWLEGACY_DEBUGFS=y is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_IWLWIFI=m
CONFIG_IWLWIFI_LEDS=y
CONFIG_IWLDVM=m
CONFIG_IWLMVM=m
CONFIG_IWLWIFI_OPMODE_MODULAR=y
# CONFIG_IWLWIFI_BCAST_FILTERING is not set
# CONFIG_IWLWIFI_PCIE_RTPM is not set
#
# Debugging Options
#
# CONFIG_IWLWIFI_DEBUG is not set
# CONFIG_IWLWIFI_DEBUGFS is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_IWLWIFI_DEVICE_TRACING is not set
CONFIG_WLAN_VENDOR_INTERSIL=y
CONFIG_HOSTAP=m
CONFIG_HOSTAP_FIRMWARE=y
CONFIG_HOSTAP_FIRMWARE_NVRAM=y
CONFIG_HOSTAP_PLX=m
CONFIG_HOSTAP_PCI=m
CONFIG_HOSTAP_CS=m
CONFIG_HERMES=m
# CONFIG_HERMES_PRISM is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_HERMES_CACHE_FW_ON_INIT=y
CONFIG_PLX_HERMES=m
CONFIG_TMD_HERMES=m
CONFIG_NORTEL_HERMES=m
CONFIG_PCMCIA_HERMES=m
CONFIG_PCMCIA_SPECTRUM=m
CONFIG_ORINOCO_USB=m
CONFIG_P54_COMMON=m
CONFIG_P54_USB=m
CONFIG_P54_PCI=m
CONFIG_P54_SPI=m
# CONFIG_P54_SPI_DEFAULT_EEPROM is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_P54_LEDS=y
# CONFIG_PRISM54 is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_WLAN_VENDOR_MARVELL=y
CONFIG_LIBERTAS=m
CONFIG_LIBERTAS_USB=m
CONFIG_LIBERTAS_CS=m
CONFIG_LIBERTAS_SDIO=m
CONFIG_LIBERTAS_SPI=m
# CONFIG_LIBERTAS_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_LIBERTAS_MESH=y
CONFIG_LIBERTAS_THINFIRM=m
# CONFIG_LIBERTAS_THINFIRM_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_LIBERTAS_THINFIRM_USB=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MWIFIEX=m
CONFIG_MWIFIEX_SDIO=m
CONFIG_MWIFIEX_PCIE=m
CONFIG_MWIFIEX_USB=m
CONFIG_MWL8K=m
CONFIG_WLAN_VENDOR_MEDIATEK=y
CONFIG_MT7601U=m
CONFIG_WLAN_VENDOR_RALINK=y
CONFIG_RT2X00=m
CONFIG_RT2400PCI=m
CONFIG_RT2500PCI=m
CONFIG_RT61PCI=m
CONFIG_RT2800PCI=m
CONFIG_RT2800PCI_RT33XX=y
CONFIG_RT2800PCI_RT35XX=y
CONFIG_RT2800PCI_RT53XX=y
CONFIG_RT2800PCI_RT3290=y
CONFIG_RT2500USB=m
CONFIG_RT73USB=m
CONFIG_RT2800USB=m
CONFIG_RT2800USB_RT33XX=y
CONFIG_RT2800USB_RT35XX=y
CONFIG_RT2800USB_RT3573=y
CONFIG_RT2800USB_RT53XX=y
CONFIG_RT2800USB_RT55XX=y
CONFIG_RT2800USB_UNKNOWN=y
CONFIG_RT2800_LIB=m
CONFIG_RT2800_LIB_MMIO=m
CONFIG_RT2X00_LIB_MMIO=m
CONFIG_RT2X00_LIB_PCI=m
CONFIG_RT2X00_LIB_USB=m
CONFIG_RT2X00_LIB=m
CONFIG_RT2X00_LIB_FIRMWARE=y
CONFIG_RT2X00_LIB_CRYPTO=y
CONFIG_RT2X00_LIB_LEDS=y
# CONFIG_RT2X00_LIB_DEBUGFS is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_RT2X00_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_WLAN_VENDOR_REALTEK=y
CONFIG_RTL8180=m
CONFIG_RTL8187=m
CONFIG_RTL8187_LEDS=y
CONFIG_RTL_CARDS=m
CONFIG_RTL8192CE=m
CONFIG_RTL8192SE=m
CONFIG_RTL8192DE=m
CONFIG_RTL8723AE=m
CONFIG_RTL8723BE=m
CONFIG_RTL8188EE=m
CONFIG_RTL8192EE=m
CONFIG_RTL8821AE=m
CONFIG_RTL8192CU=m
CONFIG_RTLWIFI=m
CONFIG_RTLWIFI_PCI=m
CONFIG_RTLWIFI_USB=m
# CONFIG_RTLWIFI_DEBUG is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_RTL8192C_COMMON=m
CONFIG_RTL8723_COMMON=m
CONFIG_RTLBTCOEXIST=m
CONFIG_RTL8XXXU=m
# CONFIG_RTL8XXXU_UNTESTED is not set
CONFIG_WLAN_VENDOR_RSI=y
CONFIG_RSI_91X=m
# CONFIG_RSI_DEBUGFS is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_RSI_SDIO=m
CONFIG_RSI_USB=m
CONFIG_WLAN_VENDOR_ST=y
CONFIG_CW1200=m
CONFIG_CW1200_WLAN_SDIO=m
CONFIG_CW1200_WLAN_SPI=m
CONFIG_WLAN_VENDOR_TI=y
CONFIG_WL1251=m
CONFIG_WL1251_SPI=m
CONFIG_WL1251_SDIO=m
CONFIG_WL12XX=m
CONFIG_WL18XX=m
CONFIG_WLCORE=m
CONFIG_WLCORE_SDIO=m
CONFIG_WILINK_PLATFORM_DATA=y
CONFIG_WLAN_VENDOR_ZYDAS=y
CONFIG_USB_ZD1201=m
CONFIG_ZD1211RW=m
# CONFIG_ZD1211RW_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_PCMCIA_RAYCS=m
CONFIG_PCMCIA_WL3501=m
CONFIG_MAC80211_HWSIM=m
CONFIG_USB_NET_RNDIS_WLAN=m
#
# WiMAX Wireless Broadband devices
#
CONFIG_WIMAX_I2400M=m
CONFIG_WIMAX_I2400M_USB=m
CONFIG_WIMAX_I2400M_DEBUG_LEVEL=8
CONFIG_IEEE802154_DRIVERS=m
CONFIG_IEEE802154_FAKELB=m
CONFIG_IEEE802154_AT86RF230=m
CONFIG_IEEE802154_AT86RF230_DEBUGFS=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_IEEE802154_MRF24J40=m
CONFIG_IEEE802154_CC2520=m
CONFIG_IEEE802154_ATUSB=m
CONFIG_IEEE802154_ADF7242=m
CONFIG_VMXNET3=m
CONFIG_FUJITSU_ES=m
CONFIG_HYPERV_NET=m
CONFIG_ISDN=y
CONFIG_ISDN_I4L=m
CONFIG_ISDN_PPP=y
CONFIG_ISDN_PPP_VJ=y
CONFIG_ISDN_MPP=y
# CONFIG_IPPP_FILTER is not set
CONFIG_ISDN_PPP_BSDCOMP=m
CONFIG_ISDN_AUDIO=y
CONFIG_ISDN_TTY_FAX=y
# CONFIG_ISDN_X25 is not set
#
# ISDN feature submodules
#
CONFIG_ISDN_DIVERSION=m
#
# ISDN4Linux hardware drivers
#
#
# Passive cards
#
CONFIG_ISDN_DRV_HISAX=m
#
# D-channel protocol features
#
CONFIG_HISAX_EURO=y
CONFIG_DE_AOC=y
# CONFIG_HISAX_NO_SENDCOMPLETE is not set
# CONFIG_HISAX_NO_LLC is not set
# CONFIG_HISAX_NO_KEYPAD is not set
CONFIG_HISAX_1TR6=y
CONFIG_HISAX_NI1=y
CONFIG_HISAX_MAX_CARDS=8
#
# HiSax supported cards
#
CONFIG_HISAX_16_0=y
CONFIG_HISAX_16_3=y
CONFIG_HISAX_TELESPCI=y
CONFIG_HISAX_S0BOX=y
CONFIG_HISAX_AVM_A1=y
CONFIG_HISAX_FRITZPCI=y
CONFIG_HISAX_AVM_A1_PCMCIA=y
CONFIG_HISAX_ELSA=y
CONFIG_HISAX_IX1MICROR2=y
CONFIG_HISAX_DIEHLDIVA=y
CONFIG_HISAX_ASUSCOM=y
CONFIG_HISAX_TELEINT=y
CONFIG_HISAX_HFCS=y
CONFIG_HISAX_SEDLBAUER=y
CONFIG_HISAX_SPORTSTER=y
CONFIG_HISAX_MIC=y
CONFIG_HISAX_NETJET=y
CONFIG_HISAX_NETJET_U=y
CONFIG_HISAX_NICCY=y
CONFIG_HISAX_ISURF=y
CONFIG_HISAX_HSTSAPHIR=y
CONFIG_HISAX_BKM_A4T=y
CONFIG_HISAX_SCT_QUADRO=y
CONFIG_HISAX_GAZEL=y
CONFIG_HISAX_HFC_PCI=y
CONFIG_HISAX_W6692=y
CONFIG_HISAX_HFC_SX=y
CONFIG_HISAX_ENTERNOW_PCI=y
# CONFIG_HISAX_DEBUG is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# HiSax PCMCIA card service modules
#
CONFIG_HISAX_SEDLBAUER_CS=m
CONFIG_HISAX_ELSA_CS=m
CONFIG_HISAX_AVM_A1_CS=m
CONFIG_HISAX_TELES_CS=m
#
# HiSax sub driver modules
#
CONFIG_HISAX_ST5481=m
CONFIG_HISAX_HFCUSB=m
CONFIG_HISAX_HFC4S8S=m
CONFIG_HISAX_FRITZ_PCIPNP=m
CONFIG_ISDN_CAPI=m
# CONFIG_CAPI_TRACE is not set
CONFIG_ISDN_CAPI_CAPI20=m
CONFIG_ISDN_CAPI_MIDDLEWARE=y
CONFIG_ISDN_CAPI_CAPIDRV=m
# CONFIG_ISDN_CAPI_CAPIDRV_VERBOSE is not set
#
# CAPI hardware drivers
#
CONFIG_ISDN_DRV_GIGASET=m
CONFIG_GIGASET_CAPI=y
# CONFIG_GIGASET_I4L is not set
# CONFIG_GIGASET_DUMMYLL is not set
CONFIG_GIGASET_BASE=m
CONFIG_GIGASET_M105=m
CONFIG_GIGASET_M101=m
# CONFIG_GIGASET_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_HYSDN=m
CONFIG_HYSDN_CAPI=y
CONFIG_MISDN=m
CONFIG_MISDN_DSP=m
CONFIG_MISDN_L1OIP=m
#
# mISDN hardware drivers
#
CONFIG_MISDN_HFCPCI=m
CONFIG_MISDN_HFCMULTI=m
CONFIG_MISDN_HFCUSB=m
CONFIG_MISDN_AVMFRITZ=m
CONFIG_MISDN_SPEEDFAX=m
CONFIG_MISDN_INFINEON=m
CONFIG_MISDN_W6692=m
CONFIG_MISDN_NETJET=m
CONFIG_MISDN_IPAC=m
CONFIG_MISDN_ISAR=m
CONFIG_ISDN_HDLC=m
CONFIG_NVM=y
# CONFIG_NVM_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_NVM_GENNVM=m
CONFIG_NVM_RRPC=m
#
# Input device support
#
CONFIG_INPUT=y
CONFIG_INPUT_LEDS=m
CONFIG_INPUT_FF_MEMLESS=m
CONFIG_INPUT_POLLDEV=m
CONFIG_INPUT_SPARSEKMAP=m
CONFIG_INPUT_MATRIXKMAP=m
#
# Userland interfaces
#
CONFIG_INPUT_MOUSEDEV=y
CONFIG_INPUT_MOUSEDEV_PSAUX=y
CONFIG_INPUT_MOUSEDEV_SCREEN_X=1024
CONFIG_INPUT_MOUSEDEV_SCREEN_Y=768
CONFIG_INPUT_JOYDEV=m
CONFIG_INPUT_EVDEV=y
# CONFIG_INPUT_EVBUG is not set
#
# Input Device Drivers
#
CONFIG_INPUT_KEYBOARD=y
# CONFIG_KEYBOARD_ADC is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_ADP5520=m
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_ADP5588=m
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_ADP5589=m
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_ATKBD=y
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_QT1070=m
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_QT2160=m
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_LKKBD=m
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_GPIO=m
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_GPIO_POLLED=m
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_TCA6416=m
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_TCA8418=m
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_MATRIX=m
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_LM8323=m
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_LM8333=m
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_MAX7359=m
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_MCS=m
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_MPR121=m
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_NEWTON=m
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_OPENCORES=m
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_SAMSUNG=m
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_STOWAWAY=m
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_SUNKBD=m
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_TWL4030=m
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_XTKBD=m
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_CROS_EC=m
CONFIG_INPUT_MOUSE=y
CONFIG_MOUSE_PS2=y
CONFIG_MOUSE_PS2_ALPS=y
CONFIG_MOUSE_PS2_BYD=y
CONFIG_MOUSE_PS2_LOGIPS2PP=y
CONFIG_MOUSE_PS2_SYNAPTICS=y
CONFIG_MOUSE_PS2_CYPRESS=y
CONFIG_MOUSE_PS2_LIFEBOOK=y
CONFIG_MOUSE_PS2_TRACKPOINT=y
CONFIG_MOUSE_PS2_ELANTECH=y
CONFIG_MOUSE_PS2_SENTELIC=y
CONFIG_MOUSE_PS2_TOUCHKIT=y
CONFIG_MOUSE_PS2_FOCALTECH=y
CONFIG_MOUSE_PS2_VMMOUSE=y
CONFIG_MOUSE_SERIAL=m
CONFIG_MOUSE_APPLETOUCH=m
CONFIG_MOUSE_BCM5974=m
CONFIG_MOUSE_CYAPA=m
CONFIG_MOUSE_ELAN_I2C=m
CONFIG_MOUSE_ELAN_I2C_I2C=y
CONFIG_MOUSE_ELAN_I2C_SMBUS=y
CONFIG_MOUSE_INPORT=m
CONFIG_MOUSE_ATIXL=y
CONFIG_MOUSE_LOGIBM=m
CONFIG_MOUSE_PC110PAD=m
CONFIG_MOUSE_VSXXXAA=m
CONFIG_MOUSE_GPIO=m
CONFIG_MOUSE_SYNAPTICS_I2C=m
CONFIG_MOUSE_SYNAPTICS_USB=m
CONFIG_INPUT_JOYSTICK=y
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_ANALOG=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_A3D=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_ADI=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_COBRA=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_GF2K=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_GRIP=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_GRIP_MP=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_GUILLEMOT=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_INTERACT=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_SIDEWINDER=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_TMDC=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_IFORCE=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_IFORCE_USB=y
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_IFORCE_232=y
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_WARRIOR=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_MAGELLAN=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_SPACEORB=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_SPACEBALL=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_STINGER=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_TWIDJOY=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_ZHENHUA=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_DB9=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_GAMECON=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_TURBOGRAFX=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_AS5011=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_JOYDUMP=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_XPAD=m
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_XPAD_FF=y
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_XPAD_LEDS=y
CONFIG_JOYSTICK_WALKERA0701=m
CONFIG_INPUT_TABLET=y
CONFIG_TABLET_USB_ACECAD=m
CONFIG_TABLET_USB_AIPTEK=m
CONFIG_TABLET_USB_GTCO=m
CONFIG_TABLET_USB_HANWANG=m
CONFIG_TABLET_USB_KBTAB=m
CONFIG_TABLET_USB_PEGASUS=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_TABLET_SERIAL_WACOM4=m
CONFIG_INPUT_TOUCHSCREEN=y
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_PROPERTIES=y
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_88PM860X=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_ADS7846=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_AD7877=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_AD7879=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_AD7879_I2C=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_AD7879_SPI=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_ATMEL_MXT=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_ATMEL_MXT_T37=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_AUO_PIXCIR=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_BU21013=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_CY8CTMG110=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_CYTTSP_CORE=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_CYTTSP_I2C=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_CYTTSP_SPI=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_CYTTSP4_CORE=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_CYTTSP4_I2C=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_CYTTSP4_SPI=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_DA9034=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_DA9052=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_DYNAPRO=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_HAMPSHIRE=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_EETI=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_EGALAX_SERIAL=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_FUJITSU=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_GOODIX=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_ILI210X=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_GUNZE=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_EKTF2127=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_ELAN=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_ELO=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_WACOM_W8001=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_WACOM_I2C=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_MAX11801=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_MCS5000=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_MMS114=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_MELFAS_MIP4=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_MTOUCH=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_INEXIO=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_MK712=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_HTCPEN=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_PENMOUNT=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_EDT_FT5X06=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_TOUCHRIGHT=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_TOUCHWIN=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_TI_AM335X_TSC=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_UCB1400=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_PIXCIR=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_WDT87XX_I2C=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_WM831X=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_WM97XX=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_WM9705=y
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_WM9712=y
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_WM9713=y
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_USB_COMPOSITE=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_MC13783=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_USB_EGALAX=y
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_USB_PANJIT=y
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_USB_3M=y
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_USB_ITM=y
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_USB_ETURBO=y
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_USB_GUNZE=y
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_USB_DMC_TSC10=y
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_USB_IRTOUCH=y
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_USB_IDEALTEK=y
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_USB_GENERAL_TOUCH=y
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_USB_GOTOP=y
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_USB_JASTEC=y
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_USB_ELO=y
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_USB_E2I=y
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_USB_ZYTRONIC=y
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_USB_ETT_TC45USB=y
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_USB_NEXIO=y
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_USB_EASYTOUCH=y
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_TOUCHIT213=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_TSC_SERIO=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_TSC200X_CORE=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_TSC2004=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_TSC2005=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_TSC2007=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_PCAP=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_RM_TS=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_SILEAD=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_SIS_I2C=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_ST1232=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_SUR40=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_SURFACE3_SPI=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_SX8654=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_TPS6507X=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_ZFORCE=m
CONFIG_TOUCHSCREEN_ROHM_BU21023=m
CONFIG_INPUT_MISC=y
CONFIG_INPUT_88PM860X_ONKEY=m
CONFIG_INPUT_88PM80X_ONKEY=m
CONFIG_INPUT_AD714X=m
CONFIG_INPUT_AD714X_I2C=m
CONFIG_INPUT_AD714X_SPI=m
# CONFIG_INPUT_ARIZONA_HAPTICS is not set
CONFIG_INPUT_BMA150=m
CONFIG_INPUT_E3X0_BUTTON=m
CONFIG_INPUT_PCSPKR=m
CONFIG_INPUT_MAX77693_HAPTIC=m
CONFIG_INPUT_MAX8925_ONKEY=m
CONFIG_INPUT_MAX8997_HAPTIC=m
CONFIG_INPUT_MC13783_PWRBUTTON=m
# CONFIG_INPUT_MMA8450 is not set
# CONFIG_INPUT_MPU3050 is not set
CONFIG_INPUT_APANEL=m
CONFIG_INPUT_GP2A=m
# CONFIG_INPUT_GPIO_BEEPER is not set
# CONFIG_INPUT_GPIO_TILT_POLLED is not set
# CONFIG_INPUT_GPIO_DECODER is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_INPUT_WISTRON_BTNS=m
CONFIG_INPUT_ATLAS_BTNS=m
CONFIG_INPUT_ATI_REMOTE2=m
CONFIG_INPUT_KEYSPAN_REMOTE=m
CONFIG_INPUT_KXTJ9=m
# CONFIG_INPUT_KXTJ9_POLLED_MODE is not set
CONFIG_INPUT_POWERMATE=m
CONFIG_INPUT_YEALINK=m
CONFIG_INPUT_CM109=m
CONFIG_INPUT_RETU_PWRBUTTON=m
# CONFIG_INPUT_TPS65218_PWRBUTTON is not set
# CONFIG_INPUT_AXP20X_PEK is not set
CONFIG_INPUT_TWL4030_PWRBUTTON=m
CONFIG_INPUT_TWL4030_VIBRA=m
CONFIG_INPUT_TWL6040_VIBRA=m
CONFIG_INPUT_UINPUT=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_INPUT_PALMAS_PWRBUTTON=m
CONFIG_INPUT_PCF50633_PMU=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_INPUT_PCF8574=m
CONFIG_INPUT_PWM_BEEPER=m
# CONFIG_INPUT_GPIO_ROTARY_ENCODER is not set
CONFIG_INPUT_DA9052_ONKEY=m
CONFIG_INPUT_DA9055_ONKEY=m
CONFIG_INPUT_DA9063_ONKEY=m
CONFIG_INPUT_WM831X_ON=m
CONFIG_INPUT_PCAP=m
# CONFIG_INPUT_ADXL34X is not set
CONFIG_INPUT_IMS_PCU=m
CONFIG_INPUT_CMA3000=m
CONFIG_INPUT_CMA3000_I2C=m
CONFIG_INPUT_IDEAPAD_SLIDEBAR=m
CONFIG_INPUT_SOC_BUTTON_ARRAY=m
CONFIG_INPUT_DRV260X_HAPTICS=m
CONFIG_INPUT_DRV2665_HAPTICS=m
CONFIG_INPUT_DRV2667_HAPTICS=m
CONFIG_RMI4_CORE=m
CONFIG_RMI4_I2C=m
CONFIG_RMI4_SPI=m
CONFIG_RMI4_SMB=m
CONFIG_RMI4_F03=y
CONFIG_RMI4_F03_SERIO=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_RMI4_2D_SENSOR=y
CONFIG_RMI4_F11=y
CONFIG_RMI4_F12=y
CONFIG_RMI4_F30=y
CONFIG_RMI4_F34=y
CONFIG_RMI4_F54=y
CONFIG_RMI4_F55=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Hardware I/O ports
#
CONFIG_SERIO=y
CONFIG_SERIO_I8042=y
CONFIG_SERIO_SERPORT=m
CONFIG_SERIO_CT82C710=m
CONFIG_SERIO_PARKBD=m
CONFIG_SERIO_PCIPS2=m
CONFIG_SERIO_LIBPS2=y
CONFIG_SERIO_RAW=m
CONFIG_SERIO_ALTERA_PS2=m
CONFIG_SERIO_PS2MULT=m
CONFIG_SERIO_ARC_PS2=m
CONFIG_HYPERV_KEYBOARD=m
CONFIG_USERIO=m
CONFIG_GAMEPORT=m
CONFIG_GAMEPORT_NS558=m
CONFIG_GAMEPORT_L4=m
CONFIG_GAMEPORT_EMU10K1=m
CONFIG_GAMEPORT_FM801=m
#
# Character devices
#
CONFIG_TTY=y
CONFIG_VT=y
CONFIG_CONSOLE_TRANSLATIONS=y
CONFIG_VT_CONSOLE=y
CONFIG_VT_CONSOLE_SLEEP=y
CONFIG_HW_CONSOLE=y
CONFIG_VT_HW_CONSOLE_BINDING=y
CONFIG_UNIX98_PTYS=y
CONFIG_LEGACY_PTYS=y
CONFIG_LEGACY_PTY_COUNT=0
CONFIG_SERIAL_NONSTANDARD=y
CONFIG_ROCKETPORT=m
CONFIG_CYCLADES=m
# CONFIG_CYZ_INTR is not set
CONFIG_MOXA_INTELLIO=m
CONFIG_MOXA_SMARTIO=m
CONFIG_SYNCLINK=m
CONFIG_SYNCLINKMP=m
CONFIG_SYNCLINK_GT=m
CONFIG_NOZOMI=m
CONFIG_ISI=m
CONFIG_N_HDLC=m
CONFIG_N_GSM=m
CONFIG_TRACE_ROUTER=m
CONFIG_TRACE_SINK=m
CONFIG_DEVMEM=y
# CONFIG_DEVKMEM is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Serial drivers
#
CONFIG_SERIAL_EARLYCON=y
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250=y
# CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_DEPRECATED_OPTIONS is not set
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_PNP=y
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_FINTEK=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_CONSOLE=y
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_DMA=y
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_PCI=y
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_CS=m
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_NR_UARTS=48
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_RUNTIME_UARTS=32
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_EXTENDED=y
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_MANY_PORTS=y
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_FOURPORT=m
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_ACCENT=m
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_BOCA=m
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_EXAR_ST16C554=m
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_HUB6=m
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_SHARE_IRQ=y
# CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_DETECT_IRQ is not set
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_RSA=y
# CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_FSL is not set
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_DW=m
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_RT288X=y
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_LPSS=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_MID=m
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_MOXA=m
#
# Non-8250 serial port support
#
CONFIG_SERIAL_KGDB_NMI=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SERIAL_MAX3100=m
CONFIG_SERIAL_MAX310X=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SERIAL_UARTLITE=m
CONFIG_SERIAL_CORE=y
CONFIG_SERIAL_CORE_CONSOLE=y
CONFIG_SERIAL_JSM=m
CONFIG_SERIAL_SCCNXP=y
CONFIG_SERIAL_SCCNXP_CONSOLE=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SERIAL_SC16IS7XX_CORE=m
CONFIG_SERIAL_SC16IS7XX=m
CONFIG_SERIAL_SC16IS7XX_I2C=y
CONFIG_SERIAL_SC16IS7XX_SPI=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SERIAL_TIMBERDALE=m
CONFIG_SERIAL_ALTERA_JTAGUART=m
CONFIG_SERIAL_ALTERA_UART=m
CONFIG_SERIAL_ALTERA_UART_MAXPORTS=4
CONFIG_SERIAL_ALTERA_UART_BAUDRATE=115200
# CONFIG_SERIAL_IFX6X60 is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SERIAL_PCH_UART=m
CONFIG_SERIAL_ARC=m
CONFIG_SERIAL_ARC_NR_PORTS=1
CONFIG_SERIAL_RP2=m
CONFIG_SERIAL_RP2_NR_UARTS=32
CONFIG_SERIAL_FSL_LPUART=m
CONFIG_SERIAL_MEN_Z135=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_TTY_PRINTK is not set
CONFIG_PRINTER=m
# CONFIG_LP_CONSOLE is not set
CONFIG_PPDEV=m
CONFIG_HVC_DRIVER=y
CONFIG_VIRTIO_CONSOLE=y
CONFIG_IPMI_HANDLER=m
CONFIG_IPMI_PANIC_EVENT=y
CONFIG_IPMI_PANIC_STRING=y
CONFIG_IPMI_DEVICE_INTERFACE=m
CONFIG_IPMI_SI=m
CONFIG_IPMI_SSIF=m
CONFIG_IPMI_WATCHDOG=m
CONFIG_IPMI_POWEROFF=m
CONFIG_HW_RANDOM=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_HW_RANDOM_TIMERIOMEM=m
CONFIG_HW_RANDOM_INTEL=m
CONFIG_HW_RANDOM_AMD=m
CONFIG_HW_RANDOM_GEODE=m
CONFIG_HW_RANDOM_VIA=m
CONFIG_HW_RANDOM_VIRTIO=m
CONFIG_HW_RANDOM_TPM=m
CONFIG_NVRAM=m
CONFIG_DTLK=m
CONFIG_R3964=m
CONFIG_APPLICOM=m
CONFIG_SONYPI=m
#
# PCMCIA character devices
#
CONFIG_SYNCLINK_CS=m
CONFIG_CARDMAN_4000=m
CONFIG_CARDMAN_4040=m
CONFIG_SCR24X=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_IPWIRELESS=m
CONFIG_MWAVE=m
CONFIG_SCx200_GPIO=m
CONFIG_PC8736x_GPIO=m
CONFIG_NSC_GPIO=m
CONFIG_RAW_DRIVER=m
CONFIG_MAX_RAW_DEVS=256
CONFIG_HPET=y
CONFIG_HPET_MMAP=y
CONFIG_HPET_MMAP_DEFAULT=y
CONFIG_HANGCHECK_TIMER=m
CONFIG_TCG_TPM=y
CONFIG_TCG_TIS_CORE=y
CONFIG_TCG_TIS=y
CONFIG_TCG_TIS_SPI=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_TCG_TIS_I2C_ATMEL=m
CONFIG_TCG_TIS_I2C_INFINEON=m
CONFIG_TCG_TIS_I2C_NUVOTON=m
CONFIG_TCG_NSC=m
CONFIG_TCG_ATMEL=m
CONFIG_TCG_INFINEON=m
CONFIG_TCG_CRB=m
CONFIG_TCG_VTPM_PROXY=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_TCG_TIS_ST33ZP24=m
CONFIG_TCG_TIS_ST33ZP24_I2C=m
CONFIG_TCG_TIS_ST33ZP24_SPI=m
CONFIG_TELCLOCK=m
CONFIG_DEVPORT=y
CONFIG_XILLYBUS=m
CONFIG_XILLYBUS_PCIE=m
#
# I2C support
#
CONFIG_I2C=y
CONFIG_ACPI_I2C_OPREGION=y
CONFIG_I2C_BOARDINFO=y
CONFIG_I2C_COMPAT=y
CONFIG_I2C_CHARDEV=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_I2C_MUX=m
#
# Multiplexer I2C Chip support
#
CONFIG_I2C_MUX_GPIO=m
CONFIG_I2C_MUX_PCA9541=m
CONFIG_I2C_MUX_PCA954x=m
CONFIG_I2C_MUX_PINCTRL=m
CONFIG_I2C_MUX_REG=m
CONFIG_I2C_MUX_MLXCPLD=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_I2C_HELPER_AUTO=y
CONFIG_I2C_SMBUS=m
CONFIG_I2C_ALGOBIT=m
CONFIG_I2C_ALGOPCA=m
#
# I2C Hardware Bus support
#
#
# PC SMBus host controller drivers
#
CONFIG_I2C_ALI1535=m
CONFIG_I2C_ALI1563=m
CONFIG_I2C_ALI15X3=m
CONFIG_I2C_AMD756=m
CONFIG_I2C_AMD756_S4882=m
CONFIG_I2C_AMD8111=m
CONFIG_I2C_I801=m
CONFIG_I2C_ISCH=m
CONFIG_I2C_ISMT=m
CONFIG_I2C_PIIX4=m
CONFIG_I2C_NFORCE2=m
CONFIG_I2C_NFORCE2_S4985=m
CONFIG_I2C_SIS5595=m
CONFIG_I2C_SIS630=m
CONFIG_I2C_SIS96X=m
CONFIG_I2C_VIA=m
CONFIG_I2C_VIAPRO=m
#
# ACPI drivers
#
CONFIG_I2C_SCMI=m
#
# I2C system bus drivers (mostly embedded / system-on-chip)
#
CONFIG_I2C_CBUS_GPIO=m
CONFIG_I2C_DESIGNWARE_CORE=m
CONFIG_I2C_DESIGNWARE_PLATFORM=m
CONFIG_I2C_DESIGNWARE_PCI=m
CONFIG_I2C_DESIGNWARE_BAYTRAIL=y
CONFIG_I2C_EG20T=m
# CONFIG_I2C_EMEV2 is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_I2C_GPIO=m
CONFIG_I2C_KEMPLD=m
# CONFIG_I2C_OCORES is not set
# CONFIG_I2C_PCA_PLATFORM is not set
# CONFIG_I2C_PXA_PCI is not set
# CONFIG_I2C_SIMTEC is not set
CONFIG_I2C_XILINX=m
#
# External I2C/SMBus adapter drivers
#
CONFIG_I2C_DIOLAN_U2C=m
CONFIG_I2C_DLN2=m
CONFIG_I2C_PARPORT=m
CONFIG_I2C_PARPORT_LIGHT=m
CONFIG_I2C_ROBOTFUZZ_OSIF=m
CONFIG_I2C_TAOS_EVM=m
CONFIG_I2C_TINY_USB=m
CONFIG_I2C_VIPERBOARD=m
#
# Other I2C/SMBus bus drivers
#
CONFIG_I2C_PCA_ISA=m
CONFIG_I2C_CROS_EC_TUNNEL=m
CONFIG_SCx200_ACB=m
# CONFIG_I2C_STUB is not set
CONFIG_I2C_SLAVE=y
CONFIG_I2C_SLAVE_EEPROM=m
# CONFIG_I2C_DEBUG_CORE is not set
# CONFIG_I2C_DEBUG_ALGO is not set
# CONFIG_I2C_DEBUG_BUS is not set
CONFIG_SPI=y
# CONFIG_SPI_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_SPI_MASTER=y
#
# SPI Master Controller Drivers
#
CONFIG_SPI_ALTERA=m
CONFIG_SPI_AXI_SPI_ENGINE=m
CONFIG_SPI_BITBANG=m
CONFIG_SPI_BUTTERFLY=m
# CONFIG_SPI_CADENCE is not set
CONFIG_SPI_DESIGNWARE=m
CONFIG_SPI_DW_PCI=m
CONFIG_SPI_DW_MID_DMA=y
CONFIG_SPI_DW_MMIO=m
# CONFIG_SPI_DLN2 is not set
CONFIG_SPI_GPIO=m
CONFIG_SPI_LM70_LLP=m
CONFIG_SPI_OC_TINY=m
CONFIG_SPI_PXA2XX=m
CONFIG_SPI_PXA2XX_PCI=m
# CONFIG_SPI_ROCKCHIP is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SPI_SC18IS602=m
CONFIG_SPI_TOPCLIFF_PCH=m
CONFIG_SPI_XCOMM=m
# CONFIG_SPI_XILINX is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SPI_ZYNQMP_GQSPI=m
#
# SPI Protocol Masters
#
CONFIG_SPI_SPIDEV=m
# CONFIG_SPI_LOOPBACK_TEST is not set
CONFIG_SPI_TLE62X0=m
CONFIG_SPMI=m
CONFIG_HSI=m
CONFIG_HSI_BOARDINFO=y
#
# HSI controllers
#
#
# HSI clients
#
CONFIG_HSI_CHAR=m
#
# PPS support
#
CONFIG_PPS=m
# CONFIG_PPS_DEBUG is not set
#
# PPS clients support
#
# CONFIG_PPS_CLIENT_KTIMER is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_PPS_CLIENT_LDISC=m
CONFIG_PPS_CLIENT_PARPORT=m
CONFIG_PPS_CLIENT_GPIO=m
#
# PPS generators support
#
#
# PTP clock support
#
CONFIG_PTP_1588_CLOCK=m
#
# Enable PHYLIB and NETWORK_PHY_TIMESTAMPING to see the additional clocks.
#
CONFIG_PTP_1588_CLOCK_PCH=m
CONFIG_PINCTRL=y
#
# Pin controllers
#
CONFIG_PINMUX=y
CONFIG_PINCONF=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_PINCONF=y
# CONFIG_DEBUG_PINCTRL is not set
CONFIG_PINCTRL_AMD=y
# CONFIG_PINCTRL_SX150X is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_PINCTRL_BAYTRAIL=y
CONFIG_PINCTRL_CHERRYVIEW=m
# CONFIG_PINCTRL_MERRIFIELD is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_PINCTRL_INTEL=m
CONFIG_PINCTRL_BROXTON=m
CONFIG_PINCTRL_SUNRISEPOINT=m
CONFIG_GPIOLIB=y
CONFIG_GPIO_ACPI=y
CONFIG_GPIOLIB_IRQCHIP=y
# CONFIG_DEBUG_GPIO is not set
CONFIG_GPIO_SYSFS=y
CONFIG_GPIO_GENERIC=m
CONFIG_GPIO_MAX730X=m
#
# Memory mapped GPIO drivers
#
# CONFIG_GPIO_AMDPT is not set
# CONFIG_GPIO_AXP209 is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_GPIO_DWAPB is not set
# CONFIG_GPIO_GENERIC_PLATFORM is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_GPIO_ICH=m
CONFIG_GPIO_LYNXPOINT=y
# CONFIG_GPIO_MOCKUP is not set
# CONFIG_GPIO_STA2X11 is not set
# CONFIG_GPIO_VX855 is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Port-mapped I/O GPIO drivers
#
CONFIG_GPIO_104_DIO_48E=m
CONFIG_GPIO_104_IDIO_16=m
CONFIG_GPIO_104_IDI_48=m
CONFIG_GPIO_F7188X=m
# CONFIG_GPIO_GPIO_MM is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_GPIO_IT87=m
CONFIG_GPIO_SCH=m
CONFIG_GPIO_SCH311X=m
CONFIG_GPIO_WS16C48=m
#
# I2C GPIO expanders
#
# CONFIG_GPIO_ADP5588 is not set
# CONFIG_GPIO_MAX7300 is not set
# CONFIG_GPIO_MAX732X is not set
# CONFIG_GPIO_PCA953X is not set
# CONFIG_GPIO_PCF857X is not set
# CONFIG_GPIO_SX150X is not set
# CONFIG_GPIO_TPIC2810 is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# MFD GPIO expanders
#
CONFIG_GPIO_ADP5520=m
CONFIG_GPIO_ARIZONA=m
CONFIG_GPIO_CRYSTAL_COVE=m
CONFIG_GPIO_CS5535=m
CONFIG_GPIO_DA9052=m
CONFIG_GPIO_DA9055=m
CONFIG_GPIO_DLN2=m
CONFIG_GPIO_JANZ_TTL=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_GPIO_KEMPLD=m
CONFIG_GPIO_LP3943=m
CONFIG_GPIO_LP873X=m
CONFIG_GPIO_MSIC=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_GPIO_PALMAS=y
CONFIG_GPIO_RC5T583=y
CONFIG_GPIO_TIMBERDALE=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_GPIO_TPS65086=m
CONFIG_GPIO_TPS65218=m
CONFIG_GPIO_TPS6586X=y
CONFIG_GPIO_TPS65910=y
CONFIG_GPIO_TPS65912=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_GPIO_TWL4030=m
CONFIG_GPIO_TWL6040=m
CONFIG_GPIO_UCB1400=m
CONFIG_GPIO_WHISKEY_COVE=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_GPIO_WM831X=m
CONFIG_GPIO_WM8350=m
CONFIG_GPIO_WM8994=m
#
# PCI GPIO expanders
#
CONFIG_GPIO_AMD8111=m
CONFIG_GPIO_ML_IOH=m
CONFIG_GPIO_PCH=m
CONFIG_GPIO_RDC321X=m
#
# SPI GPIO expanders
#
CONFIG_GPIO_MAX7301=m
CONFIG_GPIO_MC33880=m
CONFIG_GPIO_PISOSR=m
#
# SPI or I2C GPIO expanders
#
#
# USB GPIO expanders
#
CONFIG_GPIO_VIPERBOARD=m
CONFIG_W1=m
CONFIG_W1_CON=y
#
# 1-wire Bus Masters
#
CONFIG_W1_MASTER_MATROX=m
CONFIG_W1_MASTER_DS2490=m
CONFIG_W1_MASTER_DS2482=m
CONFIG_W1_MASTER_DS1WM=m
# CONFIG_W1_MASTER_GPIO is not set
#
# 1-wire Slaves
#
CONFIG_W1_SLAVE_THERM=m
CONFIG_W1_SLAVE_SMEM=m
CONFIG_W1_SLAVE_DS2408=m
CONFIG_W1_SLAVE_DS2408_READBACK=y
CONFIG_W1_SLAVE_DS2413=m
CONFIG_W1_SLAVE_DS2406=m
CONFIG_W1_SLAVE_DS2423=m
CONFIG_W1_SLAVE_DS2431=m
CONFIG_W1_SLAVE_DS2433=m
# CONFIG_W1_SLAVE_DS2433_CRC is not set
# CONFIG_W1_SLAVE_DS2760 is not set
CONFIG_W1_SLAVE_DS2780=m
CONFIG_W1_SLAVE_DS2781=m
CONFIG_W1_SLAVE_DS28E04=m
# CONFIG_W1_SLAVE_BQ27000 is not set
CONFIG_POWER_AVS=y
CONFIG_POWER_RESET=y
# CONFIG_POWER_RESET_RESTART is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_POWER_SUPPLY=y
# CONFIG_POWER_SUPPLY_DEBUG is not set
# CONFIG_PDA_POWER is not set
CONFIG_GENERIC_ADC_BATTERY=m
CONFIG_MAX8925_POWER=m
CONFIG_WM831X_BACKUP=m
CONFIG_WM831X_POWER=m
CONFIG_WM8350_POWER=m
# CONFIG_TEST_POWER is not set
CONFIG_BATTERY_88PM860X=m
CONFIG_BATTERY_DS2760=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_BATTERY_DS2780=m
CONFIG_BATTERY_DS2781=m
CONFIG_BATTERY_DS2782=m
CONFIG_BATTERY_SBS=m
CONFIG_BATTERY_BQ27XXX=m
CONFIG_BATTERY_BQ27XXX_I2C=m
CONFIG_BATTERY_DA9030=m
CONFIG_BATTERY_DA9052=m
CONFIG_CHARGER_DA9150=m
CONFIG_BATTERY_DA9150=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_AXP288_CHARGER=m
# CONFIG_AXP288_FUEL_GAUGE is not set
CONFIG_BATTERY_MAX17040=m
CONFIG_BATTERY_MAX17042=m
CONFIG_BATTERY_TWL4030_MADC=m
CONFIG_CHARGER_88PM860X=m
CONFIG_CHARGER_PCF50633=m
CONFIG_BATTERY_INTEL_MID=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_BATTERY_RX51=m
CONFIG_CHARGER_ISP1704=m
CONFIG_CHARGER_MAX8903=m
CONFIG_CHARGER_TWL4030=m
CONFIG_CHARGER_LP8727=m
CONFIG_CHARGER_LP8788=m
CONFIG_CHARGER_GPIO=m
CONFIG_CHARGER_MANAGER=y
CONFIG_CHARGER_MAX14577=m
CONFIG_CHARGER_MAX77693=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CHARGER_MAX8997=m
CONFIG_CHARGER_MAX8998=m
CONFIG_CHARGER_BQ2415X=m
CONFIG_CHARGER_BQ24190=m
CONFIG_CHARGER_BQ24257=m
CONFIG_CHARGER_BQ24735=m
CONFIG_CHARGER_BQ25890=m
CONFIG_CHARGER_SMB347=m
CONFIG_CHARGER_TPS65090=m
CONFIG_CHARGER_TPS65217=m
CONFIG_BATTERY_GAUGE_LTC2941=m
CONFIG_BATTERY_RT5033=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CHARGER_RT9455=m
CONFIG_AXP20X_POWER=m
CONFIG_HWMON=y
CONFIG_HWMON_VID=m
# CONFIG_HWMON_DEBUG_CHIP is not set
#
# Native drivers
#
CONFIG_SENSORS_ABITUGURU=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_ABITUGURU3=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_AD7314=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_AD7414=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_AD7418=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_ADM1021=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_ADM1025=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_ADM1026=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_ADM1029=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_ADM1031=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_ADM9240=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_ADT7X10=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_ADT7310=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_ADT7410=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_ADT7411=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_ADT7462=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_ADT7470=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_ADT7475=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_ASC7621=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_K8TEMP=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_K10TEMP=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_FAM15H_POWER=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_APPLESMC=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_ARM_SCPI=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SENSORS_ASB100=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_ATXP1=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_DS620=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_DS1621=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_DELL_SMM=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_DA9052_ADC=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_DA9055=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_I5K_AMB=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_F71805F=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_F71882FG=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_F75375S=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_MC13783_ADC=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_FSCHMD=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_FTSTEUTATES=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SENSORS_GL518SM=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_GL520SM=m
# CONFIG_SENSORS_G760A is not set
CONFIG_SENSORS_G762=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_GPIO_FAN=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_HIH6130=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_IBMAEM=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_IBMPEX=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_IIO_HWMON=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_I5500=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_CORETEMP=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_IT87=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_JC42=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_POWR1220=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LINEAGE=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LTC2945=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LTC2990=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LTC4151=m
# CONFIG_SENSORS_LTC4215 is not set
CONFIG_SENSORS_LTC4222=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LTC4245=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LTC4260=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LTC4261=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_MAX1111=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_MAX16065=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_MAX1619=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_MAX1668=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_MAX197=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_MAX31722=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SENSORS_MAX6639=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_MAX6642=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_MAX6650=m
# CONFIG_SENSORS_MAX6697 is not set
CONFIG_SENSORS_MAX31790=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_MCP3021=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_TC654=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SENSORS_MENF21BMC_HWMON=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_ADCXX=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LM63=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LM70=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LM73=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LM75=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LM77=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LM78=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LM80=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LM83=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LM85=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LM87=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LM90=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LM92=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LM93=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LM95234=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LM95241=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LM95245=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_PC87360=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_PC87427=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_NTC_THERMISTOR=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_NCT6683=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_NCT6775=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_NCT7802=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_NCT7904=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_PCF8591=m
CONFIG_PMBUS=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_PMBUS=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_ADM1275=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LM25066=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LTC2978=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LTC3815=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_MAX16064=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_MAX20751=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_MAX34440=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_MAX8688=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_TPS40422=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_UCD9000=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_UCD9200=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_ZL6100=m
# CONFIG_SENSORS_SHT15 is not set
# CONFIG_SENSORS_SHT21 is not set
CONFIG_SENSORS_SHT3x=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SENSORS_SHTC1=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_SIS5595=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_DME1737=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_EMC1403=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_EMC2103=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_EMC6W201=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_SMSC47M1=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_SMSC47M192=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_SMSC47B397=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_SCH56XX_COMMON=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_SCH5627=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_SCH5636=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_SMM665=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_ADC128D818=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_ADS1015=m
# CONFIG_SENSORS_ADS7828 is not set
CONFIG_SENSORS_ADS7871=m
# CONFIG_SENSORS_AMC6821 is not set
CONFIG_SENSORS_INA209=m
# CONFIG_SENSORS_INA2XX is not set
CONFIG_SENSORS_INA3221=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SENSORS_TC74=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_THMC50=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_TMP102=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_TMP103=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_TMP108=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SENSORS_TMP401=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_TMP421=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_TWL4030_MADC=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_VIA_CPUTEMP=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_VIA686A=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_VT1211=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_VT8231=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_W83781D=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_W83791D=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_W83792D=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_W83793=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_W83795=m
# CONFIG_SENSORS_W83795_FANCTRL is not set
CONFIG_SENSORS_W83L785TS=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_W83L786NG=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_W83627HF=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_W83627EHF=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_WM831X=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_WM8350=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_XGENE=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# ACPI drivers
#
CONFIG_SENSORS_ACPI_POWER=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_ATK0110=m
CONFIG_THERMAL=y
CONFIG_THERMAL_HWMON=y
CONFIG_THERMAL_WRITABLE_TRIPS=y
CONFIG_THERMAL_DEFAULT_GOV_STEP_WISE=y
# CONFIG_THERMAL_DEFAULT_GOV_FAIR_SHARE is not set
# CONFIG_THERMAL_DEFAULT_GOV_USER_SPACE is not set
# CONFIG_THERMAL_DEFAULT_GOV_POWER_ALLOCATOR is not set
CONFIG_THERMAL_GOV_FAIR_SHARE=y
CONFIG_THERMAL_GOV_STEP_WISE=y
CONFIG_THERMAL_GOV_BANG_BANG=y
CONFIG_THERMAL_GOV_USER_SPACE=y
CONFIG_THERMAL_GOV_POWER_ALLOCATOR=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_THERMAL_EMULATION=y
CONFIG_INTEL_POWERCLAMP=m
CONFIG_X86_PKG_TEMP_THERMAL=m
CONFIG_INTEL_SOC_DTS_IOSF_CORE=m
CONFIG_INTEL_SOC_DTS_THERMAL=m
#
# ACPI INT340X thermal drivers
#
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_INT340X_THERMAL=m
CONFIG_ACPI_THERMAL_REL=m
CONFIG_INT3406_THERMAL=m
CONFIG_INTEL_BXT_PMIC_THERMAL=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_INTEL_PCH_THERMAL=m
CONFIG_GENERIC_ADC_THERMAL=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_WATCHDOG=y
CONFIG_WATCHDOG_CORE=y
# CONFIG_WATCHDOG_NOWAYOUT is not set
CONFIG_WATCHDOG_SYSFS=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Watchdog Device Drivers
#
CONFIG_SOFT_WATCHDOG=m
CONFIG_DA9052_WATCHDOG=m
CONFIG_DA9055_WATCHDOG=m
CONFIG_DA9063_WATCHDOG=m
CONFIG_DA9062_WATCHDOG=m
CONFIG_MENF21BMC_WATCHDOG=m
CONFIG_WDAT_WDT=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_WM831X_WATCHDOG=m
CONFIG_WM8350_WATCHDOG=m
# CONFIG_XILINX_WATCHDOG is not set
# CONFIG_ZIIRAVE_WATCHDOG is not set
# CONFIG_CADENCE_WATCHDOG is not set
CONFIG_DW_WATCHDOG=m
CONFIG_TWL4030_WATCHDOG=m
CONFIG_MAX63XX_WATCHDOG=m
CONFIG_RETU_WATCHDOG=m
CONFIG_ACQUIRE_WDT=m
CONFIG_ADVANTECH_WDT=m
CONFIG_ALIM1535_WDT=m
CONFIG_ALIM7101_WDT=m
CONFIG_EBC_C384_WDT=m
CONFIG_F71808E_WDT=m
CONFIG_SP5100_TCO=m
# CONFIG_GEODE_WDT is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SBC_FITPC2_WATCHDOG=m
CONFIG_EUROTECH_WDT=m
CONFIG_IB700_WDT=m
CONFIG_IBMASR=m
CONFIG_WAFER_WDT=m
CONFIG_I6300ESB_WDT=m
CONFIG_IE6XX_WDT=m
CONFIG_INTEL_SCU_WATCHDOG=y
CONFIG_INTEL_MID_WATCHDOG=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_ITCO_WDT=m
CONFIG_ITCO_VENDOR_SUPPORT=y
CONFIG_IT8712F_WDT=m
CONFIG_IT87_WDT=m
CONFIG_HP_WATCHDOG=m
CONFIG_KEMPLD_WDT=m
CONFIG_HPWDT_NMI_DECODING=y
CONFIG_SC1200_WDT=m
CONFIG_SCx200_WDT=m
CONFIG_PC87413_WDT=m
CONFIG_NV_TCO=m
CONFIG_60XX_WDT=m
CONFIG_SBC8360_WDT=m
CONFIG_SBC7240_WDT=m
CONFIG_CPU5_WDT=m
CONFIG_SMSC_SCH311X_WDT=m
CONFIG_SMSC37B787_WDT=m
CONFIG_VIA_WDT=m
CONFIG_W83627HF_WDT=m
CONFIG_W83877F_WDT=m
CONFIG_W83977F_WDT=m
CONFIG_MACHZ_WDT=m
CONFIG_SBC_EPX_C3_WATCHDOG=m
CONFIG_INTEL_MEI_WDT=m
CONFIG_NI903X_WDT=m
CONFIG_MEN_A21_WDT=m
#
# ISA-based Watchdog Cards
#
CONFIG_PCWATCHDOG=m
CONFIG_MIXCOMWD=m
CONFIG_WDT=m
#
# PCI-based Watchdog Cards
#
CONFIG_PCIPCWATCHDOG=m
CONFIG_WDTPCI=m
#
# USB-based Watchdog Cards
#
CONFIG_USBPCWATCHDOG=m
#
# Watchdog Pretimeout Governors
#
CONFIG_WATCHDOG_PRETIMEOUT_GOV=y
CONFIG_WATCHDOG_PRETIMEOUT_DEFAULT_GOV_NOOP=y
# CONFIG_WATCHDOG_PRETIMEOUT_DEFAULT_GOV_PANIC is not set
CONFIG_WATCHDOG_PRETIMEOUT_GOV_NOOP=y
CONFIG_WATCHDOG_PRETIMEOUT_GOV_PANIC=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SSB_POSSIBLE=y
#
# Sonics Silicon Backplane
#
CONFIG_SSB=m
CONFIG_SSB_SPROM=y
CONFIG_SSB_BLOCKIO=y
CONFIG_SSB_PCIHOST_POSSIBLE=y
CONFIG_SSB_PCIHOST=y
CONFIG_SSB_B43_PCI_BRIDGE=y
CONFIG_SSB_PCMCIAHOST_POSSIBLE=y
# CONFIG_SSB_PCMCIAHOST is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SSB_SDIOHOST_POSSIBLE=y
CONFIG_SSB_SDIOHOST=y
# CONFIG_SSB_SILENT is not set
# CONFIG_SSB_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_SSB_DRIVER_PCICORE_POSSIBLE=y
CONFIG_SSB_DRIVER_PCICORE=y
CONFIG_SSB_DRIVER_GPIO=y
CONFIG_BCMA_POSSIBLE=y
#
# Broadcom specific AMBA
#
CONFIG_BCMA=m
CONFIG_BCMA_BLOCKIO=y
CONFIG_BCMA_HOST_PCI_POSSIBLE=y
CONFIG_BCMA_HOST_PCI=y
CONFIG_BCMA_HOST_SOC=y
CONFIG_BCMA_DRIVER_PCI=y
CONFIG_BCMA_SFLASH=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_BCMA_DRIVER_GMAC_CMN=y
CONFIG_BCMA_DRIVER_GPIO=y
# CONFIG_BCMA_DEBUG is not set
#
# Multifunction device drivers
#
CONFIG_MFD_CORE=y
CONFIG_MFD_CS5535=m
CONFIG_MFD_AS3711=y
CONFIG_PMIC_ADP5520=y
CONFIG_MFD_AAT2870_CORE=y
CONFIG_MFD_BCM590XX=m
CONFIG_MFD_AXP20X=m
CONFIG_MFD_AXP20X_I2C=m
CONFIG_MFD_CROS_EC=m
CONFIG_MFD_CROS_EC_I2C=m
CONFIG_MFD_CROS_EC_SPI=m
CONFIG_PMIC_DA903X=y
CONFIG_PMIC_DA9052=y
CONFIG_MFD_DA9052_SPI=y
CONFIG_MFD_DA9052_I2C=y
CONFIG_MFD_DA9055=y
CONFIG_MFD_DA9062=m
CONFIG_MFD_DA9063=y
# CONFIG_MFD_DA9150 is not set
CONFIG_MFD_DLN2=m
CONFIG_MFD_MC13XXX=m
CONFIG_MFD_MC13XXX_SPI=m
# CONFIG_MFD_MC13XXX_I2C is not set
# CONFIG_HTC_PASIC3 is not set
CONFIG_HTC_I2CPLD=y
CONFIG_MFD_INTEL_QUARK_I2C_GPIO=m
CONFIG_LPC_ICH=m
CONFIG_LPC_SCH=m
CONFIG_INTEL_SOC_PMIC=y
CONFIG_MFD_INTEL_LPSS=m
CONFIG_MFD_INTEL_LPSS_ACPI=m
CONFIG_MFD_INTEL_LPSS_PCI=m
CONFIG_MFD_INTEL_MSIC=y
CONFIG_MFD_JANZ_CMODIO=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MFD_KEMPLD=m
CONFIG_MFD_88PM800=m
CONFIG_MFD_88PM805=m
CONFIG_MFD_88PM860X=y
CONFIG_MFD_MAX14577=y
CONFIG_MFD_MAX77693=y
CONFIG_MFD_MAX77843=y
CONFIG_MFD_MAX8907=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MFD_MAX8925=y
CONFIG_MFD_MAX8997=y
CONFIG_MFD_MAX8998=y
CONFIG_MFD_MT6397=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MFD_MENF21BMC=m
CONFIG_EZX_PCAP=y
CONFIG_MFD_VIPERBOARD=m
CONFIG_MFD_RETU=m
CONFIG_MFD_PCF50633=m
CONFIG_PCF50633_ADC=m
CONFIG_PCF50633_GPIO=m
CONFIG_UCB1400_CORE=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MFD_RDC321X=m
CONFIG_MFD_RTSX_PCI=m
# CONFIG_MFD_RT5033 is not set
CONFIG_MFD_RTSX_USB=m
CONFIG_MFD_RC5T583=y
CONFIG_MFD_SEC_CORE=y
CONFIG_MFD_SI476X_CORE=m
# CONFIG_MFD_SM501 is not set
# CONFIG_MFD_SKY81452 is not set
CONFIG_MFD_SMSC=y
# CONFIG_ABX500_CORE is not set
CONFIG_MFD_SYSCON=y
CONFIG_MFD_TI_AM335X_TSCADC=m
CONFIG_MFD_LP3943=m
CONFIG_MFD_LP8788=y
# CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_OT200 is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MFD_PALMAS=y
# CONFIG_TPS6105X is not set
# CONFIG_TPS65010 is not set
# CONFIG_TPS6507X is not set
CONFIG_MFD_TPS65086=m
CONFIG_MFD_TPS65090=y
CONFIG_MFD_TPS65217=m
# CONFIG_MFD_TI_LP873X is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MFD_TPS65218=m
CONFIG_MFD_TPS6586X=y
CONFIG_MFD_TPS65910=y
CONFIG_MFD_TPS65912=y
CONFIG_MFD_TPS65912_I2C=y
CONFIG_MFD_TPS65912_SPI=y
CONFIG_MFD_TPS80031=y
CONFIG_TWL4030_CORE=y
CONFIG_MFD_TWL4030_AUDIO=y
CONFIG_TWL6040_CORE=y
CONFIG_MFD_WL1273_CORE=m
# CONFIG_MFD_LM3533 is not set
# CONFIG_MFD_TIMBERDALE is not set
# CONFIG_MFD_TMIO is not set
CONFIG_MFD_VX855=m
CONFIG_MFD_ARIZONA=y
CONFIG_MFD_ARIZONA_I2C=m
CONFIG_MFD_ARIZONA_SPI=m
# CONFIG_MFD_CS47L24 is not set
CONFIG_MFD_WM5102=y
CONFIG_MFD_WM5110=y
# CONFIG_MFD_WM8997 is not set
CONFIG_MFD_WM8998=y
CONFIG_MFD_WM8400=y
CONFIG_MFD_WM831X=y
CONFIG_MFD_WM831X_I2C=y
CONFIG_MFD_WM831X_SPI=y
CONFIG_MFD_WM8350=y
CONFIG_MFD_WM8350_I2C=y
CONFIG_MFD_WM8994=y
# CONFIG_REGULATOR is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MEDIA_SUPPORT=m
#
# Multimedia core support
#
CONFIG_MEDIA_CAMERA_SUPPORT=y
CONFIG_MEDIA_ANALOG_TV_SUPPORT=y
CONFIG_MEDIA_DIGITAL_TV_SUPPORT=y
CONFIG_MEDIA_RADIO_SUPPORT=y
CONFIG_MEDIA_SDR_SUPPORT=y
CONFIG_MEDIA_RC_SUPPORT=y
CONFIG_MEDIA_CEC_SUPPORT=y
# CONFIG_MEDIA_CEC_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_MEDIA_CEC_EDID=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MEDIA_CONTROLLER=y
# CONFIG_MEDIA_CONTROLLER_DVB is not set
CONFIG_VIDEO_DEV=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_V4L2_SUBDEV_API=y
CONFIG_VIDEO_V4L2=m
# CONFIG_VIDEO_ADV_DEBUG is not set
# CONFIG_VIDEO_FIXED_MINOR_RANGES is not set
# CONFIG_VIDEO_PCI_SKELETON is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_VIDEO_TUNER=m
CONFIG_V4L2_MEM2MEM_DEV=m
CONFIG_V4L2_FLASH_LED_CLASS=m
CONFIG_VIDEOBUF_GEN=m
CONFIG_VIDEOBUF_DMA_SG=m
CONFIG_VIDEOBUF_VMALLOC=m
CONFIG_VIDEOBUF_DVB=m
CONFIG_VIDEOBUF2_CORE=m
CONFIG_VIDEOBUF2_MEMOPS=m
CONFIG_VIDEOBUF2_DMA_CONTIG=m
CONFIG_VIDEOBUF2_VMALLOC=m
CONFIG_VIDEOBUF2_DMA_SG=m
CONFIG_VIDEOBUF2_DVB=m
CONFIG_DVB_CORE=m
CONFIG_DVB_NET=y
CONFIG_TTPCI_EEPROM=m
CONFIG_DVB_MAX_ADAPTERS=8
# CONFIG_DVB_DYNAMIC_MINORS is not set
# CONFIG_DVB_DEMUX_SECTION_LOSS_LOG is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Media drivers
#
CONFIG_RC_CORE=m
CONFIG_RC_MAP=m
CONFIG_RC_DECODERS=y
CONFIG_LIRC=m
CONFIG_IR_LIRC_CODEC=m
CONFIG_IR_NEC_DECODER=m
CONFIG_IR_RC5_DECODER=m
CONFIG_IR_RC6_DECODER=m
CONFIG_IR_JVC_DECODER=m
CONFIG_IR_SONY_DECODER=m
CONFIG_IR_SANYO_DECODER=m
CONFIG_IR_SHARP_DECODER=m
CONFIG_IR_MCE_KBD_DECODER=m
CONFIG_IR_XMP_DECODER=m
CONFIG_RC_DEVICES=y
CONFIG_RC_ATI_REMOTE=m
CONFIG_IR_ENE=m
CONFIG_IR_HIX5HD2=m
CONFIG_IR_IMON=m
CONFIG_IR_MCEUSB=m
CONFIG_IR_ITE_CIR=m
CONFIG_IR_FINTEK=m
CONFIG_IR_NUVOTON=m
CONFIG_IR_REDRAT3=m
CONFIG_IR_STREAMZAP=m
CONFIG_IR_WINBOND_CIR=m
CONFIG_IR_IGORPLUGUSB=m
CONFIG_IR_IGUANA=m
CONFIG_IR_TTUSBIR=m
CONFIG_RC_LOOPBACK=m
CONFIG_IR_GPIO_CIR=m
CONFIG_IR_SERIAL=m
CONFIG_IR_SERIAL_TRANSMITTER=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MEDIA_USB_SUPPORT=y
#
# Webcam devices
#
CONFIG_USB_VIDEO_CLASS=m
CONFIG_USB_VIDEO_CLASS_INPUT_EVDEV=y
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA=m
CONFIG_USB_M5602=m
CONFIG_USB_STV06XX=m
CONFIG_USB_GL860=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_BENQ=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_CONEX=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_CPIA1=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_DTCS033=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_ETOMS=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_FINEPIX=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_JEILINJ=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_JL2005BCD=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_KINECT=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_KONICA=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_MARS=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_MR97310A=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_NW80X=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_OV519=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_OV534=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_OV534_9=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_PAC207=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_PAC7302=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_PAC7311=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_SE401=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_SN9C2028=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_SN9C20X=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_SONIXB=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_SONIXJ=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_SPCA500=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_SPCA501=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_SPCA505=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_SPCA506=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_SPCA508=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_SPCA561=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_SPCA1528=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_SQ905=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_SQ905C=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_SQ930X=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_STK014=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_STK1135=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_STV0680=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_SUNPLUS=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_T613=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_TOPRO=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_TOUPTEK=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_TV8532=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_VC032X=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_VICAM=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_XIRLINK_CIT=m
CONFIG_USB_GSPCA_ZC3XX=m
CONFIG_USB_PWC=m
# CONFIG_USB_PWC_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_USB_PWC_INPUT_EVDEV=y
CONFIG_VIDEO_CPIA2=m
CONFIG_USB_ZR364XX=m
CONFIG_USB_STKWEBCAM=m
CONFIG_USB_S2255=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_USBTV=m
#
# Analog TV USB devices
#
CONFIG_VIDEO_PVRUSB2=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_PVRUSB2_SYSFS=y
CONFIG_VIDEO_PVRUSB2_DVB=y
# CONFIG_VIDEO_PVRUSB2_DEBUGIFC is not set
CONFIG_VIDEO_HDPVR=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_USBVISION=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_STK1160_COMMON=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_STK1160_AC97=y
CONFIG_VIDEO_STK1160=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_GO7007=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_GO7007_USB=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_GO7007_LOADER=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_GO7007_USB_S2250_BOARD=m
#
# Analog/digital TV USB devices
#
CONFIG_VIDEO_AU0828=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_AU0828_V4L2=y
CONFIG_VIDEO_AU0828_RC=y
CONFIG_VIDEO_CX231XX=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_CX231XX_RC=y
CONFIG_VIDEO_CX231XX_ALSA=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_CX231XX_DVB=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_TM6000=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_TM6000_ALSA=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_TM6000_DVB=m
#
# Digital TV USB devices
#
CONFIG_DVB_USB=m
# CONFIG_DVB_USB_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_DVB_USB_DIB3000MC=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_DVB_USB_A800=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_DIBUSB_MB=m
# CONFIG_DVB_USB_DIBUSB_MB_FAULTY is not set
CONFIG_DVB_USB_DIBUSB_MC=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_DIB0700=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_UMT_010=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_CXUSB=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_M920X=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_DIGITV=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_VP7045=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_VP702X=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_GP8PSK=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_NOVA_T_USB2=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_TTUSB2=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_DTT200U=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_OPERA1=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_AF9005=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_AF9005_REMOTE=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_PCTV452E=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_DW2102=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_CINERGY_T2=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_DTV5100=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_FRIIO=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_AZ6027=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_TECHNISAT_USB2=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_V2=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_AF9015=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_AF9035=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_ANYSEE=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_AU6610=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_AZ6007=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_CE6230=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_EC168=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_GL861=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_LME2510=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_MXL111SF=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_RTL28XXU=m
CONFIG_DVB_USB_DVBSKY=m
CONFIG_DVB_TTUSB_BUDGET=m
CONFIG_DVB_TTUSB_DEC=m
CONFIG_SMS_USB_DRV=m
CONFIG_DVB_B2C2_FLEXCOP_USB=m
# CONFIG_DVB_B2C2_FLEXCOP_USB_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_DVB_AS102=m
#
# Webcam, TV (analog/digital) USB devices
#
CONFIG_VIDEO_EM28XX=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_EM28XX_V4L2=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_EM28XX_ALSA=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_EM28XX_DVB=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_EM28XX_RC=m
#
# Software defined radio USB devices
#
CONFIG_USB_AIRSPY=m
CONFIG_USB_HACKRF=m
CONFIG_USB_MSI2500=m
#
# USB HDMI CEC adapters
#
CONFIG_USB_PULSE8_CEC=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MEDIA_PCI_SUPPORT=y
#
# Media capture support
#
CONFIG_VIDEO_MEYE=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_SOLO6X10=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_TW5864=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_VIDEO_TW68=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_TW686X=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_VIDEO_ZORAN=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_ZORAN_DC30=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_ZORAN_ZR36060=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_ZORAN_BUZ=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_ZORAN_DC10=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_ZORAN_LML33=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_ZORAN_LML33R10=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_ZORAN_AVS6EYES=m
#
# Media capture/analog TV support
#
CONFIG_VIDEO_IVTV=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_IVTV_ALSA=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_FB_IVTV=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_HEXIUM_GEMINI=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_HEXIUM_ORION=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_MXB=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_DT3155=m
#
# Media capture/analog/hybrid TV support
#
CONFIG_VIDEO_CX18=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_CX18_ALSA=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_CX23885=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_ALTERA_CI=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_CX25821=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_CX25821_ALSA=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_CX88=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_CX88_ALSA=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_CX88_BLACKBIRD=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_CX88_DVB=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_CX88_ENABLE_VP3054=y
CONFIG_VIDEO_CX88_VP3054=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_CX88_MPEG=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_BT848=m
CONFIG_DVB_BT8XX=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_SAA7134=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_SAA7134_ALSA=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_SAA7134_RC=y
CONFIG_VIDEO_SAA7134_DVB=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_SAA7134_GO7007=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_SAA7164=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_COBALT=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Media digital TV PCI Adapters
#
CONFIG_DVB_AV7110_IR=y
CONFIG_DVB_AV7110=m
CONFIG_DVB_AV7110_OSD=y
CONFIG_DVB_BUDGET_CORE=m
CONFIG_DVB_BUDGET=m
CONFIG_DVB_BUDGET_CI=m
CONFIG_DVB_BUDGET_AV=m
CONFIG_DVB_BUDGET_PATCH=m
CONFIG_DVB_B2C2_FLEXCOP_PCI=m
# CONFIG_DVB_B2C2_FLEXCOP_PCI_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_DVB_PLUTO2=m
CONFIG_DVB_DM1105=m
CONFIG_DVB_PT1=m
CONFIG_DVB_PT3=m
CONFIG_MANTIS_CORE=m
CONFIG_DVB_MANTIS=m
CONFIG_DVB_HOPPER=m
CONFIG_DVB_NGENE=m
CONFIG_DVB_DDBRIDGE=m
CONFIG_DVB_SMIPCIE=m
CONFIG_DVB_NETUP_UNIDVB=m
CONFIG_V4L_PLATFORM_DRIVERS=y
CONFIG_VIDEO_CAFE_CCIC=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_VIA_CAMERA=m
CONFIG_SOC_CAMERA=m
CONFIG_SOC_CAMERA_PLATFORM=m
CONFIG_V4L_MEM2MEM_DRIVERS=y
CONFIG_VIDEO_MEM2MEM_DEINTERLACE=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_SH_VEU=m
CONFIG_V4L_TEST_DRIVERS=y
CONFIG_VIDEO_VIVID=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_VIVID_CEC=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_VIDEO_VIVID_MAX_DEVS=64
CONFIG_VIDEO_VIM2M=m
CONFIG_DVB_PLATFORM_DRIVERS=y
#
# Supported MMC/SDIO adapters
#
CONFIG_SMS_SDIO_DRV=m
CONFIG_RADIO_ADAPTERS=y
CONFIG_RADIO_TEA575X=m
CONFIG_RADIO_SI470X=y
CONFIG_USB_SI470X=m
# CONFIG_I2C_SI470X is not set
# CONFIG_RADIO_SI4713 is not set
# CONFIG_RADIO_SI476X is not set
CONFIG_USB_MR800=m
CONFIG_USB_DSBR=m
CONFIG_RADIO_MAXIRADIO=m
CONFIG_RADIO_SHARK=m
CONFIG_RADIO_SHARK2=m
CONFIG_USB_KEENE=m
CONFIG_USB_RAREMONO=m
CONFIG_USB_MA901=m
CONFIG_RADIO_TEA5764=m
CONFIG_RADIO_SAA7706H=m
CONFIG_RADIO_TEF6862=m
CONFIG_RADIO_TIMBERDALE=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_RADIO_WL1273=m
#
# Texas Instruments WL128x FM driver (ST based)
#
CONFIG_RADIO_WL128X=m
CONFIG_V4L_RADIO_ISA_DRIVERS=y
CONFIG_RADIO_ISA=m
CONFIG_RADIO_CADET=m
CONFIG_RADIO_RTRACK=m
CONFIG_RADIO_RTRACK2=m
CONFIG_RADIO_AZTECH=m
CONFIG_RADIO_GEMTEK=m
CONFIG_RADIO_MIROPCM20=m
CONFIG_RADIO_SF16FMI=m
CONFIG_RADIO_SF16FMR2=m
CONFIG_RADIO_TERRATEC=m
CONFIG_RADIO_TRUST=m
CONFIG_RADIO_TYPHOON=m
CONFIG_RADIO_ZOLTRIX=m
#
# Supported FireWire (IEEE 1394) Adapters
#
CONFIG_DVB_FIREDTV=m
CONFIG_DVB_FIREDTV_INPUT=y
CONFIG_MEDIA_COMMON_OPTIONS=y
#
# common driver options
#
CONFIG_VIDEO_CX2341X=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_TVEEPROM=m
CONFIG_CYPRESS_FIRMWARE=m
CONFIG_DVB_B2C2_FLEXCOP=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_SAA7146=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_SAA7146_VV=m
CONFIG_SMS_SIANO_MDTV=m
CONFIG_SMS_SIANO_RC=y
# CONFIG_SMS_SIANO_DEBUGFS is not set
CONFIG_VIDEO_V4L2_TPG=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Media ancillary drivers (tuners, sensors, i2c, spi, frontends)
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
CONFIG_MEDIA_SUBDRV_AUTOSELECT=y
CONFIG_MEDIA_ATTACH=y
CONFIG_VIDEO_IR_I2C=m
#
# Audio decoders, processors and mixers
#
CONFIG_VIDEO_TVAUDIO=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_TDA7432=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_TDA9840=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_TEA6415C=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_TEA6420=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_MSP3400=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_CS3308=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_CS5345=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_CS53L32A=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_UDA1342=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_WM8775=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_WM8739=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_VP27SMPX=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_SONY_BTF_MPX=m
#
# RDS decoders
#
CONFIG_VIDEO_SAA6588=m
#
# Video decoders
#
CONFIG_VIDEO_ADV7604=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_ADV7842=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_VIDEO_BT819=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_BT856=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_BT866=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_KS0127=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_SAA7110=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_SAA711X=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_TVP5150=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_TW2804=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_TW9903=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_TW9906=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_VPX3220=m
#
# Video and audio decoders
#
CONFIG_VIDEO_SAA717X=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_CX25840=m
#
# Video encoders
#
CONFIG_VIDEO_SAA7127=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_SAA7185=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_ADV7170=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_ADV7175=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_ADV7511=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Camera sensor devices
#
CONFIG_VIDEO_OV7640=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_OV7670=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_MT9M111=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_VIDEO_MT9V011=m
#
# Flash devices
#
#
# Video improvement chips
#
CONFIG_VIDEO_UPD64031A=m
CONFIG_VIDEO_UPD64083=m
#
# Audio/Video compression chips
#
CONFIG_VIDEO_SAA6752HS=m
#
# Miscellaneous helper chips
#
CONFIG_VIDEO_M52790=m
#
# Sensors used on soc_camera driver
#
#
# soc_camera sensor drivers
#
CONFIG_SOC_CAMERA_IMX074=m
CONFIG_SOC_CAMERA_MT9M001=m
CONFIG_SOC_CAMERA_MT9M111=m
CONFIG_SOC_CAMERA_MT9T031=m
CONFIG_SOC_CAMERA_MT9T112=m
CONFIG_SOC_CAMERA_MT9V022=m
CONFIG_SOC_CAMERA_OV2640=m
CONFIG_SOC_CAMERA_OV5642=m
CONFIG_SOC_CAMERA_OV6650=m
CONFIG_SOC_CAMERA_OV772X=m
CONFIG_SOC_CAMERA_OV9640=m
CONFIG_SOC_CAMERA_OV9740=m
CONFIG_SOC_CAMERA_RJ54N1=m
CONFIG_SOC_CAMERA_TW9910=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_SIMPLE=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_TDA8290=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_TDA827X=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_TDA18271=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_TDA9887=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_TEA5761=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_TEA5767=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_MSI001=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_MT20XX=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_MT2060=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_MT2063=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_MT2266=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_MT2131=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_QT1010=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_XC2028=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_XC5000=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_XC4000=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_MXL5005S=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_MXL5007T=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_MC44S803=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_MAX2165=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_TDA18218=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_FC0011=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_FC0012=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_FC0013=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_TDA18212=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_E4000=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_FC2580=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_M88RS6000T=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_TUA9001=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_SI2157=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_IT913X=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_R820T=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_MXL301RF=m
CONFIG_MEDIA_TUNER_QM1D1C0042=m
#
# Multistandard (satellite) frontends
#
CONFIG_DVB_STB0899=m
CONFIG_DVB_STB6100=m
CONFIG_DVB_STV090x=m
CONFIG_DVB_STV6110x=m
CONFIG_DVB_M88DS3103=m
#
# Multistandard (cable + terrestrial) frontends
#
CONFIG_DVB_DRXK=m
CONFIG_DVB_TDA18271C2DD=m
CONFIG_DVB_SI2165=m
CONFIG_DVB_MN88472=m
CONFIG_DVB_MN88473=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# DVB-S (satellite) frontends
#
CONFIG_DVB_CX24110=m
CONFIG_DVB_CX24123=m
CONFIG_DVB_MT312=m
CONFIG_DVB_ZL10036=m
CONFIG_DVB_ZL10039=m
CONFIG_DVB_S5H1420=m
CONFIG_DVB_STV0288=m
CONFIG_DVB_STB6000=m
CONFIG_DVB_STV0299=m
CONFIG_DVB_STV6110=m
CONFIG_DVB_STV0900=m
CONFIG_DVB_TDA8083=m
CONFIG_DVB_TDA10086=m
CONFIG_DVB_TDA8261=m
CONFIG_DVB_VES1X93=m
CONFIG_DVB_TUNER_ITD1000=m
CONFIG_DVB_TUNER_CX24113=m
CONFIG_DVB_TDA826X=m
CONFIG_DVB_TUA6100=m
CONFIG_DVB_CX24116=m
CONFIG_DVB_CX24117=m
CONFIG_DVB_CX24120=m
CONFIG_DVB_SI21XX=m
CONFIG_DVB_TS2020=m
CONFIG_DVB_DS3000=m
CONFIG_DVB_MB86A16=m
CONFIG_DVB_TDA10071=m
#
# DVB-T (terrestrial) frontends
#
CONFIG_DVB_SP8870=m
CONFIG_DVB_SP887X=m
CONFIG_DVB_CX22700=m
CONFIG_DVB_CX22702=m
CONFIG_DVB_DRXD=m
CONFIG_DVB_L64781=m
CONFIG_DVB_TDA1004X=m
CONFIG_DVB_NXT6000=m
CONFIG_DVB_MT352=m
CONFIG_DVB_ZL10353=m
CONFIG_DVB_DIB3000MB=m
CONFIG_DVB_DIB3000MC=m
CONFIG_DVB_DIB7000M=m
CONFIG_DVB_DIB7000P=m
CONFIG_DVB_TDA10048=m
CONFIG_DVB_AF9013=m
CONFIG_DVB_EC100=m
CONFIG_DVB_STV0367=m
CONFIG_DVB_CXD2820R=m
CONFIG_DVB_CXD2841ER=m
CONFIG_DVB_RTL2830=m
CONFIG_DVB_RTL2832=m
CONFIG_DVB_RTL2832_SDR=m
CONFIG_DVB_SI2168=m
CONFIG_DVB_AS102_FE=m
CONFIG_DVB_GP8PSK_FE=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# DVB-C (cable) frontends
#
CONFIG_DVB_VES1820=m
CONFIG_DVB_TDA10021=m
CONFIG_DVB_TDA10023=m
CONFIG_DVB_STV0297=m
#
# ATSC (North American/Korean Terrestrial/Cable DTV) frontends
#
CONFIG_DVB_NXT200X=m
CONFIG_DVB_OR51211=m
CONFIG_DVB_OR51132=m
CONFIG_DVB_BCM3510=m
CONFIG_DVB_LGDT330X=m
CONFIG_DVB_LGDT3305=m
CONFIG_DVB_LGDT3306A=m
CONFIG_DVB_LG2160=m
CONFIG_DVB_S5H1409=m
CONFIG_DVB_AU8522=m
CONFIG_DVB_AU8522_DTV=m
CONFIG_DVB_AU8522_V4L=m
CONFIG_DVB_S5H1411=m
#
# ISDB-T (terrestrial) frontends
#
CONFIG_DVB_S921=m
CONFIG_DVB_DIB8000=m
CONFIG_DVB_MB86A20S=m
#
# ISDB-S (satellite) & ISDB-T (terrestrial) frontends
#
CONFIG_DVB_TC90522=m
#
# Digital terrestrial only tuners/PLL
#
CONFIG_DVB_PLL=m
CONFIG_DVB_TUNER_DIB0070=m
CONFIG_DVB_TUNER_DIB0090=m
#
# SEC control devices for DVB-S
#
CONFIG_DVB_DRX39XYJ=m
CONFIG_DVB_LNBH25=m
CONFIG_DVB_LNBP21=m
CONFIG_DVB_LNBP22=m
CONFIG_DVB_ISL6405=m
CONFIG_DVB_ISL6421=m
CONFIG_DVB_ISL6423=m
CONFIG_DVB_A8293=m
CONFIG_DVB_SP2=m
CONFIG_DVB_LGS8GXX=m
CONFIG_DVB_ATBM8830=m
CONFIG_DVB_TDA665x=m
CONFIG_DVB_IX2505V=m
CONFIG_DVB_M88RS2000=m
CONFIG_DVB_AF9033=m
CONFIG_DVB_HORUS3A=m
CONFIG_DVB_ASCOT2E=m
CONFIG_DVB_HELENE=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Tools to develop new frontends
#
# CONFIG_DVB_DUMMY_FE is not set
#
# Graphics support
#
CONFIG_AGP=y
# CONFIG_AGP_ALI is not set
# CONFIG_AGP_ATI is not set
# CONFIG_AGP_AMD is not set
CONFIG_AGP_AMD64=y
CONFIG_AGP_INTEL=y
CONFIG_AGP_NVIDIA=y
CONFIG_AGP_SIS=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_AGP_SWORKS=m
CONFIG_AGP_VIA=y
CONFIG_AGP_EFFICEON=m
CONFIG_INTEL_GTT=y
CONFIG_VGA_ARB=y
CONFIG_VGA_ARB_MAX_GPUS=16
CONFIG_VGA_SWITCHEROO=y
CONFIG_DRM=m
CONFIG_DRM_MIPI_DSI=y
# CONFIG_DRM_DP_AUX_CHARDEV is not set
CONFIG_DRM_KMS_HELPER=m
CONFIG_DRM_KMS_FB_HELPER=y
CONFIG_DRM_FBDEV_EMULATION=y
CONFIG_DRM_LOAD_EDID_FIRMWARE=y
CONFIG_DRM_TTM=m
#
# I2C encoder or helper chips
#
CONFIG_DRM_I2C_CH7006=m
CONFIG_DRM_I2C_SIL164=m
CONFIG_DRM_I2C_NXP_TDA998X=m
CONFIG_DRM_RADEON=m
CONFIG_DRM_RADEON_USERPTR=y
CONFIG_DRM_AMDGPU=m
# CONFIG_DRM_AMDGPU_SI is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_DRM_AMDGPU_CIK=y
CONFIG_DRM_AMDGPU_USERPTR=y
# CONFIG_DRM_AMDGPU_GART_DEBUGFS is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# ACP (Audio CoProcessor) Configuration
#
CONFIG_DRM_AMD_ACP=y
CONFIG_DRM_NOUVEAU=m
CONFIG_NOUVEAU_DEBUG=5
CONFIG_NOUVEAU_DEBUG_DEFAULT=3
CONFIG_DRM_NOUVEAU_BACKLIGHT=y
CONFIG_DRM_I915=m
# CONFIG_DRM_I915_ALPHA_SUPPORT is not set
CONFIG_DRM_I915_CAPTURE_ERROR=y
CONFIG_DRM_I915_COMPRESS_ERROR=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_DRM_I915_USERPTR=y
#
# drm/i915 Debugging
#
# CONFIG_DRM_I915_WERROR is not set
# CONFIG_DRM_I915_DEBUG is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_DRM_VGEM=m
CONFIG_DRM_VMWGFX=m
CONFIG_DRM_VMWGFX_FBCON=y
CONFIG_DRM_GMA500=m
CONFIG_DRM_GMA600=y
CONFIG_DRM_GMA3600=y
CONFIG_DRM_MEDFIELD=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_DRM_UDL=m
CONFIG_DRM_AST=m
CONFIG_DRM_MGAG200=m
CONFIG_DRM_CIRRUS_QEMU=m
CONFIG_DRM_QXL=m
CONFIG_DRM_BOCHS=m
CONFIG_DRM_VIRTIO_GPU=m
CONFIG_DRM_PANEL=y
#
# Display Panels
#
CONFIG_DRM_BRIDGE=y
#
# Display Interface Bridges
#
CONFIG_DRM_ANALOGIX_ANX78XX=m
CONFIG_DRM_HISI_HIBMC=m
# CONFIG_DRM_LEGACY is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Frame buffer Devices
#
CONFIG_FB=y
CONFIG_FIRMWARE_EDID=y
CONFIG_FB_CMDLINE=y
CONFIG_FB_NOTIFY=y
CONFIG_FB_DDC=m
CONFIG_FB_BOOT_VESA_SUPPORT=y
CONFIG_FB_CFB_FILLRECT=y
CONFIG_FB_CFB_COPYAREA=y
CONFIG_FB_CFB_IMAGEBLIT=y
# CONFIG_FB_CFB_REV_PIXELS_IN_BYTE is not set
CONFIG_FB_SYS_FILLRECT=m
CONFIG_FB_SYS_COPYAREA=m
CONFIG_FB_SYS_IMAGEBLIT=m
CONFIG_FB_FOREIGN_ENDIAN=y
CONFIG_FB_BOTH_ENDIAN=y
# CONFIG_FB_BIG_ENDIAN is not set
# CONFIG_FB_LITTLE_ENDIAN is not set
CONFIG_FB_SYS_FOPS=m
CONFIG_FB_DEFERRED_IO=y
CONFIG_FB_HECUBA=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_FB_SVGALIB=m
# CONFIG_FB_MACMODES is not set
CONFIG_FB_BACKLIGHT=y
CONFIG_FB_MODE_HELPERS=y
CONFIG_FB_TILEBLITTING=y
#
# Frame buffer hardware drivers
#
CONFIG_FB_CIRRUS=m
CONFIG_FB_PM2=m
# CONFIG_FB_PM2_FIFO_DISCONNECT is not set
CONFIG_FB_CYBER2000=m
CONFIG_FB_CYBER2000_DDC=y
CONFIG_FB_ARC=m
CONFIG_FB_ASILIANT=y
CONFIG_FB_IMSTT=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_FB_VGA16=m
CONFIG_FB_UVESA=m
CONFIG_FB_VESA=y
CONFIG_FB_EFI=y
CONFIG_FB_N411=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_FB_HGA=m
CONFIG_FB_OPENCORES=m
CONFIG_FB_S1D13XXX=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_FB_NVIDIA=m
CONFIG_FB_NVIDIA_I2C=y
# CONFIG_FB_NVIDIA_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_FB_NVIDIA_BACKLIGHT=y
CONFIG_FB_RIVA=m
# CONFIG_FB_RIVA_I2C is not set
# CONFIG_FB_RIVA_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_FB_RIVA_BACKLIGHT=y
CONFIG_FB_I740=m
# CONFIG_FB_I810 is not set
CONFIG_FB_LE80578=m
CONFIG_FB_CARILLO_RANCH=m
CONFIG_FB_INTEL=m
# CONFIG_FB_INTEL_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_FB_INTEL_I2C=y
CONFIG_FB_MATROX=m
CONFIG_FB_MATROX_MILLENIUM=y
CONFIG_FB_MATROX_MYSTIQUE=y
CONFIG_FB_MATROX_G=y
CONFIG_FB_MATROX_I2C=m
CONFIG_FB_MATROX_MAVEN=m
CONFIG_FB_RADEON=m
CONFIG_FB_RADEON_I2C=y
CONFIG_FB_RADEON_BACKLIGHT=y
# CONFIG_FB_RADEON_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_FB_ATY128=m
CONFIG_FB_ATY128_BACKLIGHT=y
CONFIG_FB_ATY=m
CONFIG_FB_ATY_CT=y
CONFIG_FB_ATY_GENERIC_LCD=y
CONFIG_FB_ATY_GX=y
CONFIG_FB_ATY_BACKLIGHT=y
CONFIG_FB_S3=m
CONFIG_FB_S3_DDC=y
CONFIG_FB_SAVAGE=m
CONFIG_FB_SAVAGE_I2C=y
CONFIG_FB_SAVAGE_ACCEL=y
CONFIG_FB_SIS=m
CONFIG_FB_SIS_300=y
CONFIG_FB_SIS_315=y
CONFIG_FB_VIA=m
# CONFIG_FB_VIA_DIRECT_PROCFS is not set
# CONFIG_FB_VIA_X_COMPATIBILITY is not set
CONFIG_FB_NEOMAGIC=m
CONFIG_FB_KYRO=m
CONFIG_FB_3DFX=m
# CONFIG_FB_3DFX_ACCEL is not set
CONFIG_FB_3DFX_I2C=y
CONFIG_FB_VOODOO1=m
CONFIG_FB_VT8623=m
CONFIG_FB_TRIDENT=m
CONFIG_FB_ARK=m
CONFIG_FB_PM3=m
CONFIG_FB_CARMINE=m
CONFIG_FB_CARMINE_DRAM_EVAL=y
# CONFIG_CARMINE_DRAM_CUSTOM is not set
# CONFIG_FB_GEODE is not set
CONFIG_FB_SMSCUFX=m
CONFIG_FB_UDL=m
CONFIG_FB_IBM_GXT4500=m
# CONFIG_FB_VIRTUAL is not set
# CONFIG_FB_METRONOME is not set
CONFIG_FB_MB862XX=m
CONFIG_FB_MB862XX_PCI_GDC=y
CONFIG_FB_MB862XX_I2C=y
# CONFIG_FB_BROADSHEET is not set
# CONFIG_FB_AUO_K190X is not set
CONFIG_FB_HYPERV=m
CONFIG_FB_SIMPLE=y
CONFIG_FB_SM712=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_LCD_SUPPORT=y
CONFIG_LCD_CLASS_DEVICE=m
CONFIG_LCD_L4F00242T03=m
CONFIG_LCD_LMS283GF05=m
CONFIG_LCD_LTV350QV=m
CONFIG_LCD_ILI922X=m
CONFIG_LCD_ILI9320=m
CONFIG_LCD_TDO24M=m
CONFIG_LCD_VGG2432A4=m
CONFIG_LCD_PLATFORM=m
CONFIG_LCD_S6E63M0=m
CONFIG_LCD_LD9040=m
CONFIG_LCD_AMS369FG06=m
CONFIG_LCD_LMS501KF03=m
CONFIG_LCD_HX8357=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_CLASS_DEVICE=y
# CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_GENERIC is not set
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_LM3533=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_CARILLO_RANCH=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_PWM=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_DA903X=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_DA9052=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_MAX8925=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_APPLE=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_PM8941_WLED=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_SAHARA=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_WM831X=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_ADP5520=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_ADP8860=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_ADP8870=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_88PM860X=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_PCF50633=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_AAT2870=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_LM3630A=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_LM3639=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_LP855X=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_LP8788=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_PANDORA=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_SKY81452=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_TPS65217=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_AS3711=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_GPIO=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_LV5207LP=m
CONFIG_BACKLIGHT_BD6107=m
CONFIG_VGASTATE=m
CONFIG_HDMI=y
#
# Console display driver support
#
CONFIG_VGA_CONSOLE=y
# CONFIG_VGACON_SOFT_SCROLLBACK is not set
CONFIG_MDA_CONSOLE=m
CONFIG_DUMMY_CONSOLE=y
CONFIG_DUMMY_CONSOLE_COLUMNS=80
CONFIG_DUMMY_CONSOLE_ROWS=25
CONFIG_FRAMEBUFFER_CONSOLE=y
CONFIG_FRAMEBUFFER_CONSOLE_DETECT_PRIMARY=y
# CONFIG_FRAMEBUFFER_CONSOLE_ROTATION is not set
# CONFIG_LOGO is not set
CONFIG_SOUND=m
CONFIG_SOUND_OSS_CORE=y
# CONFIG_SOUND_OSS_CORE_PRECLAIM is not set
CONFIG_SND=m
CONFIG_SND_TIMER=m
CONFIG_SND_PCM=m
CONFIG_SND_PCM_ELD=y
CONFIG_SND_PCM_IEC958=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SND_DMAENGINE_PCM=m
CONFIG_SND_HWDEP=m
CONFIG_SND_RAWMIDI=m
CONFIG_SND_COMPRESS_OFFLOAD=m
CONFIG_SND_JACK=y
CONFIG_SND_JACK_INPUT_DEV=y
CONFIG_SND_SEQUENCER=m
CONFIG_SND_SEQ_DUMMY=m
CONFIG_SND_OSSEMUL=y
CONFIG_SND_MIXER_OSS=m
# CONFIG_SND_PCM_OSS is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SND_PCM_TIMER=y
# CONFIG_SND_SEQUENCER_OSS is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SND_HRTIMER=m
CONFIG_SND_SEQ_HRTIMER_DEFAULT=y
CONFIG_SND_DYNAMIC_MINORS=y
CONFIG_SND_MAX_CARDS=32
CONFIG_SND_SUPPORT_OLD_API=y
CONFIG_SND_PROC_FS=y
CONFIG_SND_VERBOSE_PROCFS=y
# CONFIG_SND_VERBOSE_PRINTK is not set
# CONFIG_SND_DEBUG is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SND_VMASTER=y
CONFIG_SND_DMA_SGBUF=y
CONFIG_SND_RAWMIDI_SEQ=m
CONFIG_SND_OPL3_LIB_SEQ=m
CONFIG_SND_OPL4_LIB_SEQ=m
CONFIG_SND_SBAWE_SEQ=m
CONFIG_SND_EMU10K1_SEQ=m
CONFIG_SND_MPU401_UART=m
CONFIG_SND_OPL3_LIB=m
CONFIG_SND_OPL4_LIB=m
CONFIG_SND_VX_LIB=m
CONFIG_SND_AC97_CODEC=m
CONFIG_SND_DRIVERS=y
CONFIG_SND_PCSP=m
CONFIG_SND_DUMMY=m
CONFIG_SND_ALOOP=m
CONFIG_SND_VIRMIDI=m
CONFIG_SND_MTPAV=m
CONFIG_SND_MTS64=m
CONFIG_SND_SERIAL_U16550=m
CONFIG_SND_MPU401=m
CONFIG_SND_PORTMAN2X4=m
CONFIG_SND_AC97_POWER_SAVE=y
CONFIG_SND_AC97_POWER_SAVE_DEFAULT=0
CONFIG_SND_WSS_LIB=m
CONFIG_SND_SB_COMMON=m
CONFIG_SND_SB8_DSP=m
CONFIG_SND_SB16_DSP=m
CONFIG_SND_ISA=y
CONFIG_SND_ADLIB=m
CONFIG_SND_AD1816A=m
CONFIG_SND_AD1848=m
CONFIG_SND_ALS100=m
CONFIG_SND_AZT1605=m
CONFIG_SND_AZT2316=m
CONFIG_SND_AZT2320=m
CONFIG_SND_CMI8328=m
CONFIG_SND_CMI8330=m
CONFIG_SND_CS4231=m
CONFIG_SND_CS4236=m
CONFIG_SND_ES1688=m
CONFIG_SND_ES18XX=m
CONFIG_SND_SC6000=m
CONFIG_SND_GUSCLASSIC=m
CONFIG_SND_GUSEXTREME=m
CONFIG_SND_GUSMAX=m
CONFIG_SND_INTERWAVE=m
CONFIG_SND_INTERWAVE_STB=m
CONFIG_SND_JAZZ16=m
CONFIG_SND_OPL3SA2=m
CONFIG_SND_OPTI92X_AD1848=m
CONFIG_SND_OPTI92X_CS4231=m
CONFIG_SND_OPTI93X=m
CONFIG_SND_MIRO=m
CONFIG_SND_SB8=m
CONFIG_SND_SB16=m
CONFIG_SND_SBAWE=m
CONFIG_SND_SB16_CSP=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SND_SSCAPE=m
CONFIG_SND_WAVEFRONT=m
CONFIG_SND_MSND_PINNACLE=m
CONFIG_SND_MSND_CLASSIC=m
CONFIG_SND_PCI=y
CONFIG_SND_AD1889=m
CONFIG_SND_ALS300=m
CONFIG_SND_ALS4000=m
CONFIG_SND_ALI5451=m
CONFIG_SND_ASIHPI=m
CONFIG_SND_ATIIXP=m
CONFIG_SND_ATIIXP_MODEM=m
CONFIG_SND_AU8810=m
CONFIG_SND_AU8820=m
CONFIG_SND_AU8830=m
CONFIG_SND_AW2=m
CONFIG_SND_AZT3328=m
CONFIG_SND_BT87X=m
# CONFIG_SND_BT87X_OVERCLOCK is not set
CONFIG_SND_CA0106=m
CONFIG_SND_CMIPCI=m
CONFIG_SND_OXYGEN_LIB=m
CONFIG_SND_OXYGEN=m
CONFIG_SND_CS4281=m
CONFIG_SND_CS46XX=m
CONFIG_SND_CS46XX_NEW_DSP=y
CONFIG_SND_CS5530=m
CONFIG_SND_CS5535AUDIO=m
CONFIG_SND_CTXFI=m
CONFIG_SND_DARLA20=m
CONFIG_SND_GINA20=m
CONFIG_SND_LAYLA20=m
CONFIG_SND_DARLA24=m
CONFIG_SND_GINA24=m
CONFIG_SND_LAYLA24=m
CONFIG_SND_MONA=m
CONFIG_SND_MIA=m
CONFIG_SND_ECHO3G=m
CONFIG_SND_INDIGO=m
CONFIG_SND_INDIGOIO=m
CONFIG_SND_INDIGODJ=m
CONFIG_SND_INDIGOIOX=m
CONFIG_SND_INDIGODJX=m
CONFIG_SND_EMU10K1=m
CONFIG_SND_EMU10K1X=m
CONFIG_SND_ENS1370=m
CONFIG_SND_ENS1371=m
CONFIG_SND_ES1938=m
CONFIG_SND_ES1968=m
CONFIG_SND_ES1968_INPUT=y
CONFIG_SND_ES1968_RADIO=y
CONFIG_SND_FM801=m
CONFIG_SND_FM801_TEA575X_BOOL=y
CONFIG_SND_HDSP=m
CONFIG_SND_HDSPM=m
CONFIG_SND_ICE1712=m
CONFIG_SND_ICE1724=m
CONFIG_SND_INTEL8X0=m
CONFIG_SND_INTEL8X0M=m
CONFIG_SND_KORG1212=m
CONFIG_SND_LOLA=m
CONFIG_SND_LX6464ES=m
CONFIG_SND_MAESTRO3=m
CONFIG_SND_MAESTRO3_INPUT=y
CONFIG_SND_MIXART=m
CONFIG_SND_NM256=m
CONFIG_SND_PCXHR=m
CONFIG_SND_RIPTIDE=m
CONFIG_SND_RME32=m
CONFIG_SND_RME96=m
CONFIG_SND_RME9652=m
CONFIG_SND_SIS7019=m
CONFIG_SND_SONICVIBES=m
CONFIG_SND_TRIDENT=m
CONFIG_SND_VIA82XX=m
CONFIG_SND_VIA82XX_MODEM=m
CONFIG_SND_VIRTUOSO=m
CONFIG_SND_VX222=m
CONFIG_SND_YMFPCI=m
#
# HD-Audio
#
CONFIG_SND_HDA=m
CONFIG_SND_HDA_INTEL=m
CONFIG_SND_HDA_HWDEP=y
CONFIG_SND_HDA_RECONFIG=y
CONFIG_SND_HDA_INPUT_BEEP=y
CONFIG_SND_HDA_INPUT_BEEP_MODE=1
CONFIG_SND_HDA_PATCH_LOADER=y
CONFIG_SND_HDA_CODEC_REALTEK=m
CONFIG_SND_HDA_CODEC_ANALOG=m
CONFIG_SND_HDA_CODEC_SIGMATEL=m
CONFIG_SND_HDA_CODEC_VIA=m
CONFIG_SND_HDA_CODEC_HDMI=m
CONFIG_SND_HDA_CODEC_CIRRUS=m
CONFIG_SND_HDA_CODEC_CONEXANT=m
CONFIG_SND_HDA_CODEC_CA0110=m
CONFIG_SND_HDA_CODEC_CA0132=m
CONFIG_SND_HDA_CODEC_CA0132_DSP=y
CONFIG_SND_HDA_CODEC_CMEDIA=m
CONFIG_SND_HDA_CODEC_SI3054=m
CONFIG_SND_HDA_GENERIC=m
CONFIG_SND_HDA_POWER_SAVE_DEFAULT=0
CONFIG_SND_HDA_CORE=m
CONFIG_SND_HDA_DSP_LOADER=y
CONFIG_SND_HDA_I915=y
CONFIG_SND_HDA_EXT_CORE=m
CONFIG_SND_HDA_PREALLOC_SIZE=2048
CONFIG_SND_SPI=y
CONFIG_SND_USB=y
CONFIG_SND_USB_AUDIO=m
CONFIG_SND_USB_UA101=m
CONFIG_SND_USB_USX2Y=m
CONFIG_SND_USB_CAIAQ=m
CONFIG_SND_USB_CAIAQ_INPUT=y
CONFIG_SND_USB_US122L=m
CONFIG_SND_USB_6FIRE=m
CONFIG_SND_USB_HIFACE=m
CONFIG_SND_BCD2000=m
CONFIG_SND_USB_LINE6=m
CONFIG_SND_USB_POD=m
CONFIG_SND_USB_PODHD=m
CONFIG_SND_USB_TONEPORT=m
CONFIG_SND_USB_VARIAX=m
CONFIG_SND_FIREWIRE=y
CONFIG_SND_FIREWIRE_LIB=m
CONFIG_SND_DICE=m
CONFIG_SND_OXFW=m
CONFIG_SND_ISIGHT=m
CONFIG_SND_FIREWORKS=m
CONFIG_SND_BEBOB=m
CONFIG_SND_FIREWIRE_DIGI00X=m
CONFIG_SND_FIREWIRE_TASCAM=m
CONFIG_SND_PCMCIA=y
CONFIG_SND_VXPOCKET=m
CONFIG_SND_PDAUDIOCF=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_AC97_BUS=y
CONFIG_SND_SOC_GENERIC_DMAENGINE_PCM=y
CONFIG_SND_SOC_COMPRESS=y
CONFIG_SND_SOC_TOPOLOGY=y
CONFIG_SND_SOC_AMD_ACP=m
CONFIG_SND_ATMEL_SOC=m
CONFIG_SND_DESIGNWARE_I2S=m
CONFIG_SND_DESIGNWARE_PCM=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# SoC Audio for Freescale CPUs
#
#
# Common SoC Audio options for Freescale CPUs:
#
CONFIG_SND_SOC_FSL_ASRC=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_FSL_SAI=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_FSL_SSI=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_FSL_SPDIF=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_FSL_ESAI=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_IMX_AUDMUX=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_IMG=y
CONFIG_SND_SOC_IMG_I2S_IN=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_IMG_I2S_OUT=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_IMG_PARALLEL_OUT=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_IMG_SPDIF_IN=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_IMG_SPDIF_OUT=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_IMG_PISTACHIO_INTERNAL_DAC=m
CONFIG_SND_MFLD_MACHINE=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SND_SST_MFLD_PLATFORM=m
CONFIG_SND_SST_IPC=m
CONFIG_SND_SST_IPC_PCI=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SND_SST_IPC_ACPI=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_INTEL_SST=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_INTEL_SST_FIRMWARE=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SND_SOC_INTEL_SST_ACPI=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_INTEL_SST_MATCH=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_INTEL_HASWELL=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_INTEL_HASWELL_MACH=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_INTEL_BXT_DA7219_MAX98357A_MACH=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_INTEL_BXT_RT298_MACH=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_INTEL_BROADWELL_MACH=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SND_SOC_INTEL_BYTCR_RT5640_MACH=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_INTEL_BYTCR_RT5651_MACH=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_INTEL_CHT_BSW_RT5672_MACH=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_INTEL_CHT_BSW_RT5645_MACH=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_INTEL_CHT_BSW_MAX98090_TI_MACH=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_INTEL_SKYLAKE=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_INTEL_SKL_RT286_MACH=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_INTEL_SKL_NAU88L25_SSM4567_MACH=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_INTEL_SKL_NAU88L25_MAX98357A_MACH=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_XTFPGA_I2S=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_I2C_AND_SPI=m
#
# CODEC drivers
#
CONFIG_SND_SOC_AC97_CODEC=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_ADAU1701=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_ADAU7002=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SND_SOC_AK4104=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_AK4554=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_AK4613=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_AK4642=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_AK5386=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_ALC5623=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_BT_SCO=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SND_SOC_CS35L32=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_CS35L33=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_CS35L34=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_CS42L42=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SND_SOC_CS42L51=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_CS42L51_I2C=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_CS42L52=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_CS42L56=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_CS42L73=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_CS4265=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_CS4270=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_CS4271=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_CS4271_I2C=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_CS4271_SPI=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_CS42XX8=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_CS42XX8_I2C=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_CS4349=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_CS53L30=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_DA7219=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SND_SOC_DMIC=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_HDMI_CODEC=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SND_SOC_ES8328=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_GTM601=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_HDAC_HDMI=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_INNO_RK3036=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_MAX98090=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_MAX98357A=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_MAX98504=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_MAX9860=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_MSM8916_WCD_ANALOG=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_MSM8916_WCD_DIGITAL=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SND_SOC_PCM1681=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_PCM179X=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_PCM179X_I2C=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_PCM179X_SPI=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_PCM3168A=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_PCM3168A_I2C=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_PCM3168A_SPI=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_PCM512x=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_PCM512x_I2C=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_PCM512x_SPI=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_RL6231=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_RL6347A=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_RT286=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_RT298=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SND_SOC_RT5616=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_RT5631=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_RT5640=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_RT5645=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_RT5651=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_RT5670=m
# CONFIG_SND_SOC_RT5677_SPI is not set
CONFIG_SND_SOC_SGTL5000=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_SI476X=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SND_SOC_SIGMADSP=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_SIGMADSP_I2C=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_SIRF_AUDIO_CODEC=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_SN95031=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SND_SOC_SPDIF=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_SSM2602=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_SSM2602_SPI=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_SSM2602_I2C=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_SSM4567=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_STA32X=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_STA350=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_STI_SAS=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_TAS2552=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_TAS5086=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_TAS571X=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_TAS5720=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SND_SOC_TFA9879=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_TLV320AIC23=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_TLV320AIC23_I2C=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_TLV320AIC23_SPI=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_TLV320AIC31XX=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_TLV320AIC3X=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_TS3A227E=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_WM8510=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_WM8523=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_WM8580=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_WM8711=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_WM8728=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_WM8731=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_WM8737=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_WM8741=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_WM8750=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_WM8753=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_WM8770=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_WM8776=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_WM8804=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_WM8804_I2C=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_WM8804_SPI=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_WM8903=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_WM8960=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SND_SOC_WM8962=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_WM8974=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_WM8978=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_WM8985=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_NAU8810=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SND_SOC_NAU8825=m
CONFIG_SND_SOC_TPA6130A2=m
CONFIG_SND_SIMPLE_CARD_UTILS=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SND_SIMPLE_CARD=m
# CONFIG_SOUND_PRIME is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_AC97_BUS=m
#
# HID support
#
CONFIG_HID=m
CONFIG_HID_BATTERY_STRENGTH=y
CONFIG_HIDRAW=y
CONFIG_UHID=m
CONFIG_HID_GENERIC=m
#
# Special HID drivers
#
CONFIG_HID_A4TECH=m
CONFIG_HID_ACRUX=m
CONFIG_HID_ACRUX_FF=y
CONFIG_HID_APPLE=m
CONFIG_HID_APPLEIR=m
CONFIG_HID_ASUS=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_HID_AUREAL=m
CONFIG_HID_BELKIN=m
CONFIG_HID_BETOP_FF=m
CONFIG_HID_CHERRY=m
CONFIG_HID_CHICONY=m
CONFIG_HID_CORSAIR=m
CONFIG_HID_PRODIKEYS=m
CONFIG_HID_CMEDIA=m
CONFIG_HID_CP2112=m
CONFIG_HID_CYPRESS=m
CONFIG_HID_DRAGONRISE=m
CONFIG_DRAGONRISE_FF=y
CONFIG_HID_EMS_FF=m
CONFIG_HID_ELECOM=m
CONFIG_HID_ELO=m
CONFIG_HID_EZKEY=m
CONFIG_HID_GEMBIRD=m
CONFIG_HID_GFRM=m
CONFIG_HID_HOLTEK=m
CONFIG_HOLTEK_FF=y
CONFIG_HID_GT683R=m
CONFIG_HID_KEYTOUCH=m
CONFIG_HID_KYE=m
CONFIG_HID_UCLOGIC=m
CONFIG_HID_WALTOP=m
CONFIG_HID_GYRATION=m
CONFIG_HID_ICADE=m
CONFIG_HID_TWINHAN=m
CONFIG_HID_KENSINGTON=m
CONFIG_HID_LCPOWER=m
CONFIG_HID_LED=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_HID_LENOVO=m
CONFIG_HID_LOGITECH=m
CONFIG_HID_LOGITECH_DJ=m
CONFIG_HID_LOGITECH_HIDPP=m
CONFIG_LOGITECH_FF=y
CONFIG_LOGIRUMBLEPAD2_FF=y
CONFIG_LOGIG940_FF=y
CONFIG_LOGIWHEELS_FF=y
CONFIG_HID_MAGICMOUSE=m
CONFIG_HID_MAYFLASH=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_HID_MICROSOFT=m
CONFIG_HID_MONTEREY=m
CONFIG_HID_MULTITOUCH=m
CONFIG_HID_NTRIG=m
CONFIG_HID_ORTEK=m
CONFIG_HID_PANTHERLORD=m
CONFIG_PANTHERLORD_FF=y
CONFIG_HID_PENMOUNT=m
CONFIG_HID_PETALYNX=m
CONFIG_HID_PICOLCD=m
CONFIG_HID_PICOLCD_FB=y
CONFIG_HID_PICOLCD_BACKLIGHT=y
CONFIG_HID_PICOLCD_LCD=y
CONFIG_HID_PICOLCD_LEDS=y
CONFIG_HID_PICOLCD_CIR=y
CONFIG_HID_PLANTRONICS=m
CONFIG_HID_PRIMAX=m
CONFIG_HID_ROCCAT=m
CONFIG_HID_SAITEK=m
CONFIG_HID_SAMSUNG=m
CONFIG_HID_SONY=m
CONFIG_SONY_FF=y
CONFIG_HID_SPEEDLINK=m
CONFIG_HID_STEELSERIES=m
CONFIG_HID_SUNPLUS=m
CONFIG_HID_RMI=m
CONFIG_HID_GREENASIA=m
CONFIG_GREENASIA_FF=y
CONFIG_HID_HYPERV_MOUSE=m
CONFIG_HID_SMARTJOYPLUS=m
CONFIG_SMARTJOYPLUS_FF=y
CONFIG_HID_TIVO=m
CONFIG_HID_TOPSEED=m
CONFIG_HID_THINGM=m
CONFIG_HID_THRUSTMASTER=m
CONFIG_THRUSTMASTER_FF=y
CONFIG_HID_UDRAW_PS3=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_HID_WACOM=m
CONFIG_HID_WIIMOTE=m
CONFIG_HID_XINMO=m
CONFIG_HID_ZEROPLUS=m
CONFIG_ZEROPLUS_FF=y
CONFIG_HID_ZYDACRON=m
CONFIG_HID_SENSOR_HUB=m
CONFIG_HID_SENSOR_CUSTOM_SENSOR=m
CONFIG_HID_ALPS=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# USB HID support
#
CONFIG_USB_HID=m
CONFIG_HID_PID=y
CONFIG_USB_HIDDEV=y
#
# USB HID Boot Protocol drivers
#
# CONFIG_USB_KBD is not set
# CONFIG_USB_MOUSE is not set
#
# I2C HID support
#
CONFIG_I2C_HID=m
CONFIG_USB_OHCI_LITTLE_ENDIAN=y
CONFIG_USB_SUPPORT=y
CONFIG_USB_COMMON=y
CONFIG_USB_ARCH_HAS_HCD=y
CONFIG_USB=y
CONFIG_USB_ANNOUNCE_NEW_DEVICES=y
#
# Miscellaneous USB options
#
CONFIG_USB_DEFAULT_PERSIST=y
CONFIG_USB_DYNAMIC_MINORS=y
# CONFIG_USB_OTG is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_USB_OTG_WHITELIST is not set
# CONFIG_USB_OTG_BLACKLIST_HUB is not set
CONFIG_USB_LEDS_TRIGGER_USBPORT=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_USB_MON=m
CONFIG_USB_WUSB=m
CONFIG_USB_WUSB_CBAF=m
# CONFIG_USB_WUSB_CBAF_DEBUG is not set
#
# USB Host Controller Drivers
#
CONFIG_USB_C67X00_HCD=m
CONFIG_USB_XHCI_HCD=y
CONFIG_USB_XHCI_PCI=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_USB_XHCI_PLATFORM=m
CONFIG_USB_EHCI_HCD=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_USB_EHCI_ROOT_HUB_TT=y
CONFIG_USB_EHCI_TT_NEWSCHED=y
CONFIG_USB_EHCI_PCI=y
CONFIG_USB_EHCI_HCD_PLATFORM=y
CONFIG_USB_OXU210HP_HCD=m
CONFIG_USB_ISP116X_HCD=m
CONFIG_USB_ISP1362_HCD=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_USB_FOTG210_HCD=m
CONFIG_USB_MAX3421_HCD=m
CONFIG_USB_OHCI_HCD=y
CONFIG_USB_OHCI_HCD_PCI=y
CONFIG_USB_OHCI_HCD_PLATFORM=y
CONFIG_USB_UHCI_HCD=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_USB_U132_HCD=m
CONFIG_USB_SL811_HCD=m
CONFIG_USB_SL811_HCD_ISO=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_USB_SL811_CS=m
CONFIG_USB_R8A66597_HCD=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_USB_WHCI_HCD=m
CONFIG_USB_HWA_HCD=m
CONFIG_USB_HCD_BCMA=m
CONFIG_USB_HCD_SSB=m
# CONFIG_USB_HCD_TEST_MODE is not set
#
# USB Device Class drivers
#
CONFIG_USB_ACM=m
CONFIG_USB_PRINTER=m
CONFIG_USB_WDM=m
CONFIG_USB_TMC=m
#
# NOTE: USB_STORAGE depends on SCSI but BLK_DEV_SD may
#
#
# also be needed; see USB_STORAGE Help for more info
#
CONFIG_USB_STORAGE=m
# CONFIG_USB_STORAGE_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_USB_STORAGE_REALTEK=m
CONFIG_REALTEK_AUTOPM=y
CONFIG_USB_STORAGE_DATAFAB=m
CONFIG_USB_STORAGE_FREECOM=m
CONFIG_USB_STORAGE_ISD200=m
CONFIG_USB_STORAGE_USBAT=m
CONFIG_USB_STORAGE_SDDR09=m
CONFIG_USB_STORAGE_SDDR55=m
CONFIG_USB_STORAGE_JUMPSHOT=m
CONFIG_USB_STORAGE_ALAUDA=m
CONFIG_USB_STORAGE_ONETOUCH=m
CONFIG_USB_STORAGE_KARMA=m
CONFIG_USB_STORAGE_CYPRESS_ATACB=m
CONFIG_USB_STORAGE_ENE_UB6250=m
CONFIG_USB_UAS=m
#
# USB Imaging devices
#
CONFIG_USB_MDC800=m
CONFIG_USB_MICROTEK=m
CONFIG_USBIP_CORE=m
CONFIG_USBIP_VHCI_HCD=m
CONFIG_USBIP_VHCI_HC_PORTS=8
CONFIG_USBIP_VHCI_NR_HCS=1
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_USBIP_HOST=m
CONFIG_USBIP_VUDC=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_USBIP_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_USB_MUSB_HDRC=m
# CONFIG_USB_MUSB_HOST is not set
# CONFIG_USB_MUSB_GADGET is not set
CONFIG_USB_MUSB_DUAL_ROLE=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Platform Glue Layer
#
#
# MUSB DMA mode
#
CONFIG_MUSB_PIO_ONLY=y
CONFIG_USB_DWC3=m
CONFIG_USB_DWC3_ULPI=y
# CONFIG_USB_DWC3_HOST is not set
# CONFIG_USB_DWC3_GADGET is not set
CONFIG_USB_DWC3_DUAL_ROLE=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Platform Glue Driver Support
#
CONFIG_USB_DWC3_PCI=m
CONFIG_USB_DWC2=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_USB_DWC2_HOST=y
#
# Gadget/Dual-role mode requires USB Gadget support to be enabled
#
CONFIG_USB_DWC2_PCI=m
# CONFIG_USB_DWC2_DEBUG is not set
# CONFIG_USB_DWC2_TRACK_MISSED_SOFS is not set
# CONFIG_USB_CHIPIDEA is not set
# CONFIG_USB_ISP1760 is not set
#
# USB port drivers
#
CONFIG_USB_USS720=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_GENERIC=y
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_SIMPLE=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_AIRCABLE=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_ARK3116=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_BELKIN=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_CH341=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_WHITEHEAT=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_DIGI_ACCELEPORT=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_CP210X=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_CYPRESS_M8=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_EMPEG=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_FTDI_SIO=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_VISOR=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_IPAQ=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_IR=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_EDGEPORT=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_EDGEPORT_TI=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_F81232=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_F8153X=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_GARMIN=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_IPW=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_IUU=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_KEYSPAN_PDA=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_KEYSPAN=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_KEYSPAN_MPR=y
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_KEYSPAN_USA28=y
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_KEYSPAN_USA28X=y
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_KEYSPAN_USA28XA=y
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_KEYSPAN_USA28XB=y
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_KEYSPAN_USA19=y
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_KEYSPAN_USA18X=y
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_KEYSPAN_USA19W=y
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_KEYSPAN_USA19QW=y
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_KEYSPAN_USA19QI=y
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_KEYSPAN_USA49W=y
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_KEYSPAN_USA49WLC=y
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_KLSI=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_KOBIL_SCT=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_MCT_U232=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_METRO=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_MOS7720=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_MOS7715_PARPORT=y
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_MOS7840=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_MXUPORT=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_NAVMAN=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_PL2303=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_OTI6858=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_QCAUX=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_QUALCOMM=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_SPCP8X5=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_SAFE=m
# CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_SAFE_PADDED is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_SIERRAWIRELESS=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_SYMBOL=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_TI=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_CYBERJACK=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_XIRCOM=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_WWAN=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_OPTION=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_OMNINET=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_OPTICON=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_XSENS_MT=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_WISHBONE=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_SSU100=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_QT2=m
CONFIG_USB_SERIAL_DEBUG=m
#
# USB Miscellaneous drivers
#
CONFIG_USB_EMI62=m
CONFIG_USB_EMI26=m
CONFIG_USB_ADUTUX=m
CONFIG_USB_SEVSEG=m
CONFIG_USB_RIO500=m
CONFIG_USB_LEGOTOWER=m
CONFIG_USB_LCD=m
CONFIG_USB_CYPRESS_CY7C63=m
CONFIG_USB_CYTHERM=m
CONFIG_USB_IDMOUSE=m
CONFIG_USB_FTDI_ELAN=m
CONFIG_USB_APPLEDISPLAY=m
CONFIG_USB_SISUSBVGA=m
# CONFIG_USB_SISUSBVGA_CON is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_USB_LD=m
CONFIG_USB_TRANCEVIBRATOR=m
CONFIG_USB_IOWARRIOR=m
CONFIG_USB_TEST=m
# CONFIG_USB_EHSET_TEST_FIXTURE is not set
CONFIG_USB_ISIGHTFW=m
CONFIG_USB_YUREX=m
CONFIG_USB_EZUSB_FX2=m
CONFIG_USB_HSIC_USB3503=m
CONFIG_USB_HSIC_USB4604=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_USB_LINK_LAYER_TEST is not set
# CONFIG_USB_CHAOSKEY is not set
CONFIG_UCSI=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_USB_ATM=m
CONFIG_USB_SPEEDTOUCH=m
CONFIG_USB_CXACRU=m
CONFIG_USB_UEAGLEATM=m
CONFIG_USB_XUSBATM=m
#
# USB Physical Layer drivers
#
CONFIG_USB_PHY=y
CONFIG_NOP_USB_XCEIV=m
CONFIG_USB_GPIO_VBUS=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_TAHVO_USB=m
CONFIG_TAHVO_USB_HOST_BY_DEFAULT=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_USB_ISP1301=m
CONFIG_USB_GADGET=m
# CONFIG_USB_GADGET_DEBUG is not set
# CONFIG_USB_GADGET_DEBUG_FILES is not set
# CONFIG_USB_GADGET_DEBUG_FS is not set
CONFIG_USB_GADGET_VBUS_DRAW=2
CONFIG_USB_GADGET_STORAGE_NUM_BUFFERS=2
CONFIG_U_SERIAL_CONSOLE=y
#
# USB Peripheral Controller
#
CONFIG_USB_FOTG210_UDC=m
CONFIG_USB_GR_UDC=m
CONFIG_USB_R8A66597=m
CONFIG_USB_PXA27X=m
CONFIG_USB_MV_UDC=m
CONFIG_USB_MV_U3D=m
# CONFIG_USB_M66592 is not set
CONFIG_USB_BDC_UDC=m
#
# Platform Support
#
CONFIG_USB_BDC_PCI=m
CONFIG_USB_AMD5536UDC=m
CONFIG_USB_NET2272=m
CONFIG_USB_NET2272_DMA=y
CONFIG_USB_NET2280=m
CONFIG_USB_GOKU=m
CONFIG_USB_EG20T=m
# CONFIG_USB_DUMMY_HCD is not set
CONFIG_USB_LIBCOMPOSITE=m
CONFIG_USB_F_ACM=m
CONFIG_USB_F_SS_LB=m
CONFIG_USB_U_SERIAL=m
CONFIG_USB_U_ETHER=m
CONFIG_USB_F_SERIAL=m
CONFIG_USB_F_OBEX=m
CONFIG_USB_F_NCM=m
CONFIG_USB_F_ECM=m
CONFIG_USB_F_PHONET=m
CONFIG_USB_F_EEM=m
CONFIG_USB_F_SUBSET=m
CONFIG_USB_F_RNDIS=m
CONFIG_USB_F_MASS_STORAGE=m
CONFIG_USB_F_FS=m
CONFIG_USB_F_UAC1=m
CONFIG_USB_F_UAC2=m
CONFIG_USB_F_UVC=m
CONFIG_USB_F_MIDI=m
CONFIG_USB_F_HID=m
CONFIG_USB_F_PRINTER=m
CONFIG_USB_F_TCM=m
CONFIG_USB_CONFIGFS=m
CONFIG_USB_CONFIGFS_SERIAL=y
CONFIG_USB_CONFIGFS_ACM=y
CONFIG_USB_CONFIGFS_OBEX=y
CONFIG_USB_CONFIGFS_NCM=y
CONFIG_USB_CONFIGFS_ECM=y
CONFIG_USB_CONFIGFS_ECM_SUBSET=y
CONFIG_USB_CONFIGFS_RNDIS=y
CONFIG_USB_CONFIGFS_EEM=y
CONFIG_USB_CONFIGFS_PHONET=y
CONFIG_USB_CONFIGFS_MASS_STORAGE=y
CONFIG_USB_CONFIGFS_F_LB_SS=y
CONFIG_USB_CONFIGFS_F_FS=y
CONFIG_USB_CONFIGFS_F_UAC1=y
CONFIG_USB_CONFIGFS_F_UAC2=y
CONFIG_USB_CONFIGFS_F_MIDI=y
CONFIG_USB_CONFIGFS_F_HID=y
CONFIG_USB_CONFIGFS_F_UVC=y
CONFIG_USB_CONFIGFS_F_PRINTER=y
CONFIG_USB_CONFIGFS_F_TCM=y
CONFIG_USB_ZERO=m
CONFIG_USB_AUDIO=m
CONFIG_GADGET_UAC1=y
CONFIG_USB_ETH=m
CONFIG_USB_ETH_RNDIS=y
CONFIG_USB_ETH_EEM=y
CONFIG_USB_G_NCM=m
CONFIG_USB_GADGETFS=m
CONFIG_USB_FUNCTIONFS=m
CONFIG_USB_FUNCTIONFS_ETH=y
CONFIG_USB_FUNCTIONFS_RNDIS=y
CONFIG_USB_FUNCTIONFS_GENERIC=y
CONFIG_USB_MASS_STORAGE=m
CONFIG_USB_GADGET_TARGET=m
CONFIG_USB_G_SERIAL=m
CONFIG_USB_MIDI_GADGET=m
CONFIG_USB_G_PRINTER=m
CONFIG_USB_CDC_COMPOSITE=m
CONFIG_USB_G_NOKIA=m
CONFIG_USB_G_ACM_MS=m
# CONFIG_USB_G_MULTI is not set
CONFIG_USB_G_HID=m
CONFIG_USB_G_DBGP=m
# CONFIG_USB_G_DBGP_PRINTK is not set
CONFIG_USB_G_DBGP_SERIAL=y
CONFIG_USB_G_WEBCAM=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_USB_LED_TRIG=y
CONFIG_USB_ULPI_BUS=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_UWB=m
CONFIG_UWB_HWA=m
CONFIG_UWB_WHCI=m
CONFIG_UWB_I1480U=m
CONFIG_MMC=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_MMC_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_MMC_BLOCK=m
CONFIG_MMC_BLOCK_MINORS=8
CONFIG_MMC_BLOCK_BOUNCE=y
CONFIG_SDIO_UART=m
# CONFIG_MMC_TEST is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# MMC/SD/SDIO Host Controller Drivers
#
CONFIG_MMC_SDHCI=m
CONFIG_MMC_SDHCI_PCI=m
CONFIG_MMC_RICOH_MMC=y
CONFIG_MMC_SDHCI_ACPI=m
CONFIG_MMC_SDHCI_PLTFM=m
CONFIG_MMC_WBSD=m
CONFIG_MMC_TIFM_SD=m
CONFIG_MMC_SDRICOH_CS=m
CONFIG_MMC_CB710=m
CONFIG_MMC_VIA_SDMMC=m
CONFIG_MMC_VUB300=m
CONFIG_MMC_USHC=m
CONFIG_MMC_USDHI6ROL0=m
CONFIG_MMC_REALTEK_PCI=m
CONFIG_MMC_REALTEK_USB=m
CONFIG_MMC_TOSHIBA_PCI=m
CONFIG_MMC_MTK=m
CONFIG_MEMSTICK=m
# CONFIG_MEMSTICK_DEBUG is not set
#
# MemoryStick drivers
#
# CONFIG_MEMSTICK_UNSAFE_RESUME is not set
CONFIG_MSPRO_BLOCK=m
CONFIG_MS_BLOCK=m
#
# MemoryStick Host Controller Drivers
#
CONFIG_MEMSTICK_TIFM_MS=m
CONFIG_MEMSTICK_JMICRON_38X=m
CONFIG_MEMSTICK_R592=m
CONFIG_MEMSTICK_REALTEK_PCI=m
CONFIG_MEMSTICK_REALTEK_USB=m
CONFIG_NEW_LEDS=y
CONFIG_LEDS_CLASS=y
CONFIG_LEDS_CLASS_FLASH=m
#
# LED drivers
#
CONFIG_LEDS_88PM860X=m
CONFIG_LEDS_LM3530=m
CONFIG_LEDS_LM3533=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_LEDS_LM3642=m
CONFIG_LEDS_NET48XX=m
CONFIG_LEDS_WRAP=m
CONFIG_LEDS_PCA9532=m
CONFIG_LEDS_PCA9532_GPIO=y
CONFIG_LEDS_GPIO=m
CONFIG_LEDS_LP3944=m
CONFIG_LEDS_LP3952=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_LEDS_LP55XX_COMMON=m
CONFIG_LEDS_LP5521=m
CONFIG_LEDS_LP5523=m
CONFIG_LEDS_LP5562=m
CONFIG_LEDS_LP8501=m
CONFIG_LEDS_LP8788=m
CONFIG_LEDS_LP8860=m
CONFIG_LEDS_CLEVO_MAIL=m
CONFIG_LEDS_PCA955X=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_LEDS_PCA963X=m
CONFIG_LEDS_WM831X_STATUS=m
CONFIG_LEDS_WM8350=m
CONFIG_LEDS_DA903X=m
CONFIG_LEDS_DA9052=m
CONFIG_LEDS_DAC124S085=m
CONFIG_LEDS_PWM=m
# CONFIG_LEDS_BD2802 is not set
CONFIG_LEDS_INTEL_SS4200=m
CONFIG_LEDS_LT3593=m
CONFIG_LEDS_ADP5520=m
CONFIG_LEDS_DELL_NETBOOKS=m
CONFIG_LEDS_MC13783=m
CONFIG_LEDS_TCA6507=m
CONFIG_LEDS_TLC591XX=m
CONFIG_LEDS_MAX8997=m
CONFIG_LEDS_LM355x=m
CONFIG_LEDS_OT200=m
CONFIG_LEDS_MENF21BMC=m
#
# LED driver for blink(1) USB RGB LED is under Special HID drivers (HID_THINGM)
#
CONFIG_LEDS_BLINKM=m
CONFIG_LEDS_USER=m
CONFIG_LEDS_NIC78BX=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# LED Triggers
#
CONFIG_LEDS_TRIGGERS=y
CONFIG_LEDS_TRIGGER_TIMER=m
CONFIG_LEDS_TRIGGER_ONESHOT=m
# CONFIG_LEDS_TRIGGER_DISK is not set
# CONFIG_LEDS_TRIGGER_MTD is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_LEDS_TRIGGER_HEARTBEAT=m
CONFIG_LEDS_TRIGGER_BACKLIGHT=m
CONFIG_LEDS_TRIGGER_CPU=y
# CONFIG_LEDS_TRIGGER_GPIO is not set
CONFIG_LEDS_TRIGGER_DEFAULT_ON=m
#
# iptables trigger is under Netfilter config (LED target)
#
CONFIG_LEDS_TRIGGER_TRANSIENT=m
CONFIG_LEDS_TRIGGER_CAMERA=m
# CONFIG_LEDS_TRIGGER_PANIC is not set
# CONFIG_ACCESSIBILITY is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_EDAC_ATOMIC_SCRUB=y
CONFIG_EDAC_SUPPORT=y
CONFIG_EDAC=y
CONFIG_EDAC_LEGACY_SYSFS=y
# CONFIG_EDAC_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_EDAC_DECODE_MCE=y
CONFIG_EDAC_MM_EDAC=m
CONFIG_EDAC_AMD64=m
# CONFIG_EDAC_AMD64_ERROR_INJECTION is not set
CONFIG_EDAC_AMD76X=m
CONFIG_EDAC_E7XXX=m
CONFIG_EDAC_E752X=m
CONFIG_EDAC_I82875P=m
CONFIG_EDAC_I82975X=m
CONFIG_EDAC_I3000=m
CONFIG_EDAC_I3200=m
CONFIG_EDAC_IE31200=m
CONFIG_EDAC_X38=m
CONFIG_EDAC_I5400=m
CONFIG_EDAC_I7CORE=m
CONFIG_EDAC_I82860=m
CONFIG_EDAC_R82600=m
CONFIG_EDAC_I5000=m
CONFIG_EDAC_I5100=m
CONFIG_EDAC_I7300=m
CONFIG_RTC_LIB=y
CONFIG_RTC_MC146818_LIB=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_RTC_CLASS=y
CONFIG_RTC_HCTOSYS=y
CONFIG_RTC_HCTOSYS_DEVICE="rtc0"
CONFIG_RTC_SYSTOHC=y
CONFIG_RTC_SYSTOHC_DEVICE="rtc0"
# CONFIG_RTC_DEBUG is not set
#
# RTC interfaces
#
CONFIG_RTC_INTF_SYSFS=y
CONFIG_RTC_INTF_PROC=y
CONFIG_RTC_INTF_DEV=y
CONFIG_RTC_INTF_DEV_UIE_EMUL=y
# CONFIG_RTC_DRV_TEST is not set
#
# I2C RTC drivers
#
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_88PM860X=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_88PM80X=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_ABB5ZES3=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_ABX80X=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DS1307=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DS1307_HWMON=y
# CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DS1307_CENTURY is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DS1374=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DS1374_WDT=y
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DS1672=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_LP8788=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_MAX6900=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_MAX8907=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_MAX8925=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_MAX8998=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_MAX8997=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_RS5C372=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_ISL1208=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_ISL12022=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_X1205=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_PCF8523=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_PCF85063=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_PCF8563=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_PCF8583=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_M41T80=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_M41T80_WDT=y
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_BQ32K=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_PALMAS=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_TPS6586X=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_TPS65910=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_TPS80031=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_RC5T583=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_S35390A=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_FM3130=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_RX8010=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_RX8581=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_RX8025=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_EM3027=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_RV8803=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_S5M=m
#
# SPI RTC drivers
#
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_M41T93=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_M41T94=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DS1302=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DS1305=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DS1343=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DS1347=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DS1390=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_MAX6916=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_R9701=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_RX4581=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_RX6110=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_RS5C348=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_MAX6902=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_PCF2123=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_MCP795=m
CONFIG_RTC_I2C_AND_SPI=y
#
# SPI and I2C RTC drivers
#
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DS3232=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_PCF2127=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_RV3029C2=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_RV3029_HWMON=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Platform RTC drivers
#
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_CMOS=y
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_VRTC=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DS1286=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DS1511=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DS1553=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DS1685_FAMILY=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DS1685=y
# CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DS1689 is not set
# CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DS17285 is not set
# CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DS17485 is not set
# CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DS17885 is not set
# CONFIG_RTC_DS1685_PROC_REGS is not set
# CONFIG_RTC_DS1685_SYSFS_REGS is not set
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DS1742=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DS2404=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DA9052=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DA9055=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_DA9063=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_STK17TA8=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_M48T86=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_M48T35=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_M48T59=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_MSM6242=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_BQ4802=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_RP5C01=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_V3020=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_WM831X=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_WM8350=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_PCF50633=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_AB3100=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# on-CPU RTC drivers
#
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_PCAP=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_MC13XXX=m
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_MT6397=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# HID Sensor RTC drivers
#
CONFIG_RTC_DRV_HID_SENSOR_TIME=m
CONFIG_DMADEVICES=y
# CONFIG_DMADEVICES_DEBUG is not set
#
# DMA Devices
#
CONFIG_DMA_ENGINE=y
CONFIG_DMA_VIRTUAL_CHANNELS=m
CONFIG_DMA_ACPI=y
CONFIG_INTEL_IDMA64=m
CONFIG_PCH_DMA=m
CONFIG_TIMB_DMA=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_QCOM_HIDMA_MGMT=m
CONFIG_QCOM_HIDMA=m
CONFIG_DW_DMAC_CORE=m
CONFIG_DW_DMAC=m
CONFIG_DW_DMAC_PCI=m
CONFIG_HSU_DMA=m
CONFIG_HSU_DMA_PCI=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# DMA Clients
#
CONFIG_ASYNC_TX_DMA=y
# CONFIG_DMATEST is not set
#
# DMABUF options
#
CONFIG_SYNC_FILE=y
CONFIG_SW_SYNC=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_AUXDISPLAY=y
CONFIG_KS0108=m
CONFIG_KS0108_PORT=0x378
CONFIG_KS0108_DELAY=2
CONFIG_CFAG12864B=m
CONFIG_CFAG12864B_RATE=20
# CONFIG_IMG_ASCII_LCD is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_UIO=m
CONFIG_UIO_CIF=m
# CONFIG_UIO_PDRV_GENIRQ is not set
CONFIG_UIO_DMEM_GENIRQ=m
CONFIG_UIO_AEC=m
CONFIG_UIO_SERCOS3=m
CONFIG_UIO_PCI_GENERIC=m
CONFIG_UIO_NETX=m
CONFIG_UIO_PRUSS=m
CONFIG_UIO_MF624=m
CONFIG_UIO_HV_GENERIC=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_VFIO_IOMMU_TYPE1=m
CONFIG_VFIO_VIRQFD=m
CONFIG_VFIO=m
CONFIG_VFIO_NOIOMMU=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_VFIO_PCI=m
CONFIG_VFIO_PCI_VGA=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_VFIO_PCI_MMAP=y
CONFIG_VFIO_PCI_INTX=y
CONFIG_VFIO_PCI_IGD=y
CONFIG_VFIO_MDEV=m
CONFIG_VFIO_MDEV_DEVICE=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_IRQ_BYPASS_MANAGER=m
CONFIG_VIRT_DRIVERS=y
CONFIG_VIRTIO=y
#
# Virtio drivers
#
CONFIG_VIRTIO_PCI=m
CONFIG_VIRTIO_PCI_LEGACY=y
CONFIG_VIRTIO_BALLOON=m
CONFIG_VIRTIO_INPUT=m
CONFIG_VIRTIO_MMIO=m
# CONFIG_VIRTIO_MMIO_CMDLINE_DEVICES is not set
#
# Microsoft Hyper-V guest support
#
CONFIG_HYPERV=m
CONFIG_HYPERV_UTILS=m
CONFIG_HYPERV_BALLOON=m
CONFIG_STAGING=y
CONFIG_PRISM2_USB=m
CONFIG_COMEDI=m
# CONFIG_COMEDI_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_COMEDI_DEFAULT_BUF_SIZE_KB=2048
CONFIG_COMEDI_DEFAULT_BUF_MAXSIZE_KB=20480
CONFIG_COMEDI_MISC_DRIVERS=y
CONFIG_COMEDI_BOND=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_TEST=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_PARPORT=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_SERIAL2002=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_SSV_DNP=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ISA_DRIVERS=y
CONFIG_COMEDI_PCL711=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_PCL724=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_PCL726=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_PCL730=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_PCL812=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_PCL816=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_PCL818=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_PCM3724=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_AMPLC_DIO200_ISA=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_AMPLC_PC236_ISA=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_AMPLC_PC263_ISA=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_RTI800=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_RTI802=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_DAC02=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_DAS16M1=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_DAS08_ISA=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_DAS16=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_DAS800=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_DAS1800=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_DAS6402=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_DT2801=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_DT2811=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_DT2814=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_DT2815=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_DT2817=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_DT282X=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_DMM32AT=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_FL512=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_AIO_AIO12_8=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_AIO_IIRO_16=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_II_PCI20KC=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_C6XDIGIO=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_MPC624=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ADQ12B=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_NI_AT_A2150=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_NI_AT_AO=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_NI_ATMIO=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_NI_ATMIO16D=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_NI_LABPC_ISA=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_PCMAD=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_PCMDA12=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_PCMMIO=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_PCMUIO=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_MULTIQ3=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_S526=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_PCI_DRIVERS=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_8255_PCI=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ADDI_WATCHDOG=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ADDI_APCI_1032=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ADDI_APCI_1500=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ADDI_APCI_1516=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ADDI_APCI_1564=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ADDI_APCI_16XX=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ADDI_APCI_2032=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ADDI_APCI_2200=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ADDI_APCI_3120=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ADDI_APCI_3501=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ADDI_APCI_3XXX=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ADL_PCI6208=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ADL_PCI7X3X=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ADL_PCI8164=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ADL_PCI9111=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ADL_PCI9118=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ADV_PCI1710=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ADV_PCI1720=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ADV_PCI1723=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ADV_PCI1724=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ADV_PCI1760=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ADV_PCI_DIO=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_AMPLC_DIO200_PCI=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_AMPLC_PC236_PCI=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_AMPLC_PC263_PCI=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_AMPLC_PCI224=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_AMPLC_PCI230=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_CONTEC_PCI_DIO=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_DAS08_PCI=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_DT3000=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_DYNA_PCI10XX=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_GSC_HPDI=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_MF6X4=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ICP_MULTI=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_DAQBOARD2000=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_JR3_PCI=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_KE_COUNTER=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_CB_PCIDAS64=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_CB_PCIDAS=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_CB_PCIDDA=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_CB_PCIMDAS=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_CB_PCIMDDA=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ME4000=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ME_DAQ=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_NI_6527=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_NI_65XX=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_NI_660X=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_NI_670X=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_NI_LABPC_PCI=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_NI_PCIDIO=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_NI_PCIMIO=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_RTD520=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_S626=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_MITE=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_NI_TIOCMD=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_PCMCIA_DRIVERS=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_CB_DAS16_CS=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_DAS08_CS=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_NI_DAQ_700_CS=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_NI_DAQ_DIO24_CS=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_NI_LABPC_CS=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_NI_MIO_CS=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_QUATECH_DAQP_CS=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_USB_DRIVERS=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_DT9812=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_NI_USB6501=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_USBDUX=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_USBDUXFAST=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_USBDUXSIGMA=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_VMK80XX=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_8254=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_8255=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_8255_SA=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_KCOMEDILIB=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_AMPLC_DIO200=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_AMPLC_PC236=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_DAS08=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_ISADMA=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_NI_LABPC=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_NI_LABPC_ISADMA=m
CONFIG_COMEDI_NI_TIO=m
CONFIG_RTL8192U=m
CONFIG_RTLLIB=m
CONFIG_RTLLIB_CRYPTO_CCMP=m
CONFIG_RTLLIB_CRYPTO_TKIP=m
CONFIG_RTLLIB_CRYPTO_WEP=m
CONFIG_RTL8192E=m
CONFIG_R8712U=m
CONFIG_R8188EU=m
CONFIG_88EU_AP_MODE=y
CONFIG_RTS5208=m
CONFIG_VT6655=m
CONFIG_VT6656=m
#
# IIO staging drivers
#
#
# Accelerometers
#
CONFIG_ADIS16201=m
CONFIG_ADIS16203=m
CONFIG_ADIS16209=m
CONFIG_ADIS16240=m
#
# Analog to digital converters
#
CONFIG_AD7606=m
CONFIG_AD7606_IFACE_PARALLEL=m
CONFIG_AD7606_IFACE_SPI=m
CONFIG_AD7780=m
CONFIG_AD7816=m
CONFIG_AD7192=m
CONFIG_AD7280=m
#
# Analog digital bi-direction converters
#
CONFIG_ADT7316=m
CONFIG_ADT7316_SPI=m
CONFIG_ADT7316_I2C=m
#
# Capacitance to digital converters
#
CONFIG_AD7150=m
CONFIG_AD7152=m
CONFIG_AD7746=m
#
# Direct Digital Synthesis
#
CONFIG_AD9832=m
CONFIG_AD9834=m
#
# Digital gyroscope sensors
#
CONFIG_ADIS16060=m
#
# Network Analyzer, Impedance Converters
#
CONFIG_AD5933=m
#
# Light sensors
#
CONFIG_SENSORS_ISL29028=m
CONFIG_TSL2x7x=m
#
# Active energy metering IC
#
CONFIG_ADE7753=m
CONFIG_ADE7754=m
CONFIG_ADE7758=m
CONFIG_ADE7759=m
CONFIG_ADE7854=m
CONFIG_ADE7854_I2C=m
CONFIG_ADE7854_SPI=m
#
# Resolver to digital converters
#
CONFIG_AD2S90=m
CONFIG_AD2S1200=m
CONFIG_AD2S1210=m
#
# Triggers - standalone
#
# CONFIG_FB_SM750 is not set
CONFIG_FB_XGI=m
#
# Speakup console speech
#
CONFIG_SPEAKUP=m
CONFIG_SPEAKUP_SYNTH_ACNTSA=m
CONFIG_SPEAKUP_SYNTH_ACNTPC=m
CONFIG_SPEAKUP_SYNTH_APOLLO=m
CONFIG_SPEAKUP_SYNTH_AUDPTR=m
CONFIG_SPEAKUP_SYNTH_BNS=m
CONFIG_SPEAKUP_SYNTH_DECTLK=m
CONFIG_SPEAKUP_SYNTH_DECEXT=m
CONFIG_SPEAKUP_SYNTH_DECPC=m
CONFIG_SPEAKUP_SYNTH_DTLK=m
CONFIG_SPEAKUP_SYNTH_KEYPC=m
CONFIG_SPEAKUP_SYNTH_LTLK=m
CONFIG_SPEAKUP_SYNTH_SOFT=m
CONFIG_SPEAKUP_SYNTH_SPKOUT=m
CONFIG_SPEAKUP_SYNTH_TXPRT=m
CONFIG_SPEAKUP_SYNTH_DUMMY=m
CONFIG_STAGING_MEDIA=y
CONFIG_I2C_BCM2048=m
CONFIG_DVB_CXD2099=m
CONFIG_LIRC_STAGING=y
CONFIG_LIRC_BT829=m
CONFIG_LIRC_IMON=m
CONFIG_LIRC_PARALLEL=m
CONFIG_LIRC_SASEM=m
CONFIG_LIRC_SIR=m
CONFIG_LIRC_ZILOG=m
#
# Android
#
CONFIG_LTE_GDM724X=m
CONFIG_FIREWIRE_SERIAL=m
CONFIG_FWTTY_MAX_TOTAL_PORTS=64
CONFIG_FWTTY_MAX_CARD_PORTS=32
CONFIG_MTD_SPINAND_MT29F=m
# CONFIG_MTD_SPINAND_ONDIEECC is not set
CONFIG_LNET=m
CONFIG_LNET_MAX_PAYLOAD=1048576
# CONFIG_LNET_SELFTEST is not set
CONFIG_LUSTRE_FS=m
CONFIG_LUSTRE_OBD_MAX_IOCTL_BUFFER=8192
# CONFIG_LUSTRE_DEBUG_EXPENSIVE_CHECK is not set
CONFIG_DGNC=m
# CONFIG_GS_FPGABOOT is not set
# CONFIG_FB_TFT is not set
CONFIG_WILC1000=m
CONFIG_WILC1000_SDIO=m
# CONFIG_WILC1000_SPI is not set
CONFIG_WILC1000_HW_OOB_INTR=y
CONFIG_MOST=m
CONFIG_MOSTCORE=m
CONFIG_AIM_CDEV=m
CONFIG_AIM_NETWORK=m
CONFIG_AIM_SOUND=m
CONFIG_AIM_V4L2=m
CONFIG_HDM_DIM2=m
CONFIG_HDM_I2C=m
CONFIG_HDM_USB=m
#
# Old ISDN4Linux (deprecated)
#
CONFIG_ISDN_DRV_ICN=m
CONFIG_ISDN_DRV_PCBIT=m
CONFIG_ISDN_DRV_ACT2000=m
# CONFIG_KS7010 is not set
# CONFIG_GREYBUS is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_X86_PLATFORM_DEVICES=y
CONFIG_ACER_WMI=m
CONFIG_ACERHDF=m
CONFIG_ALIENWARE_WMI=m
CONFIG_ASUS_LAPTOP=m
CONFIG_DELL_SMBIOS=m
CONFIG_DELL_LAPTOP=m
CONFIG_DELL_WMI=m
CONFIG_DELL_WMI_AIO=m
CONFIG_DELL_SMO8800=m
CONFIG_DELL_RBTN=m
CONFIG_FUJITSU_LAPTOP=m
# CONFIG_FUJITSU_LAPTOP_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_FUJITSU_TABLET=m
CONFIG_AMILO_RFKILL=m
CONFIG_TC1100_WMI=m
CONFIG_HP_ACCEL=m
CONFIG_HP_WIRELESS=m
CONFIG_HP_WMI=m
CONFIG_MSI_LAPTOP=m
CONFIG_PANASONIC_LAPTOP=m
CONFIG_COMPAL_LAPTOP=m
CONFIG_SONY_LAPTOP=m
CONFIG_SONYPI_COMPAT=y
CONFIG_IDEAPAD_LAPTOP=m
CONFIG_SURFACE3_WMI=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_THINKPAD_ACPI=m
CONFIG_THINKPAD_ACPI_ALSA_SUPPORT=y
# CONFIG_THINKPAD_ACPI_DEBUGFACILITIES is not set
# CONFIG_THINKPAD_ACPI_DEBUG is not set
# CONFIG_THINKPAD_ACPI_UNSAFE_LEDS is not set
CONFIG_THINKPAD_ACPI_VIDEO=y
CONFIG_THINKPAD_ACPI_HOTKEY_POLL=y
CONFIG_SENSORS_HDAPS=m
CONFIG_INTEL_MENLOW=m
CONFIG_EEEPC_LAPTOP=m
CONFIG_ASUS_WMI=m
CONFIG_ASUS_NB_WMI=m
CONFIG_EEEPC_WMI=m
CONFIG_ASUS_WIRELESS=m
CONFIG_ACPI_WMI=m
CONFIG_MSI_WMI=m
CONFIG_TOPSTAR_LAPTOP=m
CONFIG_ACPI_TOSHIBA=m
CONFIG_TOSHIBA_BT_RFKILL=m
CONFIG_TOSHIBA_HAPS=m
CONFIG_TOSHIBA_WMI=m
CONFIG_ACPI_CMPC=m
CONFIG_INTEL_HID_EVENT=m
CONFIG_INTEL_VBTN=m
CONFIG_INTEL_SCU_IPC=y
CONFIG_INTEL_SCU_IPC_UTIL=m
CONFIG_GPIO_INTEL_PMIC=y
CONFIG_INTEL_MID_POWER_BUTTON=m
CONFIG_INTEL_MFLD_THERMAL=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_INTEL_IPS=m
CONFIG_INTEL_PMC_CORE=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_IBM_RTL=m
CONFIG_SAMSUNG_LAPTOP=m
CONFIG_MXM_WMI=m
CONFIG_INTEL_OAKTRAIL=m
CONFIG_SAMSUNG_Q10=m
CONFIG_APPLE_GMUX=m
CONFIG_INTEL_RST=m
CONFIG_INTEL_SMARTCONNECT=m
CONFIG_PVPANIC=m
CONFIG_INTEL_PMC_IPC=m
CONFIG_INTEL_BXTWC_PMIC_TMU=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_SURFACE_PRO3_BUTTON=m
CONFIG_SURFACE_3_BUTTON=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_INTEL_PUNIT_IPC=m
CONFIG_MLX_CPLD_PLATFORM=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CHROME_PLATFORMS=y
CONFIG_CHROMEOS_LAPTOP=m
CONFIG_CHROMEOS_PSTORE=m
CONFIG_CROS_EC_CHARDEV=m
CONFIG_CROS_EC_LPC=m
CONFIG_CROS_EC_PROTO=y
CONFIG_CROS_KBD_LED_BACKLIGHT=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CLKDEV_LOOKUP=y
CONFIG_COMMON_CLK=y
#
# Common Clock Framework
#
CONFIG_COMMON_CLK_WM831X=m
CONFIG_COMMON_CLK_SCPI=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_COMMON_CLK_SI5351=m
CONFIG_COMMON_CLK_CDCE706=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_COMMON_CLK_CS2000_CP=m
CONFIG_COMMON_CLK_S2MPS11=m
CONFIG_CLK_TWL6040=m
# CONFIG_COMMON_CLK_NXP is not set
CONFIG_COMMON_CLK_PALMAS=m
CONFIG_COMMON_CLK_PWM=m
# CONFIG_COMMON_CLK_PXA is not set
# CONFIG_COMMON_CLK_PIC32 is not set
# CONFIG_COMMON_CLK_MT2701 is not set
# CONFIG_COMMON_CLK_MT2701_MMSYS is not set
# CONFIG_COMMON_CLK_MT2701_IMGSYS is not set
# CONFIG_COMMON_CLK_MT2701_VDECSYS is not set
# CONFIG_COMMON_CLK_MT2701_HIFSYS is not set
# CONFIG_COMMON_CLK_MT2701_ETHSYS is not set
# CONFIG_COMMON_CLK_MT2701_BDPSYS is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Hardware Spinlock drivers
#
#
# Clock Source drivers
#
CONFIG_CLKSRC_I8253=y
CONFIG_CLKEVT_I8253=y
CONFIG_I8253_LOCK=y
CONFIG_CLKBLD_I8253=y
CONFIG_DW_APB_TIMER=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_ATMEL_PIT is not set
# CONFIG_SH_TIMER_CMT is not set
# CONFIG_SH_TIMER_MTU2 is not set
# CONFIG_SH_TIMER_TMU is not set
# CONFIG_EM_TIMER_STI is not set
CONFIG_MAILBOX=y
CONFIG_PCC=y
CONFIG_ALTERA_MBOX=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_IOMMU_API=y
CONFIG_IOMMU_SUPPORT=y
#
# Generic IOMMU Pagetable Support
#
CONFIG_IOMMU_IOVA=y
CONFIG_DMAR_TABLE=y
CONFIG_INTEL_IOMMU=y
CONFIG_INTEL_IOMMU_SVM=y
# CONFIG_INTEL_IOMMU_DEFAULT_ON is not set
CONFIG_INTEL_IOMMU_FLOPPY_WA=y
#
# Remoteproc drivers
#
CONFIG_REMOTEPROC=m
#
# Rpmsg drivers
#
#
# SOC (System On Chip) specific Drivers
#
#
# Broadcom SoC drivers
#
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_SUNXI_SRAM is not set
CONFIG_SOC_TI=y
CONFIG_PM_DEVFREQ=y
#
# DEVFREQ Governors
#
CONFIG_DEVFREQ_GOV_SIMPLE_ONDEMAND=y
CONFIG_DEVFREQ_GOV_PERFORMANCE=y
CONFIG_DEVFREQ_GOV_POWERSAVE=y
CONFIG_DEVFREQ_GOV_USERSPACE=y
CONFIG_DEVFREQ_GOV_PASSIVE=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# DEVFREQ Drivers
#
CONFIG_PM_DEVFREQ_EVENT=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_EXTCON=y
#
# Extcon Device Drivers
#
CONFIG_EXTCON_ADC_JACK=m
# CONFIG_EXTCON_ARIZONA is not set
CONFIG_EXTCON_AXP288=m
CONFIG_EXTCON_GPIO=m
CONFIG_EXTCON_MAX14577=m
CONFIG_EXTCON_MAX3355=m
CONFIG_EXTCON_MAX77693=m
CONFIG_EXTCON_MAX77843=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_EXTCON_MAX8997=m
CONFIG_EXTCON_PALMAS=m
# CONFIG_EXTCON_QCOM_SPMI_MISC is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_EXTCON_RT8973A=m
CONFIG_EXTCON_SM5502=m
CONFIG_EXTCON_USB_GPIO=m
CONFIG_MEMORY=y
CONFIG_IIO=m
CONFIG_IIO_BUFFER=y
CONFIG_IIO_BUFFER_CB=m
CONFIG_IIO_KFIFO_BUF=m
CONFIG_IIO_TRIGGERED_BUFFER=m
CONFIG_IIO_CONFIGFS=m
CONFIG_IIO_TRIGGER=y
CONFIG_IIO_CONSUMERS_PER_TRIGGER=2
CONFIG_IIO_SW_DEVICE=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_IIO_SW_TRIGGER=m
CONFIG_IIO_TRIGGERED_EVENT=m
#
# Accelerometers
#
CONFIG_BMA180=m
CONFIG_BMA220=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_BMC150_ACCEL=m
CONFIG_BMC150_ACCEL_I2C=m
CONFIG_BMC150_ACCEL_SPI=m
CONFIG_DA280=m
CONFIG_DA311=m
# CONFIG_DMARD09 is not set
CONFIG_DMARD10=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_HID_SENSOR_ACCEL_3D=m
CONFIG_IIO_ST_ACCEL_3AXIS=m
CONFIG_IIO_ST_ACCEL_I2C_3AXIS=m
CONFIG_IIO_ST_ACCEL_SPI_3AXIS=m
# CONFIG_KXSD9 is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_KXCJK1013=m
# CONFIG_MC3230 is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MMA7455=m
CONFIG_MMA7455_I2C=m
CONFIG_MMA7455_SPI=m
CONFIG_MMA7660=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MMA8452=m
# CONFIG_MMA9551 is not set
# CONFIG_MMA9553 is not set
CONFIG_MXC4005=m
CONFIG_MXC6255=m
CONFIG_SCA3000=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_STK8312=m
CONFIG_STK8BA50=m
#
# Analog to digital converters
#
CONFIG_AD_SIGMA_DELTA=m
CONFIG_AD7266=m
CONFIG_AD7291=m
CONFIG_AD7298=m
CONFIG_AD7476=m
CONFIG_AD7766=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_AD7791=m
CONFIG_AD7793=m
CONFIG_AD7887=m
CONFIG_AD7923=m
CONFIG_AD799X=m
CONFIG_AXP288_ADC=m
CONFIG_CC10001_ADC=m
CONFIG_DA9150_GPADC=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_HI8435=m
CONFIG_INA2XX_ADC=m
CONFIG_LP8788_ADC=m
CONFIG_LTC2485=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MAX1027=m
CONFIG_MAX1363=m
CONFIG_MCP320X=m
CONFIG_MCP3422=m
CONFIG_MEN_Z188_ADC=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NAU7802=m
CONFIG_PALMAS_GPADC=m
CONFIG_QCOM_SPMI_IADC=m
# CONFIG_QCOM_SPMI_VADC is not set
CONFIG_STX104=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_TI_ADC081C=m
CONFIG_TI_ADC0832=m
CONFIG_TI_ADC12138=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_TI_ADC128S052=m
CONFIG_TI_ADC161S626=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_TI_ADS1015=m
CONFIG_TI_AM335X_ADC=m
CONFIG_TWL4030_MADC=m
CONFIG_TWL6030_GPADC=m
CONFIG_VIPERBOARD_ADC=m
#
# Amplifiers
#
CONFIG_AD8366=m
#
# Chemical Sensors
#
CONFIG_ATLAS_PH_SENSOR=m
CONFIG_IAQCORE=m
CONFIG_VZ89X=m
CONFIG_IIO_CROS_EC_SENSORS_CORE=m
CONFIG_IIO_CROS_EC_SENSORS=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Hid Sensor IIO Common
#
CONFIG_HID_SENSOR_IIO_COMMON=m
CONFIG_HID_SENSOR_IIO_TRIGGER=m
CONFIG_IIO_MS_SENSORS_I2C=m
#
# SSP Sensor Common
#
CONFIG_IIO_SSP_SENSORS_COMMONS=m
CONFIG_IIO_SSP_SENSORHUB=m
CONFIG_IIO_ST_SENSORS_I2C=m
CONFIG_IIO_ST_SENSORS_SPI=m
CONFIG_IIO_ST_SENSORS_CORE=m
#
# Counters
#
CONFIG_104_QUAD_8=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Digital to analog converters
#
CONFIG_AD5064=m
CONFIG_AD5360=m
CONFIG_AD5380=m
CONFIG_AD5421=m
CONFIG_AD5446=m
CONFIG_AD5449=m
CONFIG_AD5592R_BASE=m
CONFIG_AD5592R=m
CONFIG_AD5593R=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_AD5504=m
CONFIG_AD5624R_SPI=m
CONFIG_AD5686=m
CONFIG_AD5755=m
CONFIG_AD5761=m
CONFIG_AD5764=m
CONFIG_AD5791=m
CONFIG_AD7303=m
# CONFIG_CIO_DAC is not set
CONFIG_AD8801=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_M62332=m
CONFIG_MAX517=m
CONFIG_MCP4725=m
CONFIG_MCP4922=m
#
# IIO dummy driver
#
# CONFIG_IIO_SIMPLE_DUMMY is not set
#
# Frequency Synthesizers DDS/PLL
#
#
# Clock Generator/Distribution
#
CONFIG_AD9523=m
#
# Phase-Locked Loop (PLL) frequency synthesizers
#
CONFIG_ADF4350=m
#
# Digital gyroscope sensors
#
CONFIG_ADIS16080=m
CONFIG_ADIS16130=m
CONFIG_ADIS16136=m
CONFIG_ADIS16260=m
CONFIG_ADXRS450=m
CONFIG_BMG160=m
CONFIG_BMG160_I2C=m
CONFIG_BMG160_SPI=m
CONFIG_HID_SENSOR_GYRO_3D=m
# CONFIG_MPU3050_I2C is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_IIO_ST_GYRO_3AXIS=m
CONFIG_IIO_ST_GYRO_I2C_3AXIS=m
CONFIG_IIO_ST_GYRO_SPI_3AXIS=m
CONFIG_ITG3200=m
#
# Health Sensors
#
#
# Heart Rate Monitors
#
CONFIG_AFE4403=m
CONFIG_AFE4404=m
CONFIG_MAX30100=m
#
# Humidity sensors
#
CONFIG_AM2315=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_DHT11=m
CONFIG_HDC100X=m
CONFIG_HTS221=m
CONFIG_HTS221_I2C=m
CONFIG_HTS221_SPI=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_HTU21=m
CONFIG_SI7005=m
CONFIG_SI7020=m
#
# Inertial measurement units
#
CONFIG_ADIS16400=m
CONFIG_ADIS16480=m
CONFIG_BMI160=m
CONFIG_BMI160_I2C=m
CONFIG_BMI160_SPI=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_KMX61 is not set
CONFIG_INV_MPU6050_IIO=m
CONFIG_INV_MPU6050_I2C=m
CONFIG_INV_MPU6050_SPI=m
CONFIG_IIO_ADIS_LIB=m
CONFIG_IIO_ADIS_LIB_BUFFER=y
#
# Light sensors
#
CONFIG_ACPI_ALS=m
CONFIG_ADJD_S311=m
CONFIG_AL3320A=m
CONFIG_APDS9300=m
CONFIG_APDS9960=m
CONFIG_BH1750=m
CONFIG_BH1780=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CM32181=m
CONFIG_CM3232=m
CONFIG_CM3323=m
CONFIG_CM36651=m
CONFIG_GP2AP020A00F=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_ISL29018=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_ISL29125=m
CONFIG_HID_SENSOR_ALS=m
CONFIG_HID_SENSOR_PROX=m
CONFIG_JSA1212=m
CONFIG_RPR0521=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_LM3533=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_LTR501=m
CONFIG_MAX44000=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_OPT3001=m
CONFIG_PA12203001=m
CONFIG_SI1145=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_STK3310=m
CONFIG_TCS3414=m
CONFIG_TCS3472=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_TSL2563=m
CONFIG_TSL2583=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_TSL4531=m
CONFIG_US5182D=m
CONFIG_VCNL4000=m
CONFIG_VEML6070=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Magnetometer sensors
#
CONFIG_AK8975=m
CONFIG_AK09911=m
CONFIG_BMC150_MAGN=m
CONFIG_BMC150_MAGN_I2C=m
CONFIG_BMC150_MAGN_SPI=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MAG3110=m
CONFIG_HID_SENSOR_MAGNETOMETER_3D=m
CONFIG_MMC35240=m
CONFIG_IIO_ST_MAGN_3AXIS=m
CONFIG_IIO_ST_MAGN_I2C_3AXIS=m
CONFIG_IIO_ST_MAGN_SPI_3AXIS=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_HMC5843=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_HMC5843_I2C=m
CONFIG_SENSORS_HMC5843_SPI=m
#
# Inclinometer sensors
#
CONFIG_HID_SENSOR_INCLINOMETER_3D=m
CONFIG_HID_SENSOR_DEVICE_ROTATION=m
#
# Triggers - standalone
#
CONFIG_IIO_HRTIMER_TRIGGER=m
CONFIG_IIO_INTERRUPT_TRIGGER=m
CONFIG_IIO_TIGHTLOOP_TRIGGER=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_IIO_SYSFS_TRIGGER=m
#
# Digital potentiometers
#
# CONFIG_DS1803 is not set
# CONFIG_MAX5487 is not set
# CONFIG_MCP4131 is not set
# CONFIG_MCP4531 is not set
# CONFIG_TPL0102 is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Digital potentiostats
#
CONFIG_LMP91000=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Pressure sensors
#
CONFIG_ABP060MG=m
# CONFIG_BMP280 is not set
# CONFIG_HID_SENSOR_PRESS is not set
# CONFIG_HP03 is not set
# CONFIG_MPL115_I2C is not set
# CONFIG_MPL115_SPI is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_MPL3115 is not set
# CONFIG_MS5611 is not set
# CONFIG_MS5637 is not set
# CONFIG_IIO_ST_PRESS is not set
# CONFIG_T5403 is not set
# CONFIG_HP206C is not set
# CONFIG_ZPA2326 is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Lightning sensors
#
# CONFIG_AS3935 is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Proximity sensors
#
# CONFIG_LIDAR_LITE_V2 is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_SX9500 is not set
#
# Temperature sensors
#
# CONFIG_MAXIM_THERMOCOUPLE is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MLX90614=m
CONFIG_TMP006=m
CONFIG_TSYS01=m
CONFIG_TSYS02D=m
CONFIG_NTB=m
CONFIG_NTB_PINGPONG=m
CONFIG_NTB_TOOL=m
CONFIG_NTB_PERF=m
CONFIG_NTB_TRANSPORT=m
CONFIG_VME_BUS=y
#
# VME Bridge Drivers
#
CONFIG_VME_CA91CX42=m
CONFIG_VME_TSI148=m
# CONFIG_VME_FAKE is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# VME Board Drivers
#
CONFIG_VMIVME_7805=m
#
# VME Device Drivers
#
CONFIG_VME_USER=m
CONFIG_VME_PIO2=m
CONFIG_PWM=y
CONFIG_PWM_SYSFS=y
CONFIG_PWM_CRC=y
CONFIG_PWM_CROS_EC=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_PWM_LP3943=m
CONFIG_PWM_LPSS=m
CONFIG_PWM_LPSS_PCI=m
CONFIG_PWM_LPSS_PLATFORM=m
CONFIG_PWM_PCA9685=m
CONFIG_PWM_TWL=m
CONFIG_PWM_TWL_LED=m
CONFIG_ARM_GIC_MAX_NR=1
CONFIG_IPACK_BUS=m
# CONFIG_BOARD_TPCI200 is not set
# CONFIG_SERIAL_IPOCTAL is not set
CONFIG_RESET_CONTROLLER=y
# CONFIG_RESET_ATH79 is not set
# CONFIG_RESET_BERLIN is not set
# CONFIG_RESET_LPC18XX is not set
# CONFIG_RESET_MESON is not set
# CONFIG_RESET_PISTACHIO is not set
# CONFIG_RESET_SOCFPGA is not set
# CONFIG_RESET_STM32 is not set
# CONFIG_RESET_SUNXI is not set
CONFIG_TI_SYSCON_RESET=m
# CONFIG_RESET_ZYNQ is not set
# CONFIG_RESET_TEGRA_BPMP is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_FMC=m
CONFIG_FMC_FAKEDEV=m
CONFIG_FMC_TRIVIAL=m
CONFIG_FMC_WRITE_EEPROM=m
CONFIG_FMC_CHARDEV=m
#
# PHY Subsystem
#
CONFIG_GENERIC_PHY=y
CONFIG_PHY_PXA_28NM_HSIC=m
CONFIG_PHY_PXA_28NM_USB2=m
CONFIG_BCM_KONA_USB2_PHY=m
CONFIG_PHY_SAMSUNG_USB2=m
# CONFIG_PHY_EXYNOS4210_USB2 is not set
# CONFIG_PHY_EXYNOS4X12_USB2 is not set
# CONFIG_PHY_EXYNOS5250_USB2 is not set
CONFIG_PHY_TUSB1210=m
CONFIG_POWERCAP=y
CONFIG_INTEL_RAPL=m
# CONFIG_MCB is not set
#
# Performance monitor support
#
CONFIG_RAS=y
CONFIG_MCE_AMD_INJ=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_THUNDERBOLT=m
#
# Android
#
# CONFIG_ANDROID is not set
CONFIG_LIBNVDIMM=y
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_PMEM=y
CONFIG_ND_BLK=y
CONFIG_ND_CLAIM=y
CONFIG_ND_BTT=y
CONFIG_BTT=y
CONFIG_DEV_DAX=m
CONFIG_NR_DEV_DAX=32768
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NVMEM=m
CONFIG_STM=m
CONFIG_STM_DUMMY=m
CONFIG_STM_SOURCE_CONSOLE=m
CONFIG_STM_SOURCE_HEARTBEAT=m
# CONFIG_STM_SOURCE_FTRACE is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_INTEL_TH=m
CONFIG_INTEL_TH_PCI=m
CONFIG_INTEL_TH_GTH=m
CONFIG_INTEL_TH_STH=m
CONFIG_INTEL_TH_MSU=m
CONFIG_INTEL_TH_PTI=m
# CONFIG_INTEL_TH_DEBUG is not set
#
# FPGA Configuration Support
#
CONFIG_FPGA=m
#
# Firmware Drivers
#
CONFIG_ARM_SCPI_PROTOCOL=m
CONFIG_ARM_SCPI_POWER_DOMAIN=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_EDD=y
CONFIG_EDD_OFF=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_FIRMWARE_MEMMAP=y
# CONFIG_DELL_RBU is not set
CONFIG_DCDBAS=m
CONFIG_DMIID=y
CONFIG_DMI_SYSFS=m
CONFIG_DMI_SCAN_MACHINE_NON_EFI_FALLBACK=y
CONFIG_ISCSI_IBFT_FIND=y
CONFIG_ISCSI_IBFT=m
CONFIG_FW_CFG_SYSFS=m
# CONFIG_FW_CFG_SYSFS_CMDLINE is not set
# CONFIG_GOOGLE_FIRMWARE is not set
#
# EFI (Extensible Firmware Interface) Support
#
CONFIG_EFI_VARS=y
CONFIG_EFI_ESRT=y
CONFIG_EFI_VARS_PSTORE=y
CONFIG_EFI_VARS_PSTORE_DEFAULT_DISABLE=y
CONFIG_EFI_RUNTIME_MAP=y
# CONFIG_EFI_FAKE_MEMMAP is not set
CONFIG_EFI_RUNTIME_WRAPPERS=y
CONFIG_EFI_BOOTLOADER_CONTROL=m
CONFIG_EFI_CAPSULE_LOADER=m
# CONFIG_EFI_TEST is not set
CONFIG_APPLE_PROPERTIES=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_UEFI_CPER=y
CONFIG_EFI_DEV_PATH_PARSER=y
#
# Tegra firmware driver
#
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# File systems
#
CONFIG_DCACHE_WORD_ACCESS=y
CONFIG_FS_IOMAP=y
# CONFIG_EXT2_FS is not set
# CONFIG_EXT3_FS is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_EXT4_FS=y
CONFIG_EXT4_USE_FOR_EXT2=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_EXT4_FS_POSIX_ACL=y
CONFIG_EXT4_FS_SECURITY=y
2016-11-16 16:09:23 +03:00
CONFIG_EXT4_ENCRYPTION=y
CONFIG_EXT4_FS_ENCRYPTION=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_EXT4_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_JBD2=y
# CONFIG_JBD2_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_FS_MBCACHE=y
CONFIG_REISERFS_FS=m
# CONFIG_REISERFS_CHECK is not set
# CONFIG_REISERFS_PROC_INFO is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_REISERFS_FS_XATTR=y
CONFIG_REISERFS_FS_POSIX_ACL=y
CONFIG_REISERFS_FS_SECURITY=y
CONFIG_JFS_FS=m
CONFIG_JFS_POSIX_ACL=y
CONFIG_JFS_SECURITY=y
# CONFIG_JFS_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_JFS_STATISTICS=y
CONFIG_XFS_FS=m
CONFIG_XFS_QUOTA=y
CONFIG_XFS_POSIX_ACL=y
CONFIG_XFS_RT=y
# CONFIG_XFS_WARN is not set
# CONFIG_XFS_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_GFS2_FS=m
CONFIG_GFS2_FS_LOCKING_DLM=y
CONFIG_OCFS2_FS=m
CONFIG_OCFS2_FS_O2CB=m
CONFIG_OCFS2_FS_USERSPACE_CLUSTER=m
CONFIG_OCFS2_FS_STATS=y
CONFIG_OCFS2_DEBUG_MASKLOG=y
# CONFIG_OCFS2_DEBUG_FS is not set
CONFIG_BTRFS_FS=y
CONFIG_BTRFS_FS_POSIX_ACL=y
# CONFIG_BTRFS_FS_CHECK_INTEGRITY is not set
# CONFIG_BTRFS_FS_RUN_SANITY_TESTS is not set
# CONFIG_BTRFS_DEBUG is not set
# CONFIG_BTRFS_ASSERT is not set
CONFIG_NILFS2_FS=m
CONFIG_F2FS_FS=m
CONFIG_F2FS_STAT_FS=y
CONFIG_F2FS_FS_XATTR=y
CONFIG_F2FS_FS_POSIX_ACL=y
CONFIG_F2FS_FS_SECURITY=y
# CONFIG_F2FS_CHECK_FS is not set
CONFIG_F2FS_FS_ENCRYPTION=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_F2FS_IO_TRACE is not set
# CONFIG_F2FS_FAULT_INJECTION is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_FS_DAX=y
CONFIG_FS_POSIX_ACL=y
CONFIG_EXPORTFS=y
CONFIG_EXPORTFS_BLOCK_OPS=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_FILE_LOCKING=y
CONFIG_MANDATORY_FILE_LOCKING=y
CONFIG_FS_ENCRYPTION=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_FSNOTIFY=y
CONFIG_DNOTIFY=y
CONFIG_INOTIFY_USER=y
CONFIG_FANOTIFY=y
CONFIG_FANOTIFY_ACCESS_PERMISSIONS=y
CONFIG_QUOTA=y
CONFIG_QUOTA_NETLINK_INTERFACE=y
# CONFIG_PRINT_QUOTA_WARNING is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_QUOTA_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_QUOTA_TREE=y
CONFIG_QFMT_V1=m
CONFIG_QFMT_V2=y
CONFIG_QUOTACTL=y
CONFIG_AUTOFS4_FS=m
CONFIG_FUSE_FS=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CUSE=m
CONFIG_OVERLAY_FS=m
# CONFIG_OVERLAY_FS_REDIRECT_DIR is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Caches
#
CONFIG_FSCACHE=m
CONFIG_FSCACHE_STATS=y
# CONFIG_FSCACHE_HISTOGRAM is not set
# CONFIG_FSCACHE_DEBUG is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_FSCACHE_OBJECT_LIST is not set
CONFIG_CACHEFILES=m
# CONFIG_CACHEFILES_DEBUG is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_CACHEFILES_HISTOGRAM is not set
#
# CD-ROM/DVD Filesystems
#
CONFIG_ISO9660_FS=m
CONFIG_JOLIET=y
CONFIG_ZISOFS=y
CONFIG_UDF_FS=m
CONFIG_UDF_NLS=y
#
# DOS/FAT/NT Filesystems
#
CONFIG_FAT_FS=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MSDOS_FS=m
CONFIG_VFAT_FS=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_FAT_DEFAULT_CODEPAGE=437
CONFIG_FAT_DEFAULT_IOCHARSET="iso8859-1"
# CONFIG_FAT_DEFAULT_UTF8 is not set
CONFIG_NTFS_FS=m
# CONFIG_NTFS_DEBUG is not set
# CONFIG_NTFS_RW is not set
#
# Pseudo filesystems
#
CONFIG_PROC_FS=y
CONFIG_PROC_KCORE=y
CONFIG_PROC_VMCORE=y
CONFIG_PROC_SYSCTL=y
CONFIG_PROC_PAGE_MONITOR=y
CONFIG_PROC_CHILDREN=y
CONFIG_KERNFS=y
CONFIG_SYSFS=y
CONFIG_TMPFS=y
CONFIG_TMPFS_POSIX_ACL=y
CONFIG_TMPFS_XATTR=y
CONFIG_HUGETLBFS=y
CONFIG_HUGETLB_PAGE=y
CONFIG_CONFIGFS_FS=m
CONFIG_EFIVAR_FS=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MISC_FILESYSTEMS=y
CONFIG_ORANGEFS_FS=m
CONFIG_ADFS_FS=m
# CONFIG_ADFS_FS_RW is not set
CONFIG_AFFS_FS=m
CONFIG_ECRYPT_FS=y
CONFIG_ECRYPT_FS_MESSAGING=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_HFS_FS=m
CONFIG_HFSPLUS_FS=m
CONFIG_HFSPLUS_FS_POSIX_ACL=y
CONFIG_BEFS_FS=m
# CONFIG_BEFS_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_BFS_FS=m
CONFIG_EFS_FS=m
CONFIG_JFFS2_FS=m
CONFIG_JFFS2_FS_DEBUG=0
CONFIG_JFFS2_FS_WRITEBUFFER=y
# CONFIG_JFFS2_FS_WBUF_VERIFY is not set
# CONFIG_JFFS2_SUMMARY is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_JFFS2_FS_XATTR=y
CONFIG_JFFS2_FS_POSIX_ACL=y
CONFIG_JFFS2_FS_SECURITY=y
CONFIG_JFFS2_COMPRESSION_OPTIONS=y
CONFIG_JFFS2_ZLIB=y
CONFIG_JFFS2_LZO=y
CONFIG_JFFS2_RTIME=y
# CONFIG_JFFS2_RUBIN is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_JFFS2_CMODE_NONE is not set
# CONFIG_JFFS2_CMODE_PRIORITY is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_JFFS2_CMODE_SIZE is not set
CONFIG_JFFS2_CMODE_FAVOURLZO=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_UBIFS_FS=m
# CONFIG_UBIFS_FS_ADVANCED_COMPR is not set
CONFIG_UBIFS_FS_LZO=y
CONFIG_UBIFS_FS_ZLIB=y
# CONFIG_UBIFS_ATIME_SUPPORT is not set
CONFIG_UBIFS_FS_ENCRYPTION=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CRAMFS=y
CONFIG_SQUASHFS=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_SQUASHFS_FILE_CACHE is not set
CONFIG_SQUASHFS_FILE_DIRECT=y
CONFIG_SQUASHFS_DECOMP_SINGLE=y
# CONFIG_SQUASHFS_DECOMP_MULTI is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_SQUASHFS_DECOMP_MULTI_PERCPU is not set
CONFIG_SQUASHFS_XATTR=y
CONFIG_SQUASHFS_ZLIB=y
CONFIG_SQUASHFS_LZ4=y
CONFIG_SQUASHFS_LZO=y
CONFIG_SQUASHFS_XZ=y
# CONFIG_SQUASHFS_4K_DEVBLK_SIZE is not set
# CONFIG_SQUASHFS_EMBEDDED is not set
CONFIG_SQUASHFS_FRAGMENT_CACHE_SIZE=3
CONFIG_VXFS_FS=m
CONFIG_MINIX_FS=m
CONFIG_OMFS_FS=m
CONFIG_HPFS_FS=m
CONFIG_QNX4FS_FS=m
CONFIG_QNX6FS_FS=m
# CONFIG_QNX6FS_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_ROMFS_FS=m
# CONFIG_ROMFS_BACKED_BY_BLOCK is not set
# CONFIG_ROMFS_BACKED_BY_MTD is not set
CONFIG_ROMFS_BACKED_BY_BOTH=y
CONFIG_ROMFS_ON_BLOCK=y
CONFIG_PSTORE=y
CONFIG_PSTORE_ZLIB_COMPRESS=y
# CONFIG_PSTORE_LZO_COMPRESS is not set
# CONFIG_PSTORE_LZ4_COMPRESS is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_PSTORE_CONSOLE is not set
# CONFIG_PSTORE_PMSG is not set
# CONFIG_PSTORE_FTRACE is not set
CONFIG_PSTORE_RAM=m
CONFIG_SYSV_FS=m
CONFIG_UFS_FS=m
# CONFIG_UFS_FS_WRITE is not set
# CONFIG_UFS_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_EXOFS_FS=m
# CONFIG_EXOFS_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_AUFS_FS=m
# CONFIG_AUFS_BRANCH_MAX_127 is not set
CONFIG_AUFS_BRANCH_MAX_511=y
# CONFIG_AUFS_BRANCH_MAX_1023 is not set
# CONFIG_AUFS_BRANCH_MAX_32767 is not set
CONFIG_AUFS_SBILIST=y
# CONFIG_AUFS_HNOTIFY is not set
# CONFIG_AUFS_EXPORT is not set
CONFIG_AUFS_XATTR=y
CONFIG_AUFS_FHSM=y
# CONFIG_AUFS_RDU is not set
CONFIG_AUFS_SHWH=y
# CONFIG_AUFS_BR_RAMFS is not set
CONFIG_AUFS_BR_FUSE=y
CONFIG_AUFS_POLL=y
CONFIG_AUFS_BR_HFSPLUS=y
CONFIG_AUFS_BDEV_LOOP=y
# CONFIG_AUFS_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_ORE=m
CONFIG_NETWORK_FILESYSTEMS=y
CONFIG_NFS_FS=m
CONFIG_NFS_V2=m
CONFIG_NFS_V3=m
CONFIG_NFS_V3_ACL=y
CONFIG_NFS_V4=m
CONFIG_NFS_SWAP=y
CONFIG_NFS_V4_1=y
CONFIG_NFS_V4_2=y
CONFIG_PNFS_FILE_LAYOUT=m
CONFIG_PNFS_BLOCK=m
CONFIG_PNFS_OBJLAYOUT=m
CONFIG_PNFS_FLEXFILE_LAYOUT=m
CONFIG_NFS_V4_1_IMPLEMENTATION_ID_DOMAIN="kernel.org"
CONFIG_NFS_V4_1_MIGRATION=y
CONFIG_NFS_V4_SECURITY_LABEL=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NFS_FSCACHE=y
# CONFIG_NFS_USE_LEGACY_DNS is not set
CONFIG_NFS_USE_KERNEL_DNS=y
CONFIG_NFS_DEBUG=y
CONFIG_NFSD=m
CONFIG_NFSD_V2_ACL=y
CONFIG_NFSD_V3=y
CONFIG_NFSD_V3_ACL=y
CONFIG_NFSD_V4=y
CONFIG_NFSD_PNFS=y
CONFIG_NFSD_BLOCKLAYOUT=y
CONFIG_NFSD_SCSILAYOUT=y
CONFIG_NFSD_FLEXFILELAYOUT=y
CONFIG_NFSD_V4_SECURITY_LABEL=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_NFSD_FAULT_INJECTION is not set
CONFIG_GRACE_PERIOD=m
CONFIG_LOCKD=m
CONFIG_LOCKD_V4=y
CONFIG_NFS_ACL_SUPPORT=m
CONFIG_NFS_COMMON=y
CONFIG_SUNRPC=m
CONFIG_SUNRPC_GSS=m
CONFIG_SUNRPC_BACKCHANNEL=y
CONFIG_SUNRPC_SWAP=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_RPCSEC_GSS_KRB5=m
CONFIG_SUNRPC_DEBUG=y
CONFIG_CEPH_FS=m
CONFIG_CEPH_FSCACHE=y
CONFIG_CEPH_FS_POSIX_ACL=y
CONFIG_CIFS=m
CONFIG_CIFS_STATS=y
# CONFIG_CIFS_STATS2 is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CIFS_WEAK_PW_HASH=y
CONFIG_CIFS_UPCALL=y
CONFIG_CIFS_XATTR=y
CONFIG_CIFS_POSIX=y
CONFIG_CIFS_ACL=y
CONFIG_CIFS_DEBUG=y
# CONFIG_CIFS_DEBUG2 is not set
CONFIG_CIFS_DFS_UPCALL=y
CONFIG_CIFS_SMB2=y
CONFIG_CIFS_SMB311=y
CONFIG_CIFS_FSCACHE=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NCP_FS=m
CONFIG_NCPFS_PACKET_SIGNING=y
CONFIG_NCPFS_IOCTL_LOCKING=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NCPFS_STRONG=y
CONFIG_NCPFS_NFS_NS=y
CONFIG_NCPFS_OS2_NS=y
# CONFIG_NCPFS_SMALLDOS is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NCPFS_NLS=y
CONFIG_NCPFS_EXTRAS=y
CONFIG_CODA_FS=m
CONFIG_AFS_FS=m
# CONFIG_AFS_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_AFS_FSCACHE=y
CONFIG_9P_FS=m
CONFIG_9P_FSCACHE=y
CONFIG_9P_FS_POSIX_ACL=y
CONFIG_9P_FS_SECURITY=y
CONFIG_NLS=y
CONFIG_NLS_DEFAULT="utf8"
CONFIG_NLS_CODEPAGE_437=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_NLS_CODEPAGE_737=m
CONFIG_NLS_CODEPAGE_775=m
CONFIG_NLS_CODEPAGE_850=m
CONFIG_NLS_CODEPAGE_852=m
CONFIG_NLS_CODEPAGE_855=m
CONFIG_NLS_CODEPAGE_857=m
CONFIG_NLS_CODEPAGE_860=m
CONFIG_NLS_CODEPAGE_861=m
CONFIG_NLS_CODEPAGE_862=m
CONFIG_NLS_CODEPAGE_863=m
CONFIG_NLS_CODEPAGE_864=m
CONFIG_NLS_CODEPAGE_865=m
CONFIG_NLS_CODEPAGE_866=m
CONFIG_NLS_CODEPAGE_869=m
CONFIG_NLS_CODEPAGE_936=m
CONFIG_NLS_CODEPAGE_950=m
CONFIG_NLS_CODEPAGE_932=m
CONFIG_NLS_CODEPAGE_949=m
CONFIG_NLS_CODEPAGE_874=m
CONFIG_NLS_ISO8859_8=m
CONFIG_NLS_CODEPAGE_1250=m
CONFIG_NLS_CODEPAGE_1251=m
CONFIG_NLS_ASCII=m
CONFIG_NLS_ISO8859_1=m
CONFIG_NLS_ISO8859_2=m
CONFIG_NLS_ISO8859_3=m
CONFIG_NLS_ISO8859_4=m
CONFIG_NLS_ISO8859_5=m
CONFIG_NLS_ISO8859_6=m
CONFIG_NLS_ISO8859_7=m
CONFIG_NLS_ISO8859_9=m
CONFIG_NLS_ISO8859_13=m
CONFIG_NLS_ISO8859_14=m
CONFIG_NLS_ISO8859_15=m
CONFIG_NLS_KOI8_R=m
CONFIG_NLS_KOI8_U=m
CONFIG_NLS_MAC_ROMAN=m
CONFIG_NLS_MAC_CELTIC=m
CONFIG_NLS_MAC_CENTEURO=m
CONFIG_NLS_MAC_CROATIAN=m
CONFIG_NLS_MAC_CYRILLIC=m
CONFIG_NLS_MAC_GAELIC=m
CONFIG_NLS_MAC_GREEK=m
CONFIG_NLS_MAC_ICELAND=m
CONFIG_NLS_MAC_INUIT=m
CONFIG_NLS_MAC_ROMANIAN=m
CONFIG_NLS_MAC_TURKISH=m
CONFIG_NLS_UTF8=m
CONFIG_DLM=m
# CONFIG_DLM_DEBUG is not set
#
# Kernel hacking
#
CONFIG_TRACE_IRQFLAGS_SUPPORT=y
#
# printk and dmesg options
#
CONFIG_PRINTK_TIME=y
CONFIG_CONSOLE_LOGLEVEL_DEFAULT=3
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_MESSAGE_LOGLEVEL_DEFAULT=4
CONFIG_BOOT_PRINTK_DELAY=y
CONFIG_DYNAMIC_DEBUG=y
#
# Compile-time checks and compiler options
#
# CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO is not set
2017-03-12 17:43:09 +03:00
# CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO_SPLIT is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO_REDUCED is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_ENABLE_WARN_DEPRECATED=y
CONFIG_ENABLE_MUST_CHECK=y
CONFIG_FRAME_WARN=1024
CONFIG_STRIP_ASM_SYMS=y
# CONFIG_READABLE_ASM is not set
CONFIG_UNUSED_SYMBOLS=y
# CONFIG_PAGE_OWNER is not set
CONFIG_DEBUG_FS=y
# CONFIG_HEADERS_CHECK is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_SECTION_MISMATCH is not set
CONFIG_SECTION_MISMATCH_WARN_ONLY=y
CONFIG_FRAME_POINTER=y
# CONFIG_DEBUG_FORCE_WEAK_PER_CPU is not set
CONFIG_MAGIC_SYSRQ=y
CONFIG_MAGIC_SYSRQ_DEFAULT_ENABLE=0x1
CONFIG_DEBUG_KERNEL=y
#
# Memory Debugging
#
# CONFIG_PAGE_EXTENSION is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_PAGEALLOC is not set
# CONFIG_PAGE_POISONING is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_PAGE_REF is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_OBJECTS is not set
# CONFIG_SLUB_DEBUG_ON is not set
# CONFIG_SLUB_STATS is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_KMEMLEAK is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_STACK_USAGE is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_VM is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_VIRTUAL is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_MEMORY_INIT is not set
# CONFIG_MEMORY_NOTIFIER_ERROR_INJECT is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_DEBUG_PER_CPU_MAPS is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_HIGHMEM is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_STACKOVERFLOW is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_SHIRQ is not set
#
# Debug Lockups and Hangs
#
CONFIG_LOCKUP_DETECTOR=y
CONFIG_HARDLOCKUP_DETECTOR=y
# CONFIG_BOOTPARAM_HARDLOCKUP_PANIC is not set
CONFIG_BOOTPARAM_HARDLOCKUP_PANIC_VALUE=0
# CONFIG_BOOTPARAM_SOFTLOCKUP_PANIC is not set
CONFIG_BOOTPARAM_SOFTLOCKUP_PANIC_VALUE=0
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_DETECT_HUNG_TASK=y
CONFIG_DEFAULT_HUNG_TASK_TIMEOUT=120
# CONFIG_BOOTPARAM_HUNG_TASK_PANIC is not set
CONFIG_BOOTPARAM_HUNG_TASK_PANIC_VALUE=0
# CONFIG_WQ_WATCHDOG is not set
# CONFIG_PANIC_ON_OOPS is not set
CONFIG_PANIC_ON_OOPS_VALUE=0
CONFIG_PANIC_TIMEOUT=0
CONFIG_SCHED_DEBUG=y
CONFIG_SCHED_INFO=y
CONFIG_SCHEDSTATS=y
# CONFIG_SCHED_STACK_END_CHECK is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_TIMEKEEPING is not set
CONFIG_TIMER_STATS=y
# CONFIG_DEBUG_PREEMPT is not set
#
# Lock Debugging (spinlocks, mutexes, etc...)
#
# CONFIG_DEBUG_RT_MUTEXES is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_SPINLOCK is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_MUTEXES is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_WW_MUTEX_SLOWPATH is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_LOCK_ALLOC is not set
# CONFIG_PROVE_LOCKING is not set
# CONFIG_LOCK_STAT is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_ATOMIC_SLEEP is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_LOCKING_API_SELFTESTS is not set
# CONFIG_LOCK_TORTURE_TEST is not set
CONFIG_STACKTRACE=y
# CONFIG_DEBUG_KOBJECT is not set
CONFIG_DEBUG_BUGVERBOSE=y
# CONFIG_DEBUG_LIST is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_PI_LIST is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_SG is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_NOTIFIERS is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_CREDENTIALS is not set
#
# RCU Debugging
#
# CONFIG_PROVE_RCU is not set
# CONFIG_SPARSE_RCU_POINTER is not set
# CONFIG_TORTURE_TEST is not set
# CONFIG_RCU_PERF_TEST is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_RCU_TORTURE_TEST is not set
CONFIG_RCU_CPU_STALL_TIMEOUT=60
# CONFIG_RCU_TRACE is not set
# CONFIG_RCU_EQS_DEBUG is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_WQ_FORCE_RR_CPU is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_BLOCK_EXT_DEVT is not set
# CONFIG_CPU_HOTPLUG_STATE_CONTROL is not set
CONFIG_NOTIFIER_ERROR_INJECTION=m
CONFIG_PM_NOTIFIER_ERROR_INJECT=m
# CONFIG_NETDEV_NOTIFIER_ERROR_INJECT is not set
# CONFIG_FAULT_INJECTION is not set
# CONFIG_LATENCYTOP is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_USER_STACKTRACE_SUPPORT=y
CONFIG_NOP_TRACER=y
CONFIG_TRACER_MAX_TRACE=y
CONFIG_TRACE_CLOCK=y
CONFIG_RING_BUFFER=y
CONFIG_EVENT_TRACING=y
CONFIG_CONTEXT_SWITCH_TRACER=y
CONFIG_RING_BUFFER_ALLOW_SWAP=y
CONFIG_TRACING=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_TRACER=y
CONFIG_TRACING_SUPPORT=y
CONFIG_FTRACE=y
CONFIG_FUNCTION_TRACER=y
CONFIG_FUNCTION_GRAPH_TRACER=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_IRQSOFF_TRACER is not set
# CONFIG_PREEMPT_TRACER is not set
CONFIG_SCHED_TRACER=y
CONFIG_HWLAT_TRACER=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_FTRACE_SYSCALLS=y
CONFIG_TRACER_SNAPSHOT=y
# CONFIG_TRACER_SNAPSHOT_PER_CPU_SWAP is not set
CONFIG_BRANCH_PROFILE_NONE=y
# CONFIG_PROFILE_ANNOTATED_BRANCHES is not set
# CONFIG_PROFILE_ALL_BRANCHES is not set
CONFIG_STACK_TRACER=y
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_IO_TRACE=y
CONFIG_KPROBE_EVENT=y
CONFIG_UPROBE_EVENT=y
CONFIG_BPF_EVENTS=y
CONFIG_PROBE_EVENTS=y
CONFIG_DYNAMIC_FTRACE=y
CONFIG_DYNAMIC_FTRACE_WITH_REGS=y
CONFIG_FUNCTION_PROFILER=y
CONFIG_FTRACE_MCOUNT_RECORD=y
# CONFIG_FTRACE_STARTUP_TEST is not set
CONFIG_MMIOTRACE=y
CONFIG_TRACING_MAP=y
CONFIG_HIST_TRIGGERS=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_MMIOTRACE_TEST is not set
# CONFIG_TRACEPOINT_BENCHMARK is not set
# CONFIG_RING_BUFFER_BENCHMARK is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_RING_BUFFER_STARTUP_TEST is not set
# CONFIG_TRACE_ENUM_MAP_FILE is not set
CONFIG_TRACING_EVENTS_GPIO=y
#
# Runtime Testing
#
# CONFIG_LKDTM is not set
# CONFIG_TEST_LIST_SORT is not set
# CONFIG_KPROBES_SANITY_TEST is not set
# CONFIG_BACKTRACE_SELF_TEST is not set
CONFIG_RBTREE_TEST=m
CONFIG_INTERVAL_TREE_TEST=m
# CONFIG_PERCPU_TEST is not set
# CONFIG_ATOMIC64_SELFTEST is not set
# CONFIG_ASYNC_RAID6_TEST is not set
# CONFIG_TEST_HEXDUMP is not set
# CONFIG_TEST_STRING_HELPERS is not set
# CONFIG_TEST_KSTRTOX is not set
CONFIG_TEST_PRINTF=m
# CONFIG_TEST_BITMAP is not set
# CONFIG_TEST_UUID is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_TEST_RHASHTABLE is not set
# CONFIG_TEST_HASH is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_PROVIDE_OHCI1394_DMA_INIT is not set
# CONFIG_DMA_API_DEBUG is not set
# CONFIG_TEST_LKM is not set
# CONFIG_TEST_USER_COPY is not set
# CONFIG_TEST_BPF is not set
# CONFIG_TEST_FIRMWARE is not set
# CONFIG_TEST_UDELAY is not set
CONFIG_MEMTEST=y
CONFIG_TEST_STATIC_KEYS=m
# CONFIG_BUG_ON_DATA_CORRUPTION is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_SAMPLES is not set
CONFIG_KGDB=y
CONFIG_KGDB_SERIAL_CONSOLE=y
# CONFIG_KGDB_TESTS is not set
CONFIG_KGDB_LOW_LEVEL_TRAP=y
CONFIG_KGDB_KDB=y
CONFIG_KDB_DEFAULT_ENABLE=0x1
CONFIG_KDB_KEYBOARD=y
CONFIG_KDB_CONTINUE_CATASTROPHIC=0
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_UBSAN is not set
CONFIG_STRICT_DEVMEM=y
# CONFIG_IO_STRICT_DEVMEM is not set
# CONFIG_X86_VERBOSE_BOOTUP is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_EARLY_PRINTK=y
# CONFIG_EARLY_PRINTK_DBGP is not set
# CONFIG_EARLY_PRINTK_EFI is not set
# CONFIG_X86_PTDUMP_CORE is not set
# CONFIG_X86_PTDUMP is not set
# CONFIG_EFI_PGT_DUMP is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_RODATA_TEST is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_WX is not set
CONFIG_DEBUG_SET_MODULE_RONX=y
# CONFIG_DEBUG_NX_TEST is not set
CONFIG_DOUBLEFAULT=y
# CONFIG_DEBUG_TLBFLUSH is not set
# CONFIG_IOMMU_STRESS is not set
# CONFIG_X86_DECODER_SELFTEST is not set
CONFIG_IO_DELAY_TYPE_0X80=0
CONFIG_IO_DELAY_TYPE_0XED=1
CONFIG_IO_DELAY_TYPE_UDELAY=2
CONFIG_IO_DELAY_TYPE_NONE=3
# CONFIG_IO_DELAY_0X80 is not set
CONFIG_IO_DELAY_0XED=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_IO_DELAY_UDELAY is not set
# CONFIG_IO_DELAY_NONE is not set
CONFIG_DEFAULT_IO_DELAY_TYPE=1
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_DEBUG_BOOT_PARAMS is not set
# CONFIG_CPA_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_OPTIMIZE_INLINING=y
# CONFIG_DEBUG_ENTRY is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_NMI_SELFTEST is not set
# CONFIG_X86_DEBUG_FPU is not set
CONFIG_PUNIT_ATOM_DEBUG=m
#
# Security options
#
CONFIG_KEYS=y
# CONFIG_PERSISTENT_KEYRINGS is not set
# CONFIG_BIG_KEYS is not set
CONFIG_TRUSTED_KEYS=y
CONFIG_ENCRYPTED_KEYS=y
# CONFIG_KEY_DH_OPERATIONS is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_SECURITY_DMESG_RESTRICT is not set
CONFIG_SECURITY=y
CONFIG_SECURITYFS=y
CONFIG_SECURITY_NETWORK=y
CONFIG_SECURITY_NETWORK_XFRM=y
CONFIG_SECURITY_PATH=y
CONFIG_INTEL_TXT=y
CONFIG_LSM_MMAP_MIN_ADDR=65536
CONFIG_HARDENED_USERCOPY=y
# CONFIG_HARDENED_USERCOPY_PAGESPAN is not set
CONFIG_SECURITY_SELINUX=y
CONFIG_SECURITY_SELINUX_BOOTPARAM=y
CONFIG_SECURITY_SELINUX_BOOTPARAM_VALUE=0
CONFIG_SECURITY_SELINUX_DISABLE=y
CONFIG_SECURITY_SELINUX_DEVELOP=y
CONFIG_SECURITY_SELINUX_AVC_STATS=y
CONFIG_SECURITY_SELINUX_CHECKREQPROT_VALUE=0
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_SECURITY_SMACK is not set
# CONFIG_SECURITY_TOMOYO is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_SECURITY_APPARMOR is not set
# CONFIG_SECURITY_LOADPIN is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
# CONFIG_SECURITY_YAMA is not set
CONFIG_INTEGRITY=y
# CONFIG_INTEGRITY_SIGNATURE is not set
CONFIG_INTEGRITY_AUDIT=y
CONFIG_IMA=y
CONFIG_IMA_MEASURE_PCR_IDX=10
CONFIG_IMA_LSM_RULES=y
# CONFIG_IMA_TEMPLATE is not set
CONFIG_IMA_NG_TEMPLATE=y
# CONFIG_IMA_SIG_TEMPLATE is not set
CONFIG_IMA_DEFAULT_HASH_SHA1=y
# CONFIG_IMA_DEFAULT_HASH_SHA256 is not set
# CONFIG_IMA_DEFAULT_HASH_SHA512 is not set
# CONFIG_IMA_DEFAULT_HASH_WP512 is not set
CONFIG_IMA_DEFAULT_HASH="sha1"
# CONFIG_IMA_WRITE_POLICY is not set
# CONFIG_IMA_READ_POLICY is not set
# CONFIG_IMA_APPRAISE is not set
# CONFIG_EVM is not set
CONFIG_DEFAULT_SECURITY_SELINUX=y
# CONFIG_DEFAULT_SECURITY_DAC is not set
CONFIG_DEFAULT_SECURITY="selinux"
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_XOR_BLOCKS=y
CONFIG_ASYNC_CORE=m
CONFIG_ASYNC_MEMCPY=m
CONFIG_ASYNC_XOR=m
CONFIG_ASYNC_PQ=m
CONFIG_ASYNC_RAID6_RECOV=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO=y
#
# Crypto core or helper
#
CONFIG_CRYPTO_ALGAPI=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_ALGAPI2=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_AEAD=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CRYPTO_AEAD2=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_BLKCIPHER=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CRYPTO_BLKCIPHER2=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_HASH=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_HASH2=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_RNG=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_RNG2=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_RNG_DEFAULT=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CRYPTO_AKCIPHER2=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_AKCIPHER=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_KPP2=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_KPP=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_ACOMP2=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_RSA=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_DH=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_ECDH=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CRYPTO_MANAGER=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_MANAGER2=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_USER=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_MANAGER_DISABLE_TESTS=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_GF128MUL=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_NULL=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CRYPTO_NULL2=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_PCRYPT=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_WORKQUEUE=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_CRYPTD=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_MCRYPTD=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_AUTHENC=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_TEST=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_ABLK_HELPER=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_SIMD=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CRYPTO_GLUE_HELPER_X86=m
#
# Authenticated Encryption with Associated Data
#
CONFIG_CRYPTO_CCM=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_GCM=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_CHACHA20POLY1305=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_SEQIV=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CRYPTO_ECHAINIV=m
#
# Block modes
#
CONFIG_CRYPTO_CBC=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_CTR=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_CTS=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_ECB=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CRYPTO_LRW=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_PCBC=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_XTS=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CRYPTO_KEYWRAP=m
#
# Hash modes
#
CONFIG_CRYPTO_CMAC=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_HMAC=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_XCBC=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_VMAC=m
#
# Digest
#
CONFIG_CRYPTO_CRC32C=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_CRC32C_INTEL=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CRYPTO_CRC32=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_CRC32_PCLMUL=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_CRCT10DIF=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_GHASH=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_POLY1305=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_MD4=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_MD5=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_MICHAEL_MIC=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_RMD128=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_RMD160=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_RMD256=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_RMD320=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_SHA1=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CRYPTO_SHA256=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_SHA512=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_SHA3=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CRYPTO_TGR192=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_WP512=m
#
# Ciphers
#
CONFIG_CRYPTO_AES=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_AES_586=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_AES_NI_INTEL=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_ANUBIS=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_ARC4=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_BLOWFISH=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_BLOWFISH_COMMON=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_CAMELLIA=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_CAST_COMMON=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_CAST5=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_CAST6=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_DES=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_FCRYPT=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_KHAZAD=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_SALSA20=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_SALSA20_586=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_CHACHA20=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_SEED=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_SERPENT=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_SERPENT_SSE2_586=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_TEA=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_TWOFISH=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_TWOFISH_COMMON=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_TWOFISH_586=m
#
# Compression
#
CONFIG_CRYPTO_DEFLATE=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_LZO=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_842=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CRYPTO_LZ4=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_LZ4HC=m
#
# Random Number Generation
#
CONFIG_CRYPTO_ANSI_CPRNG=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_DRBG_MENU=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_DRBG_HMAC=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_DRBG_HASH=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_DRBG_CTR=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_DRBG=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_JITTERENTROPY=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_USER_API=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_USER_API_HASH=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_USER_API_SKCIPHER=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_USER_API_RNG=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_USER_API_AEAD=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_HASH_INFO=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_HW=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_DEV_PADLOCK=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CRYPTO_DEV_PADLOCK_AES=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_DEV_PADLOCK_SHA=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_DEV_GEODE=m
# CONFIG_CRYPTO_DEV_FSL_CAAM_CRYPTO_API_DESC is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CRYPTO_DEV_CCP=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_DEV_CCP_DD=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_DEV_CCP_CRYPTO=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_DEV_QAT=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_DEV_QAT_DH895xCC=m
# CONFIG_CRYPTO_DEV_QAT_C3XXX is not set
# CONFIG_CRYPTO_DEV_QAT_C62X is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CRYPTO_DEV_QAT_DH895xCCVF=m
# CONFIG_CRYPTO_DEV_QAT_C3XXXVF is not set
# CONFIG_CRYPTO_DEV_QAT_C62XVF is not set
CONFIG_CRYPTO_DEV_CHELSIO=m
CONFIG_CRYPTO_DEV_VIRTIO=m
CONFIG_ASYMMETRIC_KEY_TYPE=y
CONFIG_ASYMMETRIC_PUBLIC_KEY_SUBTYPE=y
CONFIG_X509_CERTIFICATE_PARSER=y
CONFIG_PKCS7_MESSAGE_PARSER=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
#
# Certificates for signature checking
#
# CONFIG_SYSTEM_TRUSTED_KEYRING is not set
CONFIG_KVM_APIC_ARCHITECTURE=y
CONFIG_KVM_MMIO=y
CONFIG_KVM_ASYNC_PF=y
CONFIG_KVM_VFIO=y
CONFIG_KVM_GENERIC_DIRTYLOG_READ_PROTECT=y
CONFIG_VIRTUALIZATION=y
CONFIG_KVM=m
CONFIG_KVM_INTEL=m
CONFIG_KVM_AMD=m
CONFIG_KVM_MMU_AUDIT=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_KVM_DEVICE_ASSIGNMENT=y
CONFIG_VHOST_NET=m
CONFIG_VHOST_SCSI=m
CONFIG_VHOST_VSOCK=m
CONFIG_VHOST=m
# CONFIG_VHOST_CROSS_ENDIAN_LEGACY is not set
# CONFIG_LGUEST is not set
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_BINARY_PRINTF=y
#
# Library routines
#
CONFIG_RAID6_PQ=y
CONFIG_BITREVERSE=y
CONFIG_RATIONAL=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_STRNCPY_FROM_USER=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_STRNLEN_USER=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_NET_UTILS=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_FIND_FIRST_BIT=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_PCI_IOMAP=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_IOMAP=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_IO=y
CONFIG_CRC_CCITT=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_CRC16=y
CONFIG_CRC_T10DIF=y
CONFIG_CRC_ITU_T=m
CONFIG_CRC32=y
# CONFIG_CRC32_SELFTEST is not set
CONFIG_CRC32_SLICEBY8=y
# CONFIG_CRC32_SLICEBY4 is not set
# CONFIG_CRC32_SARWATE is not set
# CONFIG_CRC32_BIT is not set
CONFIG_CRC7=m
CONFIG_LIBCRC32C=y
CONFIG_CRC8=m
CONFIG_AUDIT_GENERIC=y
# CONFIG_AUDIT_ARCH_COMPAT_GENERIC is not set
# CONFIG_RANDOM32_SELFTEST is not set
CONFIG_842_COMPRESS=m
CONFIG_842_DECOMPRESS=m
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_ZLIB_INFLATE=y
CONFIG_ZLIB_DEFLATE=y
CONFIG_LZO_COMPRESS=y
CONFIG_LZO_DECOMPRESS=y
CONFIG_LZ4_COMPRESS=y
CONFIG_LZ4HC_COMPRESS=m
CONFIG_LZ4_DECOMPRESS=y
CONFIG_XZ_DEC=y
CONFIG_XZ_DEC_X86=y
# CONFIG_XZ_DEC_POWERPC is not set
# CONFIG_XZ_DEC_IA64 is not set
# CONFIG_XZ_DEC_ARM is not set
# CONFIG_XZ_DEC_ARMTHUMB is not set
# CONFIG_XZ_DEC_SPARC is not set
CONFIG_XZ_DEC_BCJ=y
# CONFIG_XZ_DEC_TEST is not set
CONFIG_DECOMPRESS_GZIP=y
CONFIG_DECOMPRESS_BZIP2=y
CONFIG_DECOMPRESS_LZMA=y
CONFIG_DECOMPRESS_XZ=y
CONFIG_DECOMPRESS_LZO=y
CONFIG_DECOMPRESS_LZ4=y
CONFIG_GENERIC_ALLOCATOR=y
CONFIG_REED_SOLOMON=m
CONFIG_REED_SOLOMON_ENC8=y
CONFIG_REED_SOLOMON_DEC8=y
CONFIG_REED_SOLOMON_DEC16=y
CONFIG_BCH=m
CONFIG_BCH_CONST_PARAMS=y
CONFIG_TEXTSEARCH=y
CONFIG_TEXTSEARCH_KMP=m
CONFIG_TEXTSEARCH_BM=m
CONFIG_TEXTSEARCH_FSM=m
CONFIG_BTREE=y
CONFIG_INTERVAL_TREE=y
CONFIG_RADIX_TREE_MULTIORDER=y
Revisited the set of kernel flavours and the generation of config files Until now, the build system for the kernel supported a number of flavours: nrj and non-nrj ones, desktop-, laptop-, server- and netbook-oriented, etc. It turned out over the years, however, that our users mostly need the following: * a kernel to use on the desktops (home and office use) with reasonable default settings for performance and responsiveness; * a kernel for laptops, with a bit more emphasis on power consumption. Other variants were rarely used. We also did not have enough time to properly support all these. Besides, the kernels for ARM and other architectures need a somewhat different build process than for x86. So, they are better off to be in separate ABF projects, even if they are needed. No signs of ROSA on ARM yet, btw. So, I kept only nrj-desktop and nrj-laptop flavours and only x86. Non-PAE systems also seem to be rare now, so I enabled PAE by default for the 32-bit kernels. Non-PAE kernels are no longer built. If they are needed, we may use a separate git branch or an ABF project for that. To simplify debugging, maintenance and experimentation with the kernel builds further, I revisited the process of preparing the kernel configuration files. The goal is to get rid of a separate git repo with the default configs (kernel-patches-and-configs) and keep everything in this project. The default config files are now kept here. For x86_64: * kernel-x86_64.config contains the options for both nrj-desktop and nrn-laptop flavours; * kernel-{nrj_desktop|nrj_laptop}-x86_64.config files contain the flavour-specific options. This way, it is easier to track which config options changed when, easier to experiment with the custom configs and so on. The kernel will be built with debug info if rpmbuild is called with "--with debug".
2016-07-21 13:56:25 +03:00
CONFIG_ASSOCIATIVE_ARRAY=y
CONFIG_HAS_IOMEM=y
CONFIG_HAS_IOPORT_MAP=y
CONFIG_HAS_DMA=y
CONFIG_CHECK_SIGNATURE=y
CONFIG_CPU_RMAP=y
CONFIG_DQL=y
CONFIG_GLOB=y
# CONFIG_GLOB_SELFTEST is not set
CONFIG_NLATTR=y
CONFIG_LRU_CACHE=m
CONFIG_CLZ_TAB=y
CONFIG_CORDIC=m
CONFIG_DDR=y
CONFIG_IRQ_POLL=y
CONFIG_MPILIB=m
CONFIG_OID_REGISTRY=m
CONFIG_UCS2_STRING=y
CONFIG_FONT_SUPPORT=y
# CONFIG_FONTS is not set
CONFIG_FONT_8x8=y
CONFIG_FONT_8x16=y
# CONFIG_SG_SPLIT is not set
CONFIG_SG_POOL=y
CONFIG_SBITMAP=y
#
# Hardening features
#
# CONFIG_PAX_MEMORY_SANITIZE is not set
# CONFIG_PAGE_POISONING_ZERO is not set