On 11/28/2012 12:43 PM, JD wrote:
I do know about these rpmbuild options, which, when turned off (--without xx) does shorten the build time. But it is not enough. Building bazillions of useless (with regards to the user's HW platform) driver, enabling features by default which the user might not want, is what I would like to have a way for the user to have the fine grained configuration ability.
Back in the Second Millennium, when I first started using Linux, the only way to update the kernel was to build your own. As most people were still on dial-up, this was something you only did if you needed a new feature, or if your current kernel was rather outdated.
When I first started doing this, the text-mode configure script was fairly simple, and it was easy to know which features to include, which to make into modules and which to ignore. By the time I moved from the old-style RedHat to FC 6, there were so many options that I'd never heard of that I was completely lost. I can just imagine what it would be like today.
What would be nice would be something like the traditional ./configure that didn't just examine the build environment, but probed the hardware and included the drivers you needed and only those. There would also be (I hope) a way to specify extra drivers, such as for a camera that's not always hooked up, plus a few questions about whatever other options are appropriate. That way, you'd get a customized kernel with exactly what you need without having to be a hardware guru with a specialization in CPU chips.
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