On Sunday 10 February 2013 13:20:49 Stephen Warren wrote: > 1On 02/10/2013 10:28 AM, Marc Dietrich wrote: > > On Friday 08 February 2013 10:09:10 Stephen Warren wrote: > >> On 02/08/2013 05:29 AM, Marc Dietrich wrote: > >>> Hiroshi, > >>> > >>> Am Freitag, 8. Februar 2013, 09:29:31 schrieb Hiroshi Doyu: > >>>> Refactored tegra{20,30,114}_init_early() so that we have the unified > >>>> tegra_init_early(). > > ... > > >>> are these ifdefs really needed? Multisoc kernels will enable them all > >>> anyway and there is a case structure which protects the assignments. > >>> Also > >>> the hotplug functions are very tiny, so there shouldn't be a big loss. > >> > >> The files that contain/implement those functions are separate for each > >> SoC and only included in the build when the individual SoCs are enabled. > >> > >> While multi-platform SoCs do make sense for distros, we also very > >> specifically want to support the case where only Tegra, and only a > >> single Tegra SoC, is enabled, hence this separation. > > > > Huh? so tegra_defconfig is not supported? > > > > grep "TEGRA_.*_SOC" tegra_defconfig: > > > > CONFIG_ARCH_TEGRA_2x_SOC=y > > CONFIG_ARCH_TEGRA_3x_SOC=y > > I don't understand the question. > > But to be clear. There are now 3 variants of Tegra supported. (Tegra20, > Tegra30, Tegra114). We want to be able to build a minimal-size kernel > (e.g. for embedded applications) that supports just one, any combination > of two, or all three Tegra variants. ah, ok - I just skipped the "also" in your sentence above. But still, the #ifdefs look strange to me and save only a few byte of code. Just me few cents. Marc -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-tegra" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html