On Mon, 19 Sep 2016 10:58:35 -0400, Aruna Hewapathirane said: > make menuconfig: > An ncurses-based pseudo-graphical menu (only text input). Navigate through > the menu to modify the > desired options. Within menuconfig, use the / key to search modules by name. Actually, / searches (in a case-insensitive manner, so feel free to type in lower case) for CONFIG_WHATEVER variables, not modules. The distinction is important for 2 reasons: 1) Sometimes, the config variable that controls building a module isn't the uppercase version of the module name. It's rare, but does happen. For example, a Fedora 4.3.0 kernel has 2,739 =m entries in its .config. Of those: [/lib/modules/4.3.0-0.rc0.git14.1.fc24.x86_64] for i in `grep =m /boot/config-4.3.0-0.rc0.git14.1.fc24.x86_64 | sed -e 's/^CONFIG_//' -e 's/=m$//' | tr 'A-Z' 'a-z'`; do find . -name ${i}.ko.xz; done | wc -l 531 Only 531 are the lowercase of the config name. [/lib/modules/4.3.0-0.rc0.git14.1.fc24.x86_64] for i in `grep =m /boot/config-4.3.0-0.rc0.git14.1.fc24.x86_64 | sed -e 's/^CONFIG_//' -e 's/=m$//' | tr '_A-Z' '-a-z'`; do find . -name ${i}.ko.xz; done | wc 593 And some more have underscores changed to dashes (CONFIG_FOO_BAR -> foo-bar.ko) And the *majority* of them play games of one form or another: obj-$(CONFIG_BATTERY_OLPC) += olpc_battery.o obj-$(CONFIG_BLK_DEV_LOOP) += loop.o obj-$(CONFIG_LOOPBACK_TARGET) += tcm_loop.o obj-$(CONFIG_NVME_TARGET_LOOP) += nvme-loop.o and so on... 2) It's also good for finding yes/no variables that don't control building a module. For example: CONFIG_ALLOW_DEV_COREDUMP=y > make defconfig: > Generates a new config with default from the ARCH supplied defconfig file. > Use this option to get back the > default configuration file that came with the sources. Actually, that *won't* get you back "the config that came with the sources". If you look in a release source tarball from kernel.org, there *isn't* a .config in there, you need to create one somehow (copying a distro .config and then running 'make localmodconfig' is a popular choice). And there's no guarantee that 'make defconfig' will re-create whatever your distro shipped - in fact, it probably *won't* do so, because distros rarely, if ever, ship a kernel that's built with a Linus-approved defconfig.
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