19.09.2014 15:04, Erich Titl пишет: > Hi > > at 19.09.2014 10:35, kp kirchdoerfer wrote: >> Am Donnerstag, 18. September 2014, 18:59:40 schrieb Timothy Wegner: >>> David wrote: >>> >>> > ... > >> Most probably it's the ehci-pci module (ehci-pci.ko.gz) which is missing. It >> is needed with the newer kernel in 5.1. >> You may add it grom the modules tarball to initmod.lrp. >> >> See >> http://bering-uclibc.zetam.org/wiki/Bering-uClibc_5.x_-_User_Guide_-_Advanced_Topics_-_Modifying_initrd.lrp >> >> how to modify initmod.lrp (It's written for initrd, but it's also valid for >> initmod). > For what it's worth, I never understood the rationale behind splitting > initrd, except for a few cycles on the server building it. It makes life > miserable for anyone using a boot loader which does not support multiple > initrd files. It probably needs more space for initrd storage and makes > debugging more difficult. I vote to go back to single initrd files. > > cheers > > Erich It's for 1) completely separating userland from kernel - that will allow us to maintaindifferent kernel branches in single release and 2) for embedded platforms where there is a single userland for arch, and multiple kernels (even with different versions - if there is a proprietary patch w/o ports to other versions, and even w/o boot-time modules for some platforms - if there is a fixed configuration of boot-time modules, they may be linked into kernel as static). Also it helps to easily update userspace w/o kernel or kernel w/o userspace (they are almost independent now). If loader doesn't support multiple initrd, 2 pieces can be easily concatenated into one w/o repacking.
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