On Sun, 25 Aug 2013 18:18:09 +0200
Alan McKinnon <alan.mckin...@gmail.com> wrote:

> On 25/08/2013 02:45, »Q« wrote:
> > On Sat, 24 Aug 2013 09:49:43 +0200
> > Alan McKinnon <alan.mckin...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > 
> >> On 24/08/2013 06:26, Chris Stankevitz wrote:
> >>> On Fri, Aug 23, 2013 at 9:12 PM, »Q« <boxc...@gmx.net> wrote:  
> >>>> It looks like maybe the best way to tell which ebuilds support
> >>>> which kernels is to read the conditional for the ewarn message in
> >>>> each ebuild.  
> >>>
> >>> If this sort of problem spreads it might be good to build into
> >>> portage some kind of blocker/keyword mechanism so that users need
> >>> not deal with this.... not that I have any appreciation for the
> >>> work involved.  
> >>
> >> Those tools already exist.
> >>
> >> Blockers, which do not really apply here;
> > 
> > In a comment on the bug (which is full of bugspam), someone
> > suggested blocking kernels which are incompatible with the
> > currently-installed nvidia-drivers.  I'm glad that idea was
> > dismissed.
> > 
> >> elog messages
> > 
> > Those elog messages are presented after compiling a new kernel and
> > then trying and failing to compile nvidia-drivers.  So now I grep
> > the nvidia-drivers ebuilds for the messages before I compile a new
> > kernel.
> > 
> > A wiki page with info about which nvidia-drivers will build against
> > which kernels would be a nice thing to have.
> 
> Your reply demonstrates nicely the true nature of the problem:
> 
> With nvidia-drivers, sometimes things break and there's nothing sane
> that portage and the devs can do to help you. You can't check the
> configured kernels as they may not be running. You can't check the
> installed sources as they may not be in use. You can't even try
> identify the sources symlinked by /usr/src/linux as they may have
> been patched, tweaked or modified and nvidia-drivers may well build
> whereas against stock sources they don't.
> 
> The entire problem is completely due to how nVidia chose to do things,
> it's their business decision. Now, if they were to get their shim code
> into mainline, most of this nonsense would not happen anymore.
> 
> The only thing left for Portage and the devs to do is to provide the
> ebuild and ask you to run it. If it doesn't compile, then don't run
> that kernel.
> 
> I doubt your wiki page idea will work, it will be just accurate enough
> to look like it might work and just inaccurate enough to be useless.
> Which brings you back to the previous paragraph - try emerge
> nvidia-drivers and if it fails then don't use that kernel.

I was unclear to the point of being misleading.  I'm sorry.

The wiki idea is only for a page which tells which
kernel/nvidia-drivers combinations the Gentoo nvidia-drivers
maintainers support.  And by "support", I mean they'll look into bugs
and fix build problems if they're able to.  This is exactly the info I'm
grepping out of ewarn messages in their ebuilds now.



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