On Jul 24, 2004, at 9:14 AM, Robert P. J. Day wrote: > the first has a help entry that refers, not to the 860, but to the > 8260 (making it out of place here).
As we have told you before, the help information is picked up in a weird way due to similar configuration options for the 8260. The 860T was the first processor with the FEC peripheral block. If you have an FEC, ask to have it configured, if you don't have it, don't configure it. > and the second, while being in the 8xx family, is still displayed > even after choosing a platform that's not an 860. As I have pointed out in a previous message, we don't distinguish among the 8xx variants in either the configuration or in the Linux software. If you have a processor that requires the CPU6 errata workaround, then configure this option, otherwise don't. It first appeared in silicon prior to 860 Rev. C, but also affected others. > this is the sort of confusion i was talking about in my earlier > emails. There is no confusion. All types of kernel configuration for nearly any platform will present options that you must be smart enough to select or to not select depending upon your board configuration. Based on the questions you continue to ask, you are very aware of what you need. Just configure your kernel and get on with things. If you want something different, submit a patch for consideration that changes the behavior. Thanks. -- Dan ** Sent via the linuxppc-embedded mail list. See http://lists.linuxppc.org/