On Thursday 14 June 2001 08:14, David Luyer wrote:
> Well, I'm actually looking at the 2nd idea I mentioned in my e-mail -- a
> very small "kernel package" which has a config script, a list of config
> options and the files they depend on and an appropriately tagged CVS tree
> which can then be
Daniel Phillips writes:
> On Thursday 14 June 2001 10:34, Alexander Viro wrote:
> > On Thu, 14 Jun 2001, Daniel Phillips wrote:
> > > This sounds a lot like apt-get, doesn't it?
> >
> > Folks, RTFFAQ, please. URL is attached to the end of each posting.
>
> The FAQ blesses the idea of people
On Thursday 14 June 2001 10:34, Alexander Viro wrote:
> On Thu, 14 Jun 2001, Daniel Phillips wrote:
> > This sounds a lot like apt-get, doesn't it?
>
> Folks, RTFFAQ, please. URL is attached to the end of each posting.
The FAQ blesses the idea of people setting up incremental download services,
(I wrote)
> > This might actually make sense - a kernel composed of multiple versioned
> > segments. A tool which works out dependencies of the options being selected,
> > downloads the required parts if the latest versions of those parts are not
> > already downloaded, and then builds the
David Luyer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
[...]
> This might actually make sense - a kernel composed of multiple versioned
> segments. A tool which works out dependencies of the options being selected,
> downloads the required parts if the latest versions of those parts are not
> already
On Thursday 14 June 2001 04:00, David Luyer wrote:
> > Would it make sense to create some sort of 'make config' script that
> > determines what you want in your kernel and then downloads only those
> > components? After all, with the constant release of new hardware, isn't a
> > 50MB kernel
On Thursday 14 June 2001 04:00, David Luyer wrote:
Would it make sense to create some sort of 'make config' script that
determines what you want in your kernel and then downloads only those
components? After all, with the constant release of new hardware, isn't a
50MB kernel release not
David Luyer [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
[...]
This might actually make sense - a kernel composed of multiple versioned
segments. A tool which works out dependencies of the options being selected,
downloads the required parts if the latest versions of those parts are not
already downloaded, and
(I wrote)
This might actually make sense - a kernel composed of multiple versioned
segments. A tool which works out dependencies of the options being selected,
downloads the required parts if the latest versions of those parts are not
already downloaded, and then builds the kernel (or
On Thursday 14 June 2001 10:34, Alexander Viro wrote:
On Thu, 14 Jun 2001, Daniel Phillips wrote:
This sounds a lot like apt-get, doesn't it?
Folks, RTFFAQ, please. URL is attached to the end of each posting.
The FAQ blesses the idea of people setting up incremental download services,
On Thursday 14 June 2001 08:14, David Luyer wrote:
Well, I'm actually looking at the 2nd idea I mentioned in my e-mail -- a
very small kernel package which has a config script, a list of config
options and the files they depend on and an appropriately tagged CVS tree
which can then be used
Daniel Phillips writes:
On Thursday 14 June 2001 10:34, Alexander Viro wrote:
On Thu, 14 Jun 2001, Daniel Phillips wrote:
This sounds a lot like apt-get, doesn't it?
Folks, RTFFAQ, please. URL is attached to the end of each posting.
The FAQ blesses the idea of people setting up
>
> Or as a simpler design, something like;
>
> * a copy of the kernel maintained in a CVS tree
> * kernel download would pull down:
> * the build script
> * a file containing the list of filenames depended on by
> each config option
> * build script builds the
> I agree that removing support for any hardware is a bad idea but I question
> the idea of putting it all in one monolithic download (tar file). If we're
> considering the concern for less developed nations with older hardware,
> imagine how you would like to download the whole kernel with an
I agree that removing support for any hardware is a bad idea but I question
the idea of putting it all in one monolithic download (tar file). If we're
considering the concern for less developed nations with older hardware,
imagine how you would like to download the whole kernel with an old
Or as a simpler design, something like;
* a copy of the kernel maintained in a CVS tree
* kernel download would pull down:
* the build script
* a file containing the list of filenames depended on by
each config option
* build script builds the config and
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