On Fri, 2006-12-29 at 15:25 +0000, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote: > The code size depends how much of FreeBSD you disable in the nanobsd > build.
Hi Poul Can you give me some pointers as to what I should be disabling. I have been following the example here http://elibrary.fultus.com/technical/index.jsp?topic=/com.fultus.freebsd.articles/articles/nanobsd/cover.html the end result does not need to do very much, just do NPT, allow static IP configuration, VI for basic config edits and allow SSH access I am new to bsd kernel configs so please forgive if these are dumb questions 1/ is there much I should be considering disabling in the generic kernel (I am guessing that the raid, USB and SCSI stuff can go for starters ) 2/ If I put my custom kernel config file in the same dir as nanobsd.sh and reference it in my custom config file the script will take care of the build for me? 3/ Do I need to add any patches for the EALN specific stuff and ELAN_PPS or is that all already there in the generic kernel sources >If you don't disable anything, I think each code image needs about > 180-200 MB so a 512MB card is perfect for getting airborne quickly. Hmm, I have my beady eye firmly on the 128Mb one that's sitting on my desk! is that an unrealistic goal if I am willing to forego the in place upgrade feature BTW nanoBSD looks to be a very nice distro, I am glad that I have discovered it as I am sure I will be using it again soon. regards Brendan _______________________________________________ time-nuts mailing list [email protected] https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
