On 05/09/15 06:31, Greg Freemyer wrote:
On Fri, Sep 4, 2015 at 3:33 AM, Basil Chupin <blchupin@iinet.net.au> wrote:
On 03/09/15 19:26, Michal Marek wrote:
Hi,
since Leap is sharing code with SLE and it will eventually share the kernel as well, I would like to align the config/ directory with the SLE kernel where practical. ia64 has already been deleted, same happened to the trace flavors. We probably want to keep the 32bit ARM, PPC and x86 architectures, to make it easier to build Leap ports for those architectures. What we can drop is the -desktop flavor. Since openSUSE releases have been using this flavor by default, I assume that this is what the majority of users are running, so we probably want to keep some of the settings of the -desktop flavor, to make the transition seamless. Therefore, I propose the following:
- Set CONFIG_PREEMPT=y, CONFIG_HZ=1000 in i386/pae and x86_64/default - Set the sysctl default vm.dirty_ratio=20 for these two flavors - Make i386/pae and x86_64/default obsolete kernel-desktop
Left for discussion is whether PREEMPT and HZ=1000 are actually worth it even on desktop. The setting can be flipped back later if there is a consensus. What we will definitely lose are the various builtin driver choices of the -desktop flavor. Merging these with the SLE kernel configs would constantly result in conflicts, while the boot time gains are negligible. And we will lose the placebo effect of the kernel having "desktop" in its name.
Michal
Why is always necessary to change things when things are running smoothly? Why?
In your own words, "What we will definitely lose are the various builtin driver choices of the -desktop flavor. Merging these with the SLE kernel configs would constantly result in conflicts.....", so why create avoidable angst and gnashing of teeth by users?
BC Basil,
As I understand it all the kernel modules are copied to initrd (initial ramdisk) so they are available at boot time without the use of any hardware drivers. Thus built-in drivers are not needed in the standard openSUSE boot sequence.
So the question is why support built-in drivers when they are not needed in the supported openSUSE boot sequence.
Greg
Sorry Greg but your response does not quite gel with what the OP stated. If what you say is correct then why all the fuss about bringing the subject up in the first place? BC -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-kernel+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-kernel+owner@opensuse.org