This is an example of a minimalist kernel config script using what I call
"subtractive synthesis", rather than the additive synthesis method of
make config and friends. This generates white-noise and then you filter
it, rather than painstakingly constructing your timbre one sinewave at a
time. Kinda. This example is for MCA-related pink noise, so to speak.
I think this may be related in a degenerate-case way to declarative
programming.
This leaves a lot to the user. It is based on the idea that hopefully
people with hardware with configuration interdependancies will be somewhat
cognizant of them.
I think this is close to a minimum for something that can generate any
desired config. I may have broken this somewhat tweaking it a bit to post,
but It's pretty handy when it works.
This is hereby public-domain-ified.
Rick Hohensee
:; cLIeNUX /dev/tty10 16:07:45 /
:;echo $DISTRO
cLIeNUX
.........................................................................
## cLIeNUX Cheap Quick Dirty kernel config
## MAD (Microchannel Affection Disorder) example
## dependancies Linux sources and...
## sh, awk, clear, ed, your $VISUAL editor, rm, ls, mv, date
## The usual /tmp is /.tm in cLIeNUX
# function declaration
swap () { ## Last field, CONFIG_*, to second, after #
awk -- '
{
ORS=""
print "\n# " $NF
for ( i = 1 ; i < NF ; i++ ) print " "$i
} ' $1
}
# declarations
ARCH=i386
MCA=ONLY
C_INCLUDE_PATH=$C_INCLUDE_PATH:/source/kernel/$1
DATE=`date`
clear
echo -e "\t\t\tcLIeNUX linux/config\n\n\n\n
\ncollating base config data\n\n"
#### if a bla/Config.in file isn't in this list variable you won't see
### the options that Config.in file contains.
## Season to taste.
configlist="
arch/i386/config.in
fs/Config.in
drivers/char/Config.in
drivers/block/Config.in
drivers/scsi/Config.in
drivers/net/Config.in
fs/nls/Config.in
net/ipv4/Config.in
net/Config.in
net/sched/Config.in
net/irda/Config.in
net/irda/compressors/Config.in
drivers/net/hamradio/Config.in
drivers/net/irda/Config.in
drivers/block/paride/Config.in
drivers/char/ftape/Config.in
drivers/char/hfmodem/Config.in
drivers/char/joystick/Config.in
drivers/sound/lowlevel/Config.in
drivers/sound/Config.in
drivers/isdn/Config.in
drivers/video/Config.in
drivers/fc4/Config.in
fs/ncpfs/Config.in
net/ax25/Config.in
net/ipx/Config.in
"
## EXCLUDED from the above
## drivers/pnp/Config.in ## put this back if not MCA
## drivers/cdrom/Config.in ## put this back if not MCA
## drivers/usb/Config.in
## net/irda/irlpt/Config.in
## net/irda/ircomm/Config.in
## net/irda/irlan/Config.in
## net/irda/irlpt/Config.in
## net/irda/ircomm/Config.in
## net/irda/irlan/Config.in
## net/irda/irlpt/Config.in
## drivers/acorn/net/Config.in Acorn
## drivers/acorn/scsi/Config.in
## drivers/acorn/block/Config.in
## drivers/acorn/char/Config.in
## drivers/sgi/Config.in SGI
## drivers/sbus/char/Config.in Mac
## drivers/sbus/audio/Config.in
## net/ipv6/Config.in
## drivers/fc4/Config.in Fiber channel
cd linux
###MMMMMMMMMMMAAAAAAAAAAAAAIIIIIIIIIIINNNNNNNNNNNNNNN
echo > /.tm/BASE
## generate bulk CONFIG_ list.
#
for CF in $configlist
do
echo -en "\n# CONFIG\n# CONFIG " $CF "# CONFIG\n" >> /.tm/BASE
cat $CF >> /.tm/BASE
done
## format, then prune. Prune out experimental up front.
#
swap /.tm/BASE |grep "^# CONFIG" | grep -v -i "XPERIMEN" \
| cut -b 1-74 > /.tm/BASE2
rm /.tm/BASE
echo -e "\n\n\npruning...\n\n\n"
## convert choice types to "=y" and "=ym", then prune
#
ed <<HEREDOC /.tm/BASE2
,s/ tristate '/=ym #/
,s/ bool '/=y #/
,s/'$//
g/Sun /d
g/Atari/d
g/Mac /d
g/Sparc/d
g/Amiga/d
wq
HEREDOC
## pro-Microchannel extreme prejudice
#
if test "$MCA" = "ONLY"
then
ed <<HEREDOC /.tm/BASE2
g/PCI/d
g/IDE/d
g/PNP/d
g/ISA/d
g/_APM_/d
wq
HEREDOC
fi
## header and assemble CONFIG
#
#
echo "## " `date` > CONFIG
cat <<HEREDOC >> CONFIG
#
# Assuming you are seeing this via the cqdconfig script, what you do
# now is uncomment (remove the leftmost # from) the kernel options you
# want. Nothing is on now. The variables that are activated by you
# in here are then asserted as kernel sourcecode, and the
# kernel will be built accordingly. Variables can be =y or completely
# unset, and module options can also be m. If an option in here is =y you
# just have to uncomment it to assert it. If it's =ym you have to decide
# if you want it as a module or in the base kernel and pick y or m, IF you
# enable modules, and want that option. These options are additive.
# You can for example build a useless x86 kernel with just CONFIG_M386 and
# maybe a memsize option. In a useful kernel there may be some option
# interdependancies. Your only automated check on them with this
# non-rigorous config method is compiling and running the result. Most
# things that aren't non-interdependant single options will probably be
# known to people that have them. If you have problems use make config ,
# or read Documentation/Configuration.help.
#
# The cqdconfig script that generated this file is part of your
# configuration options in and of itself. You can
# tweak it to not include any options here that you're not interested in
# if you have a working knowledge of regular expression match patterns.
# see regex. All that really matters is that the end result be valid. You
# are actually modifying the kernel code when you edit this file, to
# stretch a point a bit, but if you don't use modules, and you don't mind
# an enormous list of options, all you have to know about shell scripting
# is that "#" starts a comment.
#
# Break a leg :o)
# Rick
HEREDOC
cat /.tm/BASE2 >> CONFIG
## call an editor, then do what "make config" does to assert the config
#
$VISUAL CONFIG
clear
echo "Clobbering .config.old and linux/include/linux/autoconf.h,
which asserts your configuration choices.
make dep is probably your next move.
"
mv .config .config.old
cp CONFIG .config
cp .config include/linux/autoconf.h
.......................................................................
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Sun Apr 15 2001 - 21:00:23 EST