On 29 November 2022 06:49:25 GMT, Andrew Jones <ajones@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Mon, Nov 28, 2022 at 09:17:38PM +0000, Conor Dooley wrote:
On 28/11/2022 21:11, Heiko Stübner wrote:
> Am Samstag, 26. November 2022, 17:40:11 CET schrieb Conor Dooley:
>> On Fri, Nov 25, 2022 at 05:46:56PM -0600, Samuel Holland wrote:
>>> Now that several D1-based boards are supported, enable the platform in
>>> our defconfig. Build in the drivers which are necessary to boot, such as
>>> the pinctrl, MMC, RTC (which provides critical clocks), SPI (for flash),
>>> and watchdog (which may be left enabled by the bootloader).
>>
>> All of that looks good.
>>
>>> Other common
>>> onboard peripherals are enabled as modules.
>>
>> This I am not sure about though. I'll leave that to Palmer since I'm
>> pretty sure it was him that said it, but I thought the plan was only
>> turning on stuff required to boot to a console & things that are
>> generally useful rather than enabling modules for everyone's "random"
>> drivers. Palmer?
> > Isn't the defconfig meant as a starting point to get working systems
> with minimal config effort? At least that was always the way to go on arm
> so far :-) .
> > So having boot-required drivers built-in with the rest enabled as modules
> for supported boards will allow people to boot theirs without headaches.
> > Disabling unneeded drivers if you're starved for storage space in a special
> project is always easier than hunting down all the drivers to enable for a
> specific board.
I wouldn't mind being able to turn on all the PolarFire SoC stuff and
yeah, that would be the way that arm64 does it. But I do recall hearing
that I should not turn stuff on this way, when I initially tried to
turn stuff on via selects, got a nack and asked if I could do this instead.
But it may be that I misremember, which is why I appealed to the Higher
Powers for clarification :)
FWIW, I don't worry too much about modules in defconfig because I always
immediately apply a 'LSMOD=$PWD/L localmodconfig' to it, where the L
file is an lsmod output which only includes modules I need.
idk, defconfig to me is not about you or I, it's about A Developer that gets an SBC or a devkit and their experience.
Or alternatively, someone's CI ;)
I'd like to put everything in, but I recall that being shot down, that's all.