Hello Dave,

So I have to do the kernelversion.xz extraction in linux OS and then build, 
right? I am extracting this in another OS, got the problem. Thank you very much.
 

Why would I get the following errors, though they would not stop the build 
process? Any help?

1> Where do I change the annotation of snd_hda_build_pcms?

WARNING: sound/pci/hda/built-in.o(.text+0x54bc5): Section mismatch in reference 
from the function azx_probe_continue() to the function 
.devinit.text:snd_hda_build_pcms()
The function azx_probe_continue() references
the function __devinit snd_hda_build_pcms().


This is often because azx_probe_continue lacks a __devinit 
annotation or the annotation of snd_hda_build_pcms is wrong.

OR

WARNING: sound/built-in.o(.text+0x266d0d): Section mismatch in reference from 
the function azx_probe_continue() to the function 
.devinit.text:snd_hda_build_pcms()
The function azx_probe_continue() references
the function __devinit snd_hda_build_pcms().
This is often because azx_probe_continue lacks a __devinit 
annotation or the annotation of snd_hda_build_pcms is wrong.

2>

sound/pci/rme9652/hdspm.c: In function ‘snd_hdspm_create_controls’:
sound/pci/rme9652/hdspm.c:4597:20: warning: ‘limit’ may be used 
uninitialized in this function

TnR,

Ganesh B



________________________________
 From: Dave Hylands <dhyla...@gmail.com>
To: Ganesh B <ganeshsu...@yahoo.com> 
Cc: "kernelnewbies@kernelnewbies.org" <kernelnewbies@kernelnewbies.org> 
Sent: Thursday, January 3, 2013 2:07 PM
Subject: Re: Kernelnewbies Digest, Vol 26, Issue 1
 

Hi Ganesh,




On Wed, Jan 2, 2013 at 11:55 PM, Ganesh B <ganeshsu...@yahoo.com> wrote:

I am trying to build the Kernel 3.7 and there are some files which have to be 
overwritten when uncompressing. One of the same files, ipt_ECN.c, gives an 
error stopping the build process. Any suggestions?
>
>
>net/ipv4/netfilter/ipt_ECN.c:20:42: fatal error: 
>linux/netfilter_ipv4/ipt_ECN.h: No such file or directory
>compilation terminated.

There is an ipt_ecn.c file and an ipt_ECN.c file (which differ only by case), 
so it sounds like there was a case-insensitive file system involved somewhere 
in what you're doing.


Normal linux filesystems (like ext2/3/4) are case-sensitive, so these are 2 
different files.


Dave Hylands
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