On Sat, 2015-04-11 at 18:36 +0200, Stefan Hengelein wrote: > If you're reading the dependency list as "what do i have to enable to > be able to choose a value for FRAME_POINTER" and think, THUMB2_KERNEL > would be a good choice to leave disabled, you're going to have a bad > time. > (The second definition in arm/Kconfig.debug doesn't have a prompt and > the default has additional conditions)
Please elaborate on "bad time". > I personally would prefer to > additionally find the second definition that doesn't a prompt and > other dependencies instead of adding them to the first entry, but > that's just my personal preference. I notice myself getting rather grumpy. (That usually translates to: "Drop it, and revisit in a few days".) Let me explain. This is the arm64 entry: config FRAME_POINTER bool default y This is the hexagon entry config FRAME_POINTER def_bool y This is the m32r entry: config FRAME_POINTER bool "Compile the kernel with frame pointers" help If you say Y here [...] And this is the sparc entry: config FRAME_POINTER bool depends on MCOUNT default y You'd expect these entries to yield really simple results when doing a search in menuconfig. But the results show unparseable crap[1]. (And I'm afraid Gregory's patch would make that even worse. Gregory: please prove me wrong.) So to the grumpy me it looks like either: - menuconfig handles these redefinitions incorrectly in its UI; - these redefinitions are actually complicated (as in: somehow they concatenate the dependencies, etc.) and we should probably disallow them. Because otherwise looking at a Kconfig entry tells you very little about what is actually going on for the architecture you're interested in. What is the grumpy me missing here? Paul Bolle [1] The hexagon entry is interesting, probably because it sources lib/Kconfig.debug _after_ it defined FRAME_POINTER for itself. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/