VxWorks "bootrom" is an example of such a tiny-kernel as well as I understand.
But in my case LAB's solution is the only way. So, debug is the only way in the nearest future. ... and then the tiny-kernel And whether the linuxbios would have AMD K10 support the world would be perfect and smiling again. On Nov 17, 2007 1:12 AM, Jordan Crouse <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > On 16/11/07 14:58 -0800, Steve Isaacs wrote: > > Jordan Crouse wrote: > >> Well, first and foremost, because the tiny kernel already knows how to do > > > > I'm sorry, can someone enlighten me as to what a "tiny kernel" is? Is that > > anything similar to this? http://www.selenic.com/linux-tiny/ > > Well, typically, its any kernel that is small enough to fit on the ROM, > with small filesystem to accompany it. And strangely enough, many > people do use the linux-tiny patches to help make said kernel small enough. > > But generally, we use the term "tiny kernel" to differentiate between the > kernel on the ROM, and the fully featured kernel that you would normally > use to run your system (i.e - the kernel that is loaded by kexec from the > media of your choice). > > Jordan > > -- > Jordan Crouse > Systems Software Development Engineer > Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. > > > -- linuxbios mailing list linuxbios@linuxbios.org http://www.linuxbios.org/mailman/listinfo/linuxbios