On Thu, 2008-02-07 at 14:48 +0100, Takashi Iwai wrote:
At Thu, 7 Feb 2008 05:41:57 -0800 (PST), Trent Piepho wrote:
On Thu, 7 Feb 2008, Takashi Iwai wrote:
At Thu, 7 Feb 2008 05:10:27 -0800 (PST),
It would also be a huge PITA for developers who work on multiple sub-systems. If I want to make a patch for an alsa driver, I have to reboot into an alsa kernel? I try to go a few months between rebooting.
Hm, what's the problem to pull alsa.git tree to your own working tree?
How do I test the driver if it's compiled with the kernel in the alsa.git tree? I want to compile the driver against the kernel I'm running now.
Well, I don't get your point. "git-pull alsa.git" onto your current kernel tree and make. Then you have the latest ALSA drivers for your current system...
Of course, a subset tree like the current alsa-kernel would be much more handy. That's why I suggest to create the subset tree automatically from the linux kernel tree.
I do. I for one am using a canned distro (Mandriva 2008). I don't mess with the kernel tree at all. I just build and test alsa by combining the alsa-driver and alsa-kernel HG trees (same thing the daily snapshot does).
The advantage of this is I can test this snapshot on multiple distributions without having to try to find a kernel git tree for each distro (some barely give you the kernel headers package to build on).
For the work I do, having multiple kernel trees to test on would be difficult.
Tobin Davis
Darling: the popular form of address used in speaking to a member of the opposite sex whose name you cannot at the moment remember. -- Oliver Herford