properly on Amazon EC2.
* Always apply the CIFS timeout patch. It's rather annoying to have
to build a separate kernel for the VM tests.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=22630
operations to 120s. This is necessary if the host is heavily
loaded. For instance, in the Hydra build farm, if there are many
concurrent jobs, VM builds often fail because they hit the timeout.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=22347
The Linux 2.6.34 kernel delivers (from [1])
- many open-source GPU driver updates,
- GPU switching support,
- the LogFS file-system,
- faster KVM networking support,
- Btrfs file-system updates,
- the VMware memory ballooning driver,
- and many other changes.
A more exhaustive list of the Linux 2.6.34 kernel changes from
architectures to network drivers is listed on the Wiki at
KernelNewbies.org.[2]
[1] http://www.phoronix.com:
[2] http://kernelnewbies.org/Linux_2_6_34
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=22023
on the native and cross platforms.
I thought I already did that today in a previous commit, but I did all wrong.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=20280
I introduce the new nixpkgs parameter "platform", defaulting to "pc",
which was before defined as an attribute of nixpkgs.
I made the crossSystem nixpkgs attribute set parameter contain its own 'platform'.
This allows cross-building a kernel for a given crossSystem.platform in a non-PC
platform.
The actual native platform can be taken from stdenv.platform, and this way we also
avoid the constant passing of 'platform' to packages for platform-dependant builds
(kernel, initrd, ...).
I will update nixos accordingly to these changes, for non-PC platforms to work.
I think we are gaining on flexibility and clearness. I could cross build succesfully
an ultrasparc kernel and a mipsel kernel on PC. But since this change, I should be able
to do this also in non-PC.
Before this change, there was no possibility of distinguishing the "target platform" or
the "native build platform" when cross building, being the single "platform" attribute
always interpreted as target platform.
The platform is a quite relevant attribute set, as it determines the linuxHeaders used
(in the case, by now the only one supported, of linux targets).
The platform attributes are quite linux centric still. Let's hope for more generality to come.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=20273
It seems that there is no make target named 'vmlinuz' that makes the file 'vmlinuz'.
So we need different variables for the make target and the kernel file. Unless we
some day stop using the file 'vmlinuz' in pc, and use bzImage.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=20092