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author | Steven Rostedt <srostedt@redhat.com> | 2009-04-29 22:52:21 -0400 |
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committer | Steven Rostedt <rostedt@goodmis.org> | 2009-08-18 21:49:43 -0400 |
commit | dcc60243e726978576cb02b74c84440629c69c87 (patch) | |
tree | f1a4cd4a41c942118a21c3b1cb0b4857fe2c63e1 /scripts | |
parent | dc8ed71eeb8adce08d3070f4130e12ee540baa59 (diff) | |
download | op-kernel-dev-dcc60243e726978576cb02b74c84440629c69c87.zip op-kernel-dev-dcc60243e726978576cb02b74c84440629c69c87.tar.gz |
kconfig: add streamline_config.pl to scripts
streamline_config.pl is a very powerful tool. For those that install
a kernel to a new box using the config file from the distribution know that
it can take forever to compile the kernel.
Making a custom config file that will still boot your box, but bring
down the compile time of the kernel can be quit painful, and to ask
someone that reported a bug to do this can be a large burdon since that
person may not even know how to build a kernel.
This script will perform "lsmod" to find all the modules loaded on the
current running system. It will read all the Makefiles to map which
CONFIG enables a module. It will read the Kconfig files to find the
dependencies and selects that may be needed to support a CONFIG.
Finally, it reads the .config file and removes any module "=m" that is
not needed to enable the currently loaded modules. The output goes to
standard out.
Here's a way to run the script. From the Linux directory that holds
a distribution .config.
$ scripts/kconfig/streamline_config.pl arch/x86/Kconfig > config-sl
$ mv .config config-save
$ mv config-sl .config
$ make oldconfig
Now you have a .config that will still build all your modules, but also
take much less time to build the kernel.
Signed-off-by: Steven Rostedt <rostedt@goodmis.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'scripts')
-rw-r--r-- | scripts/kconfig/streamline_config.pl | 291 |
1 files changed, 291 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/scripts/kconfig/streamline_config.pl b/scripts/kconfig/streamline_config.pl new file mode 100644 index 0000000..79d8557 --- /dev/null +++ b/scripts/kconfig/streamline_config.pl @@ -0,0 +1,291 @@ +#!/usr/bin/perl -w +# +# Copywrite 2005-2009 - Steven Rostedt +# Licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL License version 2 +# +# It's simple enough to figure out how this works. +# If not, then you can ask me at stripconfig@goodmis.org +# +# What it does? +# +# If you have installed a Linux kernel from a distribution +# that turns on way too many modules than you need, and +# you only want the modules you use, then this program +# is perfect for you. +# +# It gives you the ability to turn off all the modules that are +# not loaded on your system. +# +# Howto: +# +# 1. Boot up the kernel that you want to stream line the config on. +# 2. Change directory to the directory holding the source of the +# kernel that you just booted. +# 3. Copy the configuraton file to this directory as .config +# 4. Have all your devices that you need modules for connected and +# operational (make sure that their corresponding modules are loaded) +# 5. Run this script redirecting the output to some other file +# like config_strip. +# 6. Back up your old config (if you want too). +# 7. copy the config_strip file to .config +# 8. Run "make oldconfig" +# +# Now your kernel is ready to be built with only the modules that +# are loaded. +# +# Here's what I did with my Debian distribution. +# +# cd /usr/src/linux-2.6.10 +# cp /boot/config-2.6.10-1-686-smp .config +# ~/bin/streamline_config > config_strip +# mv .config config_sav +# mv config_strip .config +# make oldconfig +# +my $config = ".config"; +my $linuxpath = "."; + +open(CIN,$config) || die "Can't open current config file: $config"; +my @makefiles = `find $linuxpath -name Makefile`; +my %depends; +my %selects; +my %prompts; +my %objects; +my $var; +my $cont = 0; + +# Get the top level Kconfig file (passed in) +my $kconfig = $ARGV[0]; + +# prevent recursion +my %read_kconfigs; + +sub read_kconfig { + my ($kconfig) = @_; + + my $state = "NONE"; + my $config; + my @kconfigs; + + open(KIN, $kconfig) || die "Can't open $kconfig"; + while (<KIN>) { + chomp; + + # collect any Kconfig sources + if (/^source\s*"(.*)"/) { + $kconfigs[$#kconfigs+1] = $1; + } + + # configs found + if (/^\s*config\s+(\S+)\s*$/) { + $state = "NEW"; + $config = $1; + + # collect the depends for the config + } elsif ($state eq "NEW" && /^\s*depends\s+on\s+(.*)$/) { + $state = "DEP"; + $depends{$config} = $1; + } elsif ($state eq "DEP" && /^\s*depends\s+on\s+(.*)$/) { + $depends{$config} .= " " . $1; + + # Get the configs that select this config + } elsif ($state ne "NONE" && /^\s*select\s+(\S+)/) { + if (defined($selects{$1})) { + $selects{$1} .= " " . $config; + } else { + $selects{$1} = $config; + } + + # configs without prompts must be selected + } elsif ($state ne "NONE" && /^\s*tristate\s\S/) { + # note if the config has a prompt + $prompt{$config} = 1; + + # stop on "help" + } elsif (/^\s*help\s*$/) { + $state = "NONE"; + } + } + close(KIN); + + # read in any configs that were found. + foreach $kconfig (@kconfigs) { + if (!defined($read_kconfigs{$kconfig})) { + $read_kconfigs{$kconfig} = 1; + read_kconfig($kconfig); + } + } +} + +if ($kconfig) { + read_kconfig($kconfig); +} + +# Read all Makefiles to map the configs to the objects +foreach my $makefile (@makefiles) { + chomp $makefile; + + open(MIN,$makefile) || die "Can't open $makefile"; + while (<MIN>) { + my $objs; + + # is this a line after a line with a backslash? + if ($cont && /(\S.*)$/) { + $objs = $1; + } + $cont = 0; + + # collect objects after obj-$(CONFIG_FOO_BAR) + if (/obj-\$\((CONFIG_[^\)]*)\)\s*[+:]?=\s*(.*)/) { + $var = $1; + $objs = $2; + } + if (defined($objs)) { + # test if the line ends with a backslash + if ($objs =~ m,(.*)\\$,) { + $objs = $1; + $cont = 1; + } + + foreach my $obj (split /\s+/,$objs) { + $obj =~ s/-/_/g; + if ($obj =~ /(.*)\.o$/) { + # Objects may bes enabled by more than one config. + # Store configs in an array. + my @arr; + + if (defined($objects{$1})) { + @arr = @{$objects{$1}}; + } + + $arr[$#arr+1] = $var; + + # The objects have a hash mapping to a reference + # of an array of configs. + $objects{$1} = \@arr; + } + } + } + } + close(MIN); +} + +my %modules; + +# see what modules are loaded on this system +open(LIN,"/sbin/lsmod|") || die "Cant lsmod"; +while (<LIN>) { + next if (/^Module/); # Skip the first line. + if (/^(\S+)/) { + $modules{$1} = 1; + } +} +close (LIN); + +# add to the configs hash all configs that are needed to enable +# a loaded module. +my %configs; +foreach my $module (keys(%modules)) { + if (defined($objects{$module})) { + @arr = @{$objects{$module}}; + foreach my $conf (@arr) { + $configs{$conf} = $module; + } + } else { + # Most likely, someone has a custom (binary?) module loaded. + print STDERR "$module config not found!!\n"; + } +} + +my $valid = "A-Za-z_0-9"; +my $repeat = 1; + +# +# Note, we do not care about operands (like: &&, ||, !) we want to add any +# config that is in the depend list of another config. This script does +# not enable configs that are not already enabled. If we come across a +# config A that depends on !B, we can still add B to the list of depends +# to keep on. If A was on in the original config, B would not have been +# and B would not be turned on by this script. +# +sub parse_config_dep_select +{ + my ($p) = @_; + + while ($p =~ /[$valid]/) { + + if ($p =~ /^[^$valid]*([$valid]+)/) { + my $conf = "CONFIG_" . $1; + + $p =~ s/^[^$valid]*[$valid]+//; + + if (!defined($configs{$conf})) { + # We must make sure that this config has its + # dependencies met. + $repeat = 1; # do again + $configs{$conf} = 1; + } + } else { + die "this should never happen"; + } + } +} + +while ($repeat) { + $repeat = 0; + + foreach my $config (keys %configs) { + $config =~ s/^CONFIG_//; + + if (!defined($depends{$config})) { + next; + } + + # This config has dependencies. Make sure they are also included + parse_config_dep_select $depends{$config}; + + if (defined($prompt{$config}) || !defined($selects{$config})) { + next; + } + + # config has no prompt and must be selected. + parse_config_dep_select $selects{$config}; + } +} + +my %setconfigs; + +# Finally, read the .config file and turn off any module enabled that +# we could not find a reason to keep enabled. +while(<CIN>) { + if (/^(CONFIG.*)=m/) { + if (defined($configs{$1})) { + $setconfigs{$1} = 1; + print; + } else { + print "# $1 is not set\n"; + } + } else { + print; + } +} +close(CIN); + +# Integrity check, make sure all modules that we want enabled do +# indeed have their configs set. +loop: +foreach my $module (keys(%modules)) { + if (defined($objects{$module})) { + my @arr = @{$objects{$module}}; + foreach my $conf (@arr) { + if (defined($setconfigs{$conf})) { + next loop; + } + } + print STDERR "module $module did not have configs"; + foreach my $conf (@arr) { + print STDERR " " , $conf; + } + print STDERR "\n"; + } +} |