# Kernel patches configuration file # vim: set ts=8 sw=8 noet: # # There are three kinds of rules (see guards.1 for details): # +symbol include this patch if symbol is defined; otherwise exclude. # -symbol exclude this patch if symbol is defined; otherwise include. # - exclude this patch. # # Using symbols means that an entirely different source tree will be # generated depending on which symbols are defined. This used to be # a good thing when arch-specific patches contained conflicts with other # patches, but we now have a policy that patches must build everywhere. # The result is a unified source tree that allows us to do neat things # like ship kernel module packages. Creating a divergent tree breaks # these # so you'd better have an extraordinary reason for using them. # For example, the openSUSE 10.3 kernel uses them for segregating the # -rt patches until they can be integrated completely, and these are # only applied at the very end of the series. # # The most common use in recent kernels is to disable a patch with a # username as the symbol to indicate responsbility. Another use is # to check in a patch for testing, but have it disabled in all but your # own build environment. ######################################################## # Build fixes that apply to the vanilla kernel too. # Patches in patches.rpmify are applied to both -vanilla # and patched flavors. ######################################################## patches.rpmify/Add-ksym-provides-tool.patch patches.rpmify/Revert-kconfig-only-write-CONFIG_FOO-is-not-set-for-.patch ######################################################## # You'd better have a good reason for adding a patch # below here. ########################################################