diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'extra')
-rw-r--r-- | extra/Configs/Config.in.arch | 19 |
1 files changed, 10 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/extra/Configs/Config.in.arch b/extra/Configs/Config.in.arch index 248675e07..35c6323f9 100644 --- a/extra/Configs/Config.in.arch +++ b/extra/Configs/Config.in.arch @@ -123,8 +123,8 @@ config UCLIBC_HAS_FLOATS such as printf() and scanf() will still be included in the library, but will not contain support for floating point numbers. - Answering N to this option can reduce the size of uClibc. Most people - will answer Y. + Answering N to this option can reduce the size of uClibc. + Most people will answer Y. config UCLIBC_HAS_FPU bool "Target CPU has a floating point unit (FPU)" @@ -172,13 +172,14 @@ config KERNEL_HEADERS string "Linux kernel header location" default "/usr/include" help - The kernel source you use to compile with should be the same as the - Linux kernel you run your apps on. uClibc doesn't even try to achieve binary - compatibility across kernel versions. So don't expect, for example, uClibc - compiled with Linux kernel 2.0.x to implement lchown properly, since 2.0.x - can't do that. Similarly, if you compile uClibc vs Linux 2.4.x kernel headers, - but then run on Linux 2.0.x, lchown will be compiled into uClibc, but won't - work at all. You have been warned. + The kernel source you use to compile with should be the same + as the Linux kernel you run your apps on. uClibc doesn't even + try to achieve binary compatibility across kernel versions. + So don't expect, for example, uClibc compiled with Linux kernel + 2.0.x to implement lchown properly, since 2.0.x can't do that. + Similarly, if you compile uClibc vs Linux 2.4.x kernel headers, + but then run on Linux 2.0.x, lchown will be compiled into uClibc, + but won't work at all. You have been warned. config UCLIBC_UCLINUX_BROKEN_MUNMAP bool |