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Steve Muckle 8ab2e495f4 add CONFIG_SECCOMP_FILTER=y to android-base.cfg am: faa8aca29e
am: 27e6482ef6

Change-Id: I365402091e8e447b66bbd8c4319ab5a8b99ab05f
2017-11-10 22:55:52 +00:00
android-3.18 add CONFIG_SECCOMP_FILTER=y to android-base.cfg 2017-11-09 14:17:34 -08:00
android-4.4 add CONFIG_SECCOMP_FILTER=y to android-base.cfg 2017-11-09 14:17:34 -08:00
android-4.9 add CONFIG_SECCOMP_FILTER=y to android-base.cfg 2017-11-09 14:17:34 -08:00
OWNERS OWNERS: initial OWNERS file 2017-09-12 09:59:28 -07:00
README.md add recommended configs and README.md file 2017-09-13 16:51:44 -07:00

Android Kernel Config Fragments

The files in these directories are meant to be used as a base for an Android kernel config. All devices must have the options in android-base.cfg configured as specified. If an android-base-ARCH.cfg file exists for the architecture of your device, the options in that file must be configured as specified also.

While not mandatory, the options in android-recommended.cfg enable advanced Android features.

Assuming you already have a minimalist defconfig for your device, a possible way to enable these options would be to use the merge_config.sh script in the kernel tree. From the root of the kernel tree:

     ARCH=<arch> scripts/kconfig/merge_config.sh <...>/<device>_defconfig <...>/android-base.cfg <...>/android-base-<arch>.cfg <...>/android-recommended.cfg

This will generate a .config that can then be used to save a new defconfig or compile a new kernel with Android features enabled.

Because there is no tool to consistently generate these config fragments, lets keep them alphabetically sorted instead of random.