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Date:      Tue, 21 Oct 2008 15:22:28 -0400
From:      Robert Fitzpatrick <lists@webtent.net>
To:        John Baldwin <jhb@freebsd.org>
Cc:        Jeremy Chadwick <koitsu@freebsd.org>, FreeBSD <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: page fault while in kernel mode
Message-ID:  <1224616948.8122.79.camel@columbus.webtent.org>
In-Reply-To: <200810211509.53454.jhb@freebsd.org>
References:  <1224445801.6926.0.camel@laptop.webtent.org> <1224614122.8122.62.camel@columbus.webtent.org> <20081021184711.GA37448@icarus.home.lan> <200810211509.53454.jhb@freebsd.org>

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On Tue, 2008-10-21 at 15:09 -0400, John Baldwin wrote:
> Alternatively, you could just remove the 'device adv' line from your
> kernel 
> config rather than adding lots of 'nodevice' lines at the bottom.  You
> can 
> usually do 'man 4 <driver name>' to see what devices it supports.  In
> this 
> case, adv(4) supports mostly ancient Advansys SCSI host adapters.
> The 
> manpage has a full list of the various model numbers, etc.

Yes, that is what I thought. Right now, I am just commenting them out,
now I know what people mean when they say they are running a
trimmed/clean kernel.

I did see one potential issue...

# USB support
device          uhci            # UHCI PCI->USB interface
device          ohci            # OHCI PCI->USB interface
device          ehci            # EHCI PCI->USB interface (USB 2.0)
device          usb             # USB Bus (required)

I see all of these with nodevice lines in the PAE file. Although I have
USB ports, I don't use them, but I was concerned by the 'required' on
the last one, is it OK to remove? Also, would I then need to disable USB
in the BIOS to avoid errors?

-- 
Robert




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