From: Alexey Dobriyan Part of a 44-patch series to split fs/Kconfig into many fs//Kconfig files. Not realy suitable for applying to subsystem git trees (please). Signed-off-by: Alexey Dobriyan Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton --- fs/Kconfig | 23 +---------------------- fs/bfs/Kconfig | 19 +++++++++++++++++++ 2 files changed, 20 insertions(+), 22 deletions(-) diff -puN fs/Kconfig~fs-kconfig-split-bfs fs/Kconfig --- a/fs/Kconfig~fs-kconfig-split-bfs +++ a/fs/Kconfig @@ -191,28 +191,7 @@ source "fs/ecryptfs/Kconfig" source "fs/hfs/Kconfig" source "fs/hfsplus/Kconfig" source "fs/befs/Kconfig" - -config BFS_FS - tristate "BFS file system support (EXPERIMENTAL)" - depends on EXPERIMENTAL - help - Boot File System (BFS) is a file system used under SCO UnixWare to - allow the bootloader access to the kernel image and other important - files during the boot process. It is usually mounted under /stand - and corresponds to the slice marked as "STAND" in the UnixWare - partition. You should say Y if you want to read or write the files - on your /stand slice from within Linux. You then also need to say Y - to "UnixWare slices support", below. More information about the BFS - file system is contained in the file - . - - If you don't know what this is about, say N. - - To compile this as a module, choose M here: the module will be called - bfs. Note that the file system of your root partition (the one - containing the directory /) cannot be compiled as a module. - - +source "fs/bfs/Kconfig" config EFS_FS tristate "EFS file system support (read only) (EXPERIMENTAL)" diff -puN /dev/null fs/bfs/Kconfig --- /dev/null +++ a/fs/bfs/Kconfig @@ -0,0 +1,19 @@ +config BFS_FS + tristate "BFS file system support (EXPERIMENTAL)" + depends on EXPERIMENTAL + help + Boot File System (BFS) is a file system used under SCO UnixWare to + allow the bootloader access to the kernel image and other important + files during the boot process. It is usually mounted under /stand + and corresponds to the slice marked as "STAND" in the UnixWare + partition. You should say Y if you want to read or write the files + on your /stand slice from within Linux. You then also need to say Y + to "UnixWare slices support", below. More information about the BFS + file system is contained in the file + . + + If you don't know what this is about, say N. + + To compile this as a module, choose M here: the module will be called + bfs. Note that the file system of your root partition (the one + containing the directory /) cannot be compiled as a module. _