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[Xen-changelog] [xen-unstable] Fix some more text inconsistencies and pu

To: xen-changelog@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [Xen-changelog] [xen-unstable] Fix some more text inconsistencies and put devices in a more sensible order.
From: Xen patchbot-unstable <patchbot-unstable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Fri, 14 Jul 2006 17:40:53 +0000
Delivery-date: Fri, 14 Jul 2006 10:45:48 -0700
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# HG changeset patch
# User chris@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
# Node ID 4e2eb1947728ce75f63fcf17135705042b1dbf09
# Parent  34ba512b2d64cb8b7783e89f9351ccd3da702332
Fix some more text inconsistencies and put devices in a more sensible order.

Signed-off-by: Christian Limpach <Christian.Limpach@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
---
 linux-2.6-xen-sparse/drivers/xen/Kconfig |  116 +++++++++++++++----------------
 1 files changed, 58 insertions(+), 58 deletions(-)

diff -r 34ba512b2d64 -r 4e2eb1947728 linux-2.6-xen-sparse/drivers/xen/Kconfig
--- a/linux-2.6-xen-sparse/drivers/xen/Kconfig  Fri Jul 14 14:02:59 2006 +0100
+++ b/linux-2.6-xen-sparse/drivers/xen/Kconfig  Fri Jul 14 14:18:39 2006 +0100
@@ -29,6 +29,11 @@ config XEN_UNPRIVILEGED_GUEST
        default !XEN_PRIVILEGED_GUEST
 
 config XEN_PRIVCMD
+       bool
+       depends on PROC_FS
+       default y
+
+config XEN_XENBUS_DEV
        bool
        depends on PROC_FS
        default y
@@ -40,8 +45,59 @@ config XEN_BACKEND
           Support for backend device drivers that provide I/O services
           to other virtual machines.
 
+config XEN_BLKDEV_BACKEND
+       tristate "Block-device backend driver"
+        depends on XEN_BACKEND
+       default y
+       help
+         The block-device backend driver allows the kernel to export its
+         block devices to other guests via a high-performance shared-memory
+         interface.
+
+config XEN_BLKDEV_TAP
+       tristate "Block-device tap backend driver"
+       depends on XEN_BACKEND
+       default XEN_PRIVILEGED_GUEST
+       help
+         The block tap driver is an alternative to the block back driver 
+          and allows VM block requests to be redirected to userspace through
+          a device interface.  The tap allows user-space development of 
+          high-performance block backends, where disk images may be implemented
+          as files, in memory, or on other hosts across the network.  This 
+         driver can safely coexist with the existing blockback driver.
+
+config XEN_NETDEV_BACKEND
+       tristate "Network-device backend driver"
+        depends on XEN_BACKEND && NET
+       default y
+       help
+         The network-device backend driver allows the kernel to export its
+         network devices to other guests via a high-performance shared-memory
+         interface.
+
+config XEN_NETDEV_PIPELINED_TRANSMITTER
+       bool "Pipelined transmitter (DANGEROUS)"
+       depends on XEN_NETDEV_BACKEND
+       default n
+       help
+         If the net backend is a dumb domain, such as a transparent Ethernet
+         bridge with no local IP interface, it is safe to say Y here to get
+         slightly lower network overhead.
+         If the backend has a local IP interface; or may be doing smart things
+         like reassembling packets to perform firewall filtering; or if you
+         are unsure; or if you experience network hangs when this option is
+         enabled; then you must say N here.
+
+config XEN_NETDEV_LOOPBACK
+       tristate "Network-device loopback driver"
+       depends on XEN_NETDEV_BACKEND
+       default y
+       help
+         A two-interface loopback device to emulate a local netfront-netback
+         connection.
+
 config XEN_PCIDEV_BACKEND
-       tristate "PCI device backend driver"
+       tristate "PCI-device backend driver"
        depends on PCI && XEN_BACKEND
        default XEN_PRIVILEGED_GUEST
        help
@@ -80,62 +136,6 @@ config XEN_PCIDEV_BE_DEBUG
        depends on XEN_PCIDEV_BACKEND
        default n
 
-config XEN_BLKDEV_BACKEND
-       tristate "Block-device backend driver"
-        depends on XEN_BACKEND
-       default y
-       help
-         The block-device backend driver allows the kernel to export its
-         block devices to other guests via a high-performance shared-memory
-         interface.
-
-config XEN_XENBUS_DEV
-       bool
-       depends on PROC_FS
-       default y
-
-config XEN_BLKDEV_TAP
-       tristate "Block device tap backend"
-       depends on XEN_BACKEND
-       default XEN_PRIVILEGED_GUEST
-       help
-         The block tap driver is an alternative to the block back driver 
-          and allows VM block requests to be redirected to userspace through
-          a device interface.  The tap allows user-space development of 
-          high-performance block backends, where disk images may be implemented
-          as files, in memory, or on other hosts across the network.  This 
-         driver can safely coexist with the existing blockback driver.
-
-config XEN_NETDEV_BACKEND
-       tristate "Network-device backend driver"
-        depends on XEN_BACKEND && NET
-       default y
-       help
-         The network-device backend driver allows the kernel to export its
-         network devices to other guests via a high-performance shared-memory
-         interface.
-
-config XEN_NETDEV_PIPELINED_TRANSMITTER
-       bool "Pipelined transmitter (DANGEROUS)"
-       depends on XEN_NETDEV_BACKEND
-       default n
-       help
-         If the net backend is a dumb domain, such as a transparent Ethernet
-         bridge with no local IP interface, it is safe to say Y here to get
-         slightly lower network overhead.
-         If the backend has a local IP interface; or may be doing smart things
-         like reassembling packets to perform firewall filtering; or if you
-         are unsure; or if you experience network hangs when this option is
-         enabled; then you must say N here.
-
-config XEN_NETDEV_LOOPBACK
-       tristate "Network-device loopback driver"
-       depends on XEN_NETDEV_BACKEND
-       default y
-       help
-         A two-interface loopback device to emulate a local netfront-netback
-         connection.
-
 config XEN_TPMDEV_BACKEND
        tristate "TPM-device backend driver"
         depends on XEN_BACKEND
@@ -195,7 +195,7 @@ config XEN_SYSFS
        depends on SYSFS
        default y
        help
-               Xen hypervisor attributes will show up under /sys/hypervisor/.
+         Xen hypervisor attributes will show up under /sys/hypervisor/.
 
 choice
        prompt "Xen version compatibility"

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