Arnd Bergmann wrote:
To solve this, you can to change include/linux/Kbuild to list
synclink.h as unifdef-y instead of header-y, and put the parts
that you don't want to be in user space inside of #ifdef __KERNEL__.
Alternatively, you can put these kernel-internal definitions into
a private header file in drivers/char that does not get installed
in the first place. That would be particularly useful if you can
also move other parts of linux/synclink.h into the private header,
when they are not part of the external ABI.
Understood. That is the last piece to the puzzle.
I think the first approach would be better as
synclink.h is all interface definitions. The kernel
specific parts are in the individual synclink drivers
(such as register definitions, etc). The only exception
to this is now the ioctl32 structures and I would hate
to break out a whole new header just for that.
Thanks again for your targeted and informative help.
(Thanks to Andrew for your patience in dealing
with a patch that never should have been submitted.)
--
Paul
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