xref: /linux/fs/reiserfs/Makefile (revision 60e13231561b3a4c5269bfa1ef6c0569ad6f28ec)
1#
2# Makefile for the linux reiser-filesystem routines.
3#
4
5obj-$(CONFIG_REISERFS_FS) += reiserfs.o
6
7reiserfs-objs := bitmap.o do_balan.o namei.o inode.o file.o dir.o fix_node.o \
8		 super.o prints.o objectid.o lbalance.o ibalance.o stree.o \
9		 hashes.o tail_conversion.o journal.o resize.o \
10		 item_ops.o ioctl.o xattr.o lock.o
11
12ifeq ($(CONFIG_REISERFS_PROC_INFO),y)
13reiserfs-objs += procfs.o
14endif
15
16ifeq ($(CONFIG_REISERFS_FS_XATTR),y)
17reiserfs-objs += xattr_user.o xattr_trusted.o
18endif
19
20ifeq ($(CONFIG_REISERFS_FS_SECURITY),y)
21reiserfs-objs += xattr_security.o
22endif
23
24ifeq ($(CONFIG_REISERFS_FS_POSIX_ACL),y)
25reiserfs-objs += xattr_acl.o
26endif
27
28# gcc -O2 (the kernel default)  is overaggressive on ppc32 when many inline
29# functions are used.  This causes the compiler to advance the stack
30# pointer out of the available stack space, corrupting kernel space,
31# and causing a panic. Since this behavior only affects ppc32, this ifeq
32# will work around it. If any other architecture displays this behavior,
33# add it here.
34ccflags-$(CONFIG_PPC32) := $(call cc-ifversion, -lt, 0400, -O1)
35
36TAGS:
37	etags *.c
38
39