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= Building a custom kernel
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'''
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[IMPORTANT]
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======
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This page was automatically converted from https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Building_a_custom_kernel
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It is probably
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* Badly formatted
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* Missing graphics and tables that do not convert well from mediawiki
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* Out-of-date
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* In need of other love
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Pull requests accepted at https://pagure.io/fedora-docs/quick-docs
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Once you've fixed this page, remove this notice, and update
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`_topic_map.yml`.
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Once the document is live, go to the original wiki page and replace its text
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with the following macro:
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....
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{{#fedoradocs: https://docs.fedoraproject.org/whatever-the-of-this-new-page}}
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....
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======
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'''
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This document provides instructions for advanced users who want to
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rebuild the kernel from some source. Note, however, that when building
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or running any such kernel, one should NOT expect support from the
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Fedora kernel team; you're pretty much on your own here if something
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doesn't work as you'd hoped or expected. But hey, you're an advanced
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user, so you can handle it, right? Anyway, advanced users build custom
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kernels for a variety of reasons:
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* To apply patches for testing that they either generated or obtained
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from another source
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* To reconfigure the existing kernel
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* To learn more about the kernel and kernel development
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[[dependencies-for-building-kernels]]
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Dependencies for building kernels
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Not all of these will apply to all methods but this provides a good
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dependency list of items to install
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`# sudo dnf install fedpkg fedora-packager rpmdevtools ncurses-devel pesign`
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Give the following command from the top directory of the kernel source
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tree once you have checked it out
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`# sudo dnf builddep kernel.spec`
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if you plan to run 'make xconfig'
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`# sudo dnf install qt3-devel libXi-devel gcc-c++`
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Also make sure you add the user doing the build to /etc/pesign/users and
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run the authorize user script:
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`# sudo /usr/libexec/pesign/pesign-authorize-users`
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It should be noted that pesign pesign-rh-test-certs gets pulled in
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automatically for some, but not for everyone, it depends on how you
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installed pesign. It is best to make sure that you have it installed.
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[[building-a-kernel-from-the-fedora-source-tree]]
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Building a Kernel from the Fedora source tree
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Make sure you have installed all dependencies
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`$ fedpkg clone kernel`
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you will likely need to checkout the source anonymously unless you have
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an Fedora developer account
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`$ fedpkg clone -a kernel`
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As of the time of this wiki writing, the kernel is managed using git.
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Each fedora release is a separate branch. rawhide tracks master. To get
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the tree for a particular release, you can use git checkout from the top
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of your newly created source tree.
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e.g. for fedora 23,
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`$ git checkout origin/f23`
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You can now make whatever changes / customizations you need before
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generating the rpms and installing them. You may want to consider
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uncommenting
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`# define buildid .local`
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to avoid conflicts, e.g.
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`%define buildid .local`
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When finished, generate the appropriate rpms with
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`$ fedpkg local`
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The rpms will be generated in a subdirectory $ARCH which can then be
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installed:
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`$ dnf install --nogpgcheck ./x86_64/kernel-$version.rpm`
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[[building-a-non-debugging-kernel]]
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Building a non-debugging kernel
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Branched kernels are built with debugging enabled by default in the
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early stages of the release to assist developers. To make a kernel with
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debugging information disabled, you can follow the above instructions to
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check out and do:
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`$ make release`
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`$ fedpkg local`
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[[enabling-config-options]]
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Enabling config options
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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If there are configuration options that need to be adjusted for your
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build, you can add changes in the kernel-local file. These changes will
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get picked up when you build.
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[[updating]]
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Updating
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^^^^^^^^
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* `$ cd kernel`
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* `kernel $ git status`
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** your tree will be dirty in the configs and kernel.spec
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* `kernel $ git stash`
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** puts aside your changes so your tree will be clean
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* `kernel $ git pull origin`
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** update to the latest tree from fedpkg git
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Now you can run whatever other commands you want (e.g. make release)
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[[building-a-kernel-from-the-exploded-git-trees]]
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Building a kernel from the exploded git trees
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Fedora keeps a git tree containing Fedora patches applied on top of the
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vanilla sources.
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`$ git clone `git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/jwboyer/fedora.git[`git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/jwboyer/fedora.git`]
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`$ git checkout -b my_branch kernel-4.7.4-200.fc24`
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You can now build the kernel following regular kernel instructions. This
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tree is useful for generating patches that can be applied to the
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kernel.spec.
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[[building-a-kernel-from-the-source-rpm]]
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Building a Kernel from the source RPM
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Instructions for this are on a link:Building_a_custom_kernel/Source_RPM[
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separate page]. In general, you should use one of the other methods for
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building the kernel which are much easier.
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[[building-only-kernel-modules-out-of-tree-modules]]
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Building Only Kernel Modules (Out Of Tree Modules)
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This section is for users who are only interested in working on a kernel
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module, and who do not wish to build an entire custom kernel. It is not
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necessary to download and rebuild the entire kernel in order to build a
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module. To build a module for the currently running kernel, only the
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matching `kernel-devel` package is required. Run the following command
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to install the `kernel-devel` package using `dnf`.
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....
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su -c 'dnf install kernel-devel'
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....
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You can build against any kernel version, as long as you have `kernel`
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and `kernel-devel` packages installed for that version. The rest of this
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section assumes we're building for the running kernel; if not, replace
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`\`uname -r\`` with the desired version number.
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As a simple example, to build the `foo.ko` module from `foo.c`, create
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the following `Makefile` in the directory containing the `foo.c` file:
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....
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obj-m := foo.o
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KDIR := /lib/modules/$(shell uname -r)/build
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PWD := $(shell pwd)
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default:
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[TAB]$(MAKE) -C $(KDIR) M=$(PWD) modules
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....
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[TAB] Denotes a tab character which must come first for makefile lines
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containing commands.
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Then, issue the `make` command to build the `foo.ko` module.
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The above is a helpful local Makefile wrapper invoking kbuild; in
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general you can simply do things like
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....
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# make -C /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build M=`pwd` modules
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# make -C /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build M=`pwd` clean
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# make -C /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build M=`pwd` modules_install
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....
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etc to build those targets.
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[[building-vanilla-upstream-kernel]]
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Building Vanilla upstream kernel
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Sometimes a Fedora developer may ask you to try building and installing
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an upstream kernel (possibly with a patch added) for testing. If there
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are multiple iterations, it may be quicker for you to do this than for
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the developer to turn around several RPMs.
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[[existing-fedora-vanilla-packages]]
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Existing Fedora Vanilla packages
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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There is an effort underway for packaging vanilla kernels.
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link:Kernel_Vanilla_Repositories[ See if this meets your needs first]
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[[getting-the-sources]]
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Getting the sources
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Clone a kernel tree from kernel.org
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`$ git clone `git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git[`git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git`]
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This will clone the entire upstream tree. This may take a while
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depending on your connection speed. (While the tree is syncing, why not
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take the time to update some steps on this wiki that are inevitably out
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of date?)
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`$ cd linux`
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Double check what baseline is being used and check out a new one if
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necessary:
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`$ git checkout v4.5.2`
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[[applying-patches]]
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Applying patches
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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[[the-patch-method]]
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The patch method
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++++++++++++++++
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If you were asked to apply any patches by the developer, this is the
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stage at which we would do so. These would typically be applied using a
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command something like..
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`$ cat ~/testpatch.diff | patch -p1`
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If you have to try multiple different patches individually, you can
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unapply the previous one after testing by adding -R on the end of the
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above command.
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[[the-git-method]]
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The git method
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++++++++++++++
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Most developers these days generate patches using git and you can use
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git to help apply patches. You can do:
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`$ git am -3 `
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This will create a git commit of a single patch in your tree.
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[[configuring-the-kernel]]
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Configuring the kernel
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Chances are that the kernel you are running is older than the one you
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are about to configure. This means there will be new options. There are
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several possibilities here.
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* If the developer has pointed you at a specific config file to use,
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save it in the linux directory with the filename .config
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* You can take your existing .config file by using the command
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`cp /boot/config-\`uname -r\`* .config`
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When you run the next step, you'll be asked (potentially lots of)
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questions about all the new options. Just hitting return 'should' always
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pick the safe decision for each option. However, it's worth taking care
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and reading each option, as this isn't always the case, and they may
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introduce new features your distro isn't capable of running, which may
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result in a non-booting system.
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* FIXME how to grab a rawhide config
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With the config in place, you are now ready to move on to the next step.
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[[building-the-kernel]]
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Building the kernel
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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`$EDITOR Makefile` Change the EXTRAVERSION line to add something on the
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end. For example, if it reads "EXTRAVERSION = -rc5" change it to
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"EXTRAVERSION = -rc5-dave" (what you choose is only relevant for the
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final part of this procedure)
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`$ make oldconfig`
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`$ make bzImage`
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`$ make modules`
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(become root)
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`# make modules_install`
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`# make install`
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You have now built and installed a kernel. It will show up in the grub
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menu next time you reboot.
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[[rebuilding]]
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Rebuilding
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^^^^^^^^^^
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If you have been asked to try several different things, the procedure
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once you have already built the tree once is mostly the same. A
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`make clean` is recommended between builds. This will leave the .config
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in place, so you can skip that step above and proceed straight to the
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`make bzImage` part of the steps above. Because we installed ccache in
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the first step, subsequent builds may go a lot faster as the compiler
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hits files that haven't changed since the last time it built them.
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[[cleaning-up]]
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Cleaning up
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^^^^^^^^^^^
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Once you have tested the kernel, and you've booted back to one of your
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kernels installed from an RPM, you can clean up the files that the above
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procedure installed by becoming root, and calling these commands. (Be
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sure to get the kernel version correct!) Remember above, we changed
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EXTRAVERSION to add a 'tag' to the kernel ? All the files it installed
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will have this as part of the filename. So you should be able to use
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wildcards to delete them safely using commands similar to those below.
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(Just replace 'dave' with whatever tag you chose)
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....
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rm -f /boot/config-2.6.*dave* /boot/initrd-2.6.*dave* /boot/vmlinuz-*dave* /boot/System.map-*dave*
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rm -rf /lib/modules/2.6*dave*
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....
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Finally, you will need to remove the kernel as an option to your
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bootloader. This will change from architecture to architecture. For x86,
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(as root), edit /boot/grub2/grub.cfg or /boot/efi/EFI/fedora/grub.cfg if
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you have EFI enabled and delete the four lines relating to your kernel
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(They should be easy to spot, they'll be the ones with your tag).
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They'll look something like this..
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....
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title Fedora Core (2.6.22-rc3-dave)
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root (hd0,0)
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kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.22-rc3-dave ro root=/dev/md0
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initrd /initrd-2.6.22-rc3-dave.img
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....
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Category:Documentation Category:Tutorials
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'''
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See a typo, something missing or out of date, or anything else which can be
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improved? Edit this document at https://pagure.io/fedora-docs/quick-docs.
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