The Linux kernel is a many-tentacled beast. Many groups of people work on different pieces of it, and some parts of the code are a patchwork of ideas meeting different design goals. Overall, however, the kernel code is clean and uniform, and those interested in exploring its innards should have little trouble doing so. However, because of the great amount of development going on with the kernel, new releases are made very rapidly—sometimes daily! The chief reason for this is that nearly all device drivers are contained within the kernel code, and every time someone updates a driver, a new release is necessary. Even though almost all device drivers are loadable modules these days, they are still typically shipped together with the kernel as one big package.
Currently, Linus Torvalds maintains the “official” kernel release. Although the GPL allows anyone to modify and rerelease the kernel under the same copyright, Linus’s maintenance of an “official” kernel is a helpful convention that keeps version numbers uniform and allows everyone to be on equal footing when talking about kernel revisions. In order for a bug fix or new feature to be included in the kernel, all one must do is send it to Linus (or whoever is in charge for the kernel series in question — Linus himself always maintains the most current kernel), who will usually incorporate the change as long as it doesn’t break anything. Linus also makes use of so-called lieutenants, very experienced kernel developers, who take care of particular subsystems.
Kernel version numbers follow the convention
major
.minor
.patchlevel
major
is the major version number,
which rarely changes; minor
is the minor
version number, which indicates the current “strain” of the kernel
release; and patchlevel
is the number of
the patch to the current kernel version. Some examples of kernel
versions are 2.4.4 (patch level 4 of kernel Version 2.4), and 2.6.11.4
(subversion 4 of patch level 11 of kernel Version 2.6).
If you are interested in how the existing kernel versions have evolved, check out http://www.kernel.org.
On your system, the kernel sources most probably live in /usr/src/linux (unless you use the Debian distribution, where you can find the kernel sources in /usr/src/kernel-source-versionsnumber). If you are going to rebuild your kernel only from the current sources, you don’t need to obtain any files or apply any patches (assuming you installed the kernel sources when you installed your system). If you wish to upgrade your kernel to a new version, you need to follow the instructions in the following section.
The official kernel is released as a gzipped tar file, containing the sources along with a series of patch files—one per patch level. The tar file contains the source for the unpatched revision; for example, there is a tar file containing the sources for kernel Version 2.6.0 with no patches applied. Each subsequent patch level is released as a patch file (produced using diff), which can be applied using the patch program. In “Patching Files” in Chapter 21, we describe the use of patch in detail.
Let’s say you’re upgrading to kernel Version 2.6, patch level 4. You’ll need the sources for 2.6 (the file might be named v2.6.0.tar.gz) and the patches for patch levels 1 through 4. These files would be named patch1, patch2, and so forth. (You need all the patch files up to the version to which you’re upgrading. Usually, these patch files are rather small, and are gzipped on the archive sites.) All these files can be found in the kernel directory of the Linux FTP archive sites; for example, on ftp://ftp.kernel.org, the directory containing the 2.6 sources and patches is /pub/linux/kernel/v2.6. You will find the kernel sources here as tar archives, compressed with both gzip and bzip2.
If you are already at some patch level of the kernel (such as 2.6 patch level 2) and want to upgrade to a newer patch level, you can simply apply the patches from the version you have up to the version to which you’d like to upgrade. If you’re upgrading from, say, 2.6 patch level 2 to 2.6 patch level 4, you need the patch files for 2.6.3 and 2.6.4.
First, unpack the source tar file from /usr/src using commands such as:
rutabaga#cd /usr/src
rutabaga#mv linux linux.old
rutabaga#tar xzf v2.6.0.tar.gz
This saves your old kernel source tree as /usr/src/linux.old and creates /usr/src/linux containing the new sources. Note that the tar file containing the sources includes the linux subdirectory.
You should keep your current kernel sources in the directory /usr/src/linux because there are two symbolic links--/usr/include/linux and /usr/include/asm--that point into the current kernel source tree to provide certain header files when compiling programs. (If you are planning on doing any software development, you should always have your kernel sources available so that programs using these include files can be compiled.) If you want to keep several kernel source trees around, be sure that /usr/src/linux points to the most recent one.
If you are applying any patch files, use the patch program. Let’s say that you have the files patch1.gz through patch4.gz, which are gzipped. These patches should be applied from the kernel sources main directory. That doesn’t mean the patch files themselves should be located there, but rather that patch should be executed from, for example, /usr/src/linux. For each patch file, use the command:
gunzip -c patchfile
| patch -p1
from /usr/src. The -p1 option tells patch it shouldn’t strip any part of the filenames contained within the patch file except for the first one.
You must apply each patch in numerical order by patch level.
This is very important. Note that using a wildcard such as
patch*
will not work because the *
wildcard uses ASCII order, not numeric order. (Otherwise, if you
are applying a larger number of patches, patch1 might be followed by patch10 and patch11, as opposed to patch2 and patch3.) It is best to run the previous
command for each patch file in succession, by hand. This way you
can ensure you’re doing things in the right order.
You shouldn’t encounter problems when patching your source tree in this way unless you try to apply patches out of order or apply a patch more than once. Check the patch manual page if you do encounter trouble. If all else fails, remove the new kernel source tree and start over from the original tar file.
To double-check that the patches were applied successfully, use the commands:
find /usr/src/linux -follow -name "*.rej" -print find /usr/src/linux -follow -name "*#" -print
This lists any files that are “rejected” portions of the patch process. If any such files exist, they contain sections of the patch file that could not be applied for some reason. Look into these, and if there’s any doubt, start over from scratch. You cannot expect your kernel to compile or work correctly unless the patch process completes successfully and without rejections.
A handy script for patching the kernel is available and can be found in scripts/patch-kernel. But as always, you should know what you are doing before using automated tools — even more so when it comes to the very core of the operating system, the kernel.
There are six steps to building the kernel, and they should be quite painless. All these steps are described in more detail in the following pages.
Make sure that all the required tools and utilities are installed and at the appropriate versions. See the file Documentation/Changes in the kernel source for the list of requirements.
Run make config, which asks you various questions about which drivers you wish to include. You could also use the more comfortable variants make menuconfig, or make xconfig (when you are running KDE), or make gconfig (when you are running GNOME).
If you have previously built a kernel and then applied patches to a new version, you can run make oldconfig to use your old configuration but be prompted for any new options that may not have been in the old kernel.
Some older kernels require you at this point to run make dep to gather dependencies for each source file and include them in the various makefiles. This step is not necessary for current kernels (such as the 2.6 series).
If you have built a kernel from this source tree before, run make clean to clear out old object files and force a complete rebuild.
Run make bzImage to build the kernel itself.
Go have a coffee (or two, depending on the speed of your machine and amount of available memory).
Install the new kernel image, either on a boot floppy or via GRUB. You can use make bzDisk to put the kernel on a boot floppy.
All these commands are executed from /usr/src/linux, except for step 5, which you can do anywhere.
A README file is included in the kernel sources, which should be located at /usr/src/linux/README on your system. Read it. It contains up-to-date notes on kernel compilation, which may be more current than the information presented here. Be sure to follow the steps described there, using the descriptions given later in this section as a guide. If you have installed the kernel sources from a package included with your distribution, there may also be a file with distribution-specific notes that tells you how your distribution’s packagers have configured the kernel, and whether (and how) the kernel changes have been changed from the pristine sources that you can download from the net.
The first step is to run make config.
This executes a script that asks you a set of yes/no questions
about which drivers to include in the kernel. There are defaults
for each question, but be careful: the defaults probably don’t
correspond to what you want. (When several options are available,
the default will be shown as a capital letter, as in [Y/n]
.) Your answers to each question
will become the default the next time you build the kernel from
this source tree.
Simply answer each question, either by pressing Enter for
the default, or pressing y
or
n
(followed by Enter). Some
questions don’t have a yes/no answer; you may be asked to enter a
number or some other value. A number of the configuration
questions allow an answer of m
in addition to y
or n
. This option allows the corresponding
kernel feature to be compiled as a loadable kernel module, as
opposed to building it into the kernel image itself. Loadable
modules, covered in the following section, “Loadable Device
Drivers,” allow portions of the kernel (such as device drivers) to
be loaded and unloaded as needed on a running system. If you are
unsure about an option, type ?
at the prompt; for most options, a message will be shown that
tells you more about the option.
The system remembers your configuration options each time you run make config, so if you’re adding or removing only a few features from your kernel, you need not re-enter all the options.
Some people say that make config has so many options now that it is hardly feasible to run it by hand any longer, as you have to concentrate for a long time to press the right keys in response to the right questions. Therefore, people are moving to the alternatives described next.
An alternative to running make config is make xconfig, which compiles and runs an X-Window-based kernel configuration program. In order for this to work, you must have the X Window System running, have the appropriate X11 and Qt libraries installed, and so forth. Instead of asking a series of questions, the X-based configuration utility allows you to use checkboxes to select which kernel options you want to enable.
Also available is make
menuconfig
, which uses the text-based
curses library, providing a similar
menu-based kernel configuration if you don’t have X installed.
make menuconfig and make
xconfig are much more comfortable than make
config, especially because you can go back to an option
and change your mind up to the point where you save your
configuration. However, we’ll describe the process here in a
linear fashion, as make config does
it.
The following is part of a session with make config. When using make menuconfig or make xconfig, you will encounter the same options, only presented in a more user-friendly fashion (we actually recommend the use of these tools if at all possible, because it is very easy to get confused by the myriad of configuration options):
pooh:/usr/src/linux #make config
scripts/kconfig/conf arch/i386/Kconfig # # using defaults found in .config # * * Linux Kernel Configuration * * * Code maturity level options * Prompt for development and/or incomplete code/drivers (EXPERIMENTAL) [Y/n/?] Select only drivers expected to compile cleanly (CLEAN_COMPILE) [Y/n/?] * * General setup * Local version - append to kernel release (LOCALVERSION) [-default] Support for paging of anonymous memory (swap) (SWAP) [Y/n/?] System V IPC (SYSVIPC) [Y/n/?] POSIX Message Queues (POSIX_MQUEUE) [Y/n/?] BSD Process Accounting (BSD_PROCESS_ACCT) [Y/n/?] BSD Process Accounting version 3 file format (BSD_PROCESS_ACCT_V3) [Y/n/?] Sysctl support (SYSCTL) [Y/n/?] Auditing support (AUDIT) [Y/n/?] Enable system-call auditing support (AUDITSYSCALL) [Y/n/?] Kernel log buffer size (16 => 64KB, 17 => 128KB) (LOG_BUF_SHIFT) [17] Support for hot-pluggable devices (HOTPLUG) [Y/?] y Kernel Userspace Events (KOBJECT_UEVENT) [Y/n/?] Kernel .config support (IKCONFIG) [Y/n/?] Enable access to .config through /proc/config.gz (IKCONFIG_PROC) [Y/n/?] * * Configure standard kernel features (for small systems) * Configure standard kernel features (for small systems) (EMBEDDED) [N/y/?] Load all symbols for debugging/kksymoops (KALLSYMS) [Y/?] (NEW) y Include all symbols in kallsyms (KALLSYMS_ALL) [N/y/?] Do an extra kallsyms pass (KALLSYMS_EXTRA_PASS) [N/y/?] * * Loadable module support * Enable loadable module support (MODULES) [Y/n/?] Module unloading (MODULE_UNLOAD) [Y/n/?] Forced module unloading (MODULE_FORCE_UNLOAD) [Y/n/?] Module versioning support (EXPERIMENTAL) (MODVERSIONS) [Y/n/?] Source checksum for all modules (MODULE_SRCVERSION_ALL) [Y/n/?] Automatic kernel module loading (KMOD) [Y/n/?] * * Processor type and features * Subarchitecture Type > 1. PC-compatible (X86_PC) 2. AMD Elan (X86_ELAN) 3. Voyager (NCR) (X86_VOYAGER) 4. NUMAQ (IBM/Sequent) (X86_NUMAQ) 5. SGI 320/540 (Visual Workstation) (X86_VISWS) choice[1-5]: Processor family 1. 386 (M386) 2. 486 (M486) > 3. 586/K5/5x86/6x86/6x86MX (M586) 4. Pentium-Classic (M586TSC) 5. Pentium-MMX (M586MMX) 6. Pentium-Pro (M686) 7. Pentium-II/Celeron(pre-Coppermine) (MPENTIUMII) 8. Pentium-III/Celeron(Coppermine)/Pentium-III Xeon (MPENTIUMIII) 9. Pentium M (MPENTIUMM) 10. Pentium-4/Celeron(P4-based)/Pentium-4 M/Xeon (MPENTIUM4) 11. K6/K6-II/K6-III (MK6) 12. Athlon/Duron/K7 (MK7) 13. Opteron/Athlon64/Hammer/K8 (MK8) 14. Crusoe (MCRUSOE) 15. Efficeon (MEFFICEON) 16. Winchip-C6 (MWINCHIPC6) 17. Winchip-2 (MWINCHIP2) 18. Winchip-2A/Winchip-3 (MWINCHIP3D) 19. CyrixIII/VIA-C3 (MCYRIXIII) 20. VIA C3-2 (Nehemiah) (MVIAC3_2) choice[1-20]: Generic x86 support (X86_GENERIC) [Y/n/?] HPET Timer Support (HPET_TIMER) [N/y/?] Symmetric multi-processing support (SMP) [N/y/?] Preemptible Kernel (PREEMPT) [N/y/?] Local APIC support on uniprocessors (X86_UP_APIC) [Y/n/?] IO-APIC support on uniprocessors (X86_UP_IOAPIC) [Y/n/?] Disable local/IO APIC by default (X86_APIC_OFF) [Y/n/?] Machine Check Exception (X86_MCE) [Y/n/?] Check for non-fatal errors on AMD Athlon/Duron / Intel Pentium 4 (X86_MCE_NONFATAL) [N/m/y/?] check for P4 thermal throttling interrupt. (X86_MCE_P4THERMAL) [Y/n/?] Toshiba Laptop support (TOSHIBA) [M/n/y/?]...and so on.
.. *** End of Linux kernel configuration. *** Check the top-level Makefile for additional configuration. *** Next, you may run 'make bzImage', 'make bzdisk', or 'make install'.
If you have gathered the information about your hardware when installing Linux, that information is probably sufficient to answer the configuration questions, most of which should be straightforward. If you don’t recognize some feature, it’s a specialized feature that you don’t need.
It should be noted here that not all Linux device drivers are actually built into the kernel. Instead, some drivers are available only as loadable modules, distributed separately from the kernel sources. (As mentioned earlier, some drivers can be either built into the kernel or compiled as modules. In other cases, you have only one choice or the other.)
If you can’t find support for your favorite hardware device in the list presented by make config, it’s quite possible that the driver is available as a module or a separate kernel patch. Scour the FTP sites and archive CD-ROMs if you can’t find what you’re looking for. In the next section, “Loadable Device Drivers,” kernel modules are covered in detail.
The following questions are found in the kernel
configuration for Version 2.6.11.4. If you have applied other
patches, additional questions might appear. The same is true for
later versions of the kernel. Note that in the following list we
don’t show all the kernel configuration options; there are simply
too many of them, and most are self-explanatory. We have
highlighted only those that may require further explanation.
Remember that if you’re not sure how to answer a particular
question, the default answer is often the best choice. When in
doubt, it is also a good idea to type ?
and check the help message.
Following are the high-level choices and the ramifications of choosing each one.
Answer yes for this item if you want to try new features that aren’t considered stable enough by the developers. You do not want this option unless you want to help test new features.
Answering yes to this option includes kernel support for System V interprocess communication (IPC) functions, such as msgrcv and msgsnd. Some programs ported from System V require this; you should answer yes unless you have a strong aversion to these features.
This option instructs the kernel to provide a way to change kernel parameters on the fly, without rebooting. It is a good idea to enable this unless you have very limited memory and cannot tolerate the extra 8 KB that this option adds to the kernel.
This enables the support for dynamically loading additional modules. You definitely want to enable this.
This is a special option that makes it possible to use a module compiled for one kernel version with another kernel version. A number of problems are attached to this; say no here unless you know exactly what you are doing.
If you enable this option, the kernel can automatically load and unload dynamically loadable modules as needed.
Here, you have to specify the CPU type that you have. The kernel will then be compiled with optimizations especially geared toward your machine. Note that if you specify a higher processor here than you actually have, the kernel might not work. Choosing an earlier CPU type (such as a Pentium when what you actually have is a Pentium IV) should work just fine, but your kernel may not run as fast as it could when using more advanced machine-specific features available in newer CPUs.
This enables kernel support for more than one CPU. If your machine has more than one CPU, say yes here; if not, say no.
This is an entire subsection for power management,
mostly for laptops, but things like suspend-to-disk
(“hibernation”) could be useful for workstations too.
However, power management often leads to problems, including
a complete failure to boot. If you experience any problems,
try recompiling your kernel without power management, or
pass the kernel command-line options noapm
and noacpi
at boot time to turn off
power management.
Enable this option if your motherboard includes the PCI bus and you have PCI-bus devices installed in your system. The PCI BIOS is used to detect and enable PCI devices; kernel support for it is necessary for use of any PCI devices in your system.
Enable this option if you have a parallel port in your
system and want to access it from Linux. Linux can use the
parallel port not only for printers, but also for
PLIP (a networking protocol for parallel
lines), Zip drives, scanners, and other
things. In most cases, you will need an additional driver to
attach a device to the parallel port. If you have a modern
printer that reports status back to the computer, you also
want to enable the IEEE 1284
transfer modes
option.
Answer yes to this option unless you don’t want
support for floppy drives (this can save some memory on
systems where floppy support isn’t required). If you are
using one of those attachable floppy drives on IBM Thinkpad
laptops, you also need to pass floppy=thinkpad
to the kernel at
boot time.
This option enables support for IDE devices that are attached to the parallel port, such as portable CD-ROM drives.
If you have a modern CD or DVD burner, you can enable packet writing (as opposed to track writing) here by selecting this option.
Answer yes to this option unless you don’t need IDE/MFM/RLL drive support. After answering yes, you will be prompted for types of devices (hard disks, CD-ROM drives, tape drives, and floppy drives) you want to access over the IDE driver. If you have no IDE hardware (only SCSI), it may be safe to disable this option.
If you have a SCSI controller of any kind, answer yes to this option. You will be asked a series of questions about the specific SCSI devices on your system; be sure you know what type of hardware you have installed. All these questions deal with specific SCSI controller chips and boards; if you aren’t sure what sort of SCSI controller you have, check the hardware documentation or consult the Linux HOWTO documents.
You will also be asked if you want support for SCSI disks, tapes, CD-ROMs, and other devices; be sure to enable the options appropriate for your hardware.
If you don’t have any SCSI hardware, you should answer no to this option; it greatly reduces the size of your kernel.
This is a series of questions dealing with the specific CD-ROM drivers supported by the kernel, such as the Sony CDU31A/33A, Mitsumi, or Sound Blaster Pro CD-ROM. If you have a SCSI or IDECD-ROM controller (and have selected support for it earlier), you need not enable any of these options. Some CD-ROM drives have their own interface boards, and these options enable drivers for them.
Answer yes to this option if you want any sort of networking support in your kernel (including TCP/IP, SLIP, PPP, NFS, and so on).
If you selected networking support, you will be asked
a series of questions about which networking options you
want enabled in your kernel. Unless you have special
networking needs (in which case you’ll know how to answer
the questions appropriately), selecting the defaults for
these questions should suffice. A number of the questions
are esoteric in nature (such as PF_KEY sockets
), and you should
select the defaults for these in almost all cases.
This is a series of questions about the specific networking controllers Linux supports. If you plan to use an Ethernet card (or some other networking controller), be sure to enable the options for your hardware. As with SCSI devices, you should consult your hardware documentation or the Linux HOWTO documents (such as the Ethernet HOWTO) to determine which driver is appropriate for your network controller.
This option enables basic support for networking over public radio frequencies. If you have the equipment to use the feature, enable this option and read the AX25 and the HAM HOWTO.
If you have ISDN hardware in your system, enable this
option and select the ISDN hardware driver suitable for your
hardware. You will most probably also want to select
Support synchronous PPP
(see "PPP over
ISDN" in Chapter
13). Linux is currently switching from the old
so-called ISDN4Linux support to support of the CAPI 2.0 standard. Both
should work with most ISDN hardware, but CAPI 2.0 support is
going to be used exclusively in the future.
Linux supports some interface cards that let you use a normal telephone set with VoIP (voice-over-IP) Internet telephony . As the documentation says, this has nothing to do with modems, so you have to enable this only if you have such an interface card.
Linux supports a number of special “character” devices, such as serial and parallel port controllers, tape drives, and mice with their own proprietary interfaces (not mice that connect to the serial and USB ports, such as the Microsoft serial mouse) or most newer mice.
This section lets you pick between two different sound systems, the newer ALSA (Advanced Linux Sound Architecture) and the older OSS (Open Sound System). If it supports your sound hardware, go for ALSA.
Enable this to get support for many
USB devices. In particular, if you want
to use the popular memory sticks, you need to select
USB Mass Storage Support
as well. This option also applies to digital cameras that
are connected to your computer via the
USB port.
This is a series of questions for each filesystem type supported by the kernel. As discussed in the section “Managing Filesystems” in Chapter 10, a number of filesystem types are supported by the system, and you can pick and choose which to include in the kernel. Nearly all systems should include support for the Second Extended and /proc filesystems. You should include support for the MS-DOS filesystem if you want to access your MS-DOS files directly from Linux, and the ISO 9660 filesystem to access files on a CD-ROM (most of which are encoded in this way).
This section contains options that are useful only if you plan on hacking the Linux kernel yourself. If you do not want to do this, answer no.
If you wish to force a complete recompilation of the kernel, you should issue make clean at this point. This removes from this source tree all object files produced from a previous build. If you have never built the kernel from this tree, you’re probably safe skipping this step (although it can’t hurt to perform it). If you are tweaking minor parts of the kernel, you might want to avoid this step so that only those files that have changed will be recompiled. At any rate, running make clean simply ensures the entire kernel will be recompiled “from scratch,” and if you’re in any doubt, use this command to be on the safe side.
Now you’re ready to compile the kernel. This is done with the command make bzImage. It is best to build your kernel on a lightly loaded system, with most of your memory free for the compilation. If other users are accessing the system, or if you’re trying to run any large applications yourself (such as the X Window System, or another compilation), the build may slow to a crawl. The key here is memory. If a system is low on memory and starts swapping, it will be slow no matter how fast the processor is.
The kernel compilation can take anywhere from a few minutes to many hours, depending on your hardware. There is a great deal of code—well over 80 MB—in the entire kernel, so this should come as no surprise. Slower systems with 16 MB (or less) of RAM can expect to take several hours for a complete rebuild; faster machines with more memory can complete it in less than half an hour. Your mileage will most assuredly vary.
If any errors or warnings occur while compiling , you cannot expect the resulting kernel to work correctly; in most cases, the build will halt if an error occurs. Such errors can be the result of incorrectly applying patches, problems with the make config step, or actual bugs in the code. In the “stock” kernels , this latter case is rare, but is more common if you’re working with development code or new drivers under testing. If you have any doubt, remove the kernel source tree altogether and start over.
When the compilation is complete, you will be left with the file bzImage in the directory /usr/src/linux/arch/i386/boot. (Of course, if you’re attempting to build Linux on a platform other than the Intel x86, the kernel image will be found in the corresponding subdirectory under arch.) The kernel is so named because it is the executable image of the kernel, and it has been internally compressed using the bzip2 algorithm. When the kernel boots, it uncompresses itself into memory: don’t attempt to use bzip2 or bunzip2 on bzImage yourself! The kernel requires much less disk space when compressed in this way, allowing kernel images to fit on a floppy. Earlier kernels supported both the gzip and the bzip2 compression algorithms, the former resulting in a file called zImage. Because bzImage gives better compression results, however, gzip should not be used, as the resulting kernels are usually too big to be installed these days.
If you pick too much kernel functionality, you can get a
kernel too big
error at the end of the kernel compilation. This
happens rarely because you need only a very limited amount of
hardware support for one machine, but it can happen. In this case,
there is one way out: compile some kernel functionality as modules
(see "Loadable Device
Drivers“).
You should now run rdev on the new kernel image to verify that the root filesystem device, console SVGA mode, and other parameters have been set correctly. This is described in “Using a Boot Floppy” in Chapter 17.
With your new kernel in hand, you’re ready to configure it for booting. This involves either placing the kernel image on a boot floppy, or configuring GRUB to boot the kernel from the hard drive. These topics are discussed in “Booting the System” in Chapter 17. To use the new kernel, configure it for booting in one of these ways, and reboot the system.
You should always keep a known good kernel available for booting. Either keep a previous backup kernel selectable from GRUB or test new kernels using a floppy first. This will save you if you make a mistake such as omitting a crucial driver in your new kernel, making your system not bootable.