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KernelNewbies:
  • KernelHackingTools

When dealing with a source base as large as the kernel, it certainly helps to have software tools to help understand how the pieces fit together. This page is meant to provide you with pointers to the most commonly used tools to make your first forays in kernel-land as productive as possible.

Editing Kernel Sources

Perhaps the most important tool is a good programmers's text editor. Popular choices are emacs and any vi clone, vim being the most widely used these days. Generally, text editors written for programmers are programmable and have features such as syntax highlighting, text folding, brace matching, and easy integration with source management tools, such as make(1), cvs(1), text reformatting, man page lookups, and more.

Downloading

Once you're set on using a particular editor, you will need to download the kernel source tree you want to work with. Different possibilities are available.

Kernel source management with git

If you want to download the lastest kernel source, you need git. You can get it from here.

  • There are some tips while using Git here

Kernel tarballs

The alternative, more "classic", way to download a kernel source tree release is to pull it from http://kernel.org/ as a compressed archive file.

Navigation Aid

You're now ready to edit the kernel source code or browse it to learn. Where to start? As you read through the code, you'll need many times to lookup the declaration or definition of this or that particular data structure, macro or function. the most basic way to do so is to use a combination of the grep (or egrep) and find` commands;

find . -exec grep --with-filename myfunction '{}' \;

Another way is,

find . -name '*.[chS]' | xargs egrep -n "myregularexpression";

If you have GNU grep (as virtually all Linux distributions do) then you can take advantage of its "recursive" flag:

egrep -r --include "*.[chS]" "myregularexpression" .

Add "-w" to avoid catching words in which your search term is a substring.

This searches the current directory [and all subdirectories] for files ending with .c, .h or .S, and runs egrep on each of them for the pattern myregularexpression. Substitute myregularexpression with more complex regular expressions.

Indexing tools for web browsing

While this approach works, other tools allow you to index the entire kernel source tree to faciliate its browsing. This makes learning to find your landmarks in the code a lot easier and allow you to quickly find the declarations / definitions of unknown data structures.

  • LXR project : Nice website to browse the kernel source, search for identifiers, and diff between kernel versions. Uses lxr as its backend.

Some websites make it their duty to archive indexed kernel source trees:

  • LXR Project

  • FXR watson FreeBSD and Linux Kernel Cross-Reference

Navigation Utilities

Eventually, you'll want to maybe incorporate such browsing capabilities in your favored editor:

  • ctags

  • cscope. Tutorials: Using with large projects, Using Cscope with Vim.

Alternative tools include: freescope, etags, and idutils which build databases to use when searching for C symbols. Each has their own idiosyncrasies and features. Some integrate better with your text editor of choice. (Look especially for plugins to help with integration.) cgvg is another option, though it doesn't appear to use a database to speed searches. See https://uzix.org/cgvg.html or https://github.com/uzi/cgvg.

I've posted (with minor frustrations) a StructDumper python script that scans .h files for definitions and publishes them to an .htm file. Lots of room to criticise.

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