## page was renamed from OPWfirstpatchSetup = Developing on a native Linux platform = These instructions assume you're running a variant of Ubuntu (like [[|https://www.ubuntu.com/download/desktop|18.04 LTS]]) or ArchLinux (like [[https://manjaro.org|Manjaro]]). If you’re not familiar with using Linux, then probably you should check out the Linux Foundation’s course on [[https://www.edx.org/course/introduction-to-linux|Introduction to Linux]] on Edx. = Install important packages= The following packages are very important in order to develop for the Linux Kernel! To do so, open a terminal (click the Ubuntu logo at the top left corner and type "terminal"). Click the terminal screen icon. Tip: You may want to pin the terminal app for easy access. Do that by hitting the Windows logo key, moving your mouse over the terminal icon on the left vertical menu, right-clicking, and choosing "Lock to Launcher". You can make the menu go away by hitting the escape key. Next, run this command: {{{ sudo apt-get install vim libncurses5-dev gcc make git exuberant-ctags libssl-dev bison flex libelf-dev bc}}} == Setup your Linux kernel code repository == Once that finishes, run these two commands: {{{ mkdir -p git/kernels; cd git/kernels}}} Tip: mkdir creates directories, and cd changes the current working directory to a different directory. You can learn more about any command by reading the manual pages. Simply prefixing the command with the word "man", e.g. {{{man mkdir}}}. Then use the revision control system called [[http://git-scm.com/|git]] to clone Greg Kroah-Hartman's staging tree repository: {{{ git clone -b staging-testing git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/staging.git}}} That's going to take a while. Why don't you read up on [[http://lwn.net/Kernel/LDD3/|Linux Device Drivers]] in the meantime? The first couple of chapters, especially the ones on kernel modules, will be useful. (Note that LDD3 is a bit outdated; the high-level overviews still make sense, but a few of the code examples are out of date. Still recommended to get a view of the kernel landscape, though.) Next, change into the staging directory: {{{ cd staging}}} Now you need to compile the kernel. The first step is setting up your kernel configuration. = Setting up your kernel configuration = Many kernel drivers can be turned on or off, or built as modules. The .config file in the kernel source directory determines which drivers are built. When you download the source tree, it doesn't come with a .config file. You have several options on generating a .config file. The easiest is to duplicate your current config. == Duplicating your current config == If you're trying to see if a bug is fixed, you probably want to duplicate the configuration on your running kernel. That config file is stored somewhere in /boot/. There might be several files that start with config, so you want the one associated with your running kernel. You can find that by running `uname -a` and finding the config file that ends with your kernel version number. Copy that file into the source directory as .config. Or just run this command: {{{ cp /boot/config-`uname -r`* .config }}} == Changing your config == If you need to make any changes to your configuration, run this command to silently update any new configuration values to their default: {{{ make olddefconfig}}} If you need to make changes, you can run: {{{ make menuconfig}}} This requires the ncurses library to be installed. If you want to compile faster, you can remove from the configuration all the modules you are not using at the moment in your system with: {{{ make localmodconfig}}} Warning: this might not compile some required modules to your system when building the kernel. = Building the kernel = Run {{{ make}}} Or, if you have a multi-core processor, run {{{ make -jX }}} Where X is a number like 2 or 4. If you have a dual core, 2 or 3 might be good. Quad core, 4 or 6. Do not run with really big numbers unless you want your machine to be dog-slow! Let that compile, and maybe read some more of the [[http://lwn.net/Kernel/LDD3/|Linux Device Drivers]] book. Note: when you run make with a .config file that was copied from a different kernel than the one you were building, you may be prompted to make choices about which new kernel features to enable. When in doubt, just choose the default choice. You can do that by hitting enter. A faster way to simply chose all the defaults is to run {{{make menuconfig}}}. This will set default values for unset features. Don't forget to save when you exit. == Installing the kernel == To install a kernel, you will need to either manually update your GRUB configuration file, or have an installkernel script. This script installs the kernel to /boot/, installs modules to /lib/modules/X.Y.Z/ (where X.Y.Z is something like 3.1.5), and updates file /boot/grub/grub.conf. Fortunately, Ubuntu provides an installkernel script in /sbin/installkernel. The grubby RPM provides it for RPM based systems. If you have an installkernel script, you can just run {{{ sudo make modules_install install }}} Or if you don't have sudo installed, run {{{ su -c "make modules_install install" }}} == Running your kernel == Linux stores both old and new kernel versions, so you can boot into your old kernel if you run into issues with your new kernel. The bootloader program called grub lets you chose which kernel you want to boot into. The grub bootloader usually presents users with a choice of kernels and you can reboot into a known good kernel if your new compile doesn't work. Some distros (like Ubuntu) use a default grub configuration that hides that menu. You can usually get the menu to appear by mashing the ESC key during boot after the BIOS display disappears. To make the grub boot menu always appear under Ubuntu, run {{{ sudo vim /etc/default/grub }}} Then delete these two lines: {{{ GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT=0 GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT_QUIET=true }}} This next line controls how long grub shows the menu before it chooses the kernel at the top of the list (which is usually the most recent kernel): {{{ GRUB_TIMEOUT=10 }}} You may want to increase the GRUB_DEFAULT timeout from 10 seconds to 30 seconds or more. I set it to 60 seconds. After you've finished editing the grub file, you need to tell grub that you made a change, so that can re-write some automatically generated files. Run this command: {{{ sudo update-grub2 }}} You will (usually) need to reboot into your new kernel. = Email software = To send patches, you will need to be able to have a mail transport client installed: {{{ sudo apt-get install esmtp}}} Now you will be able to send email through git-send-email. However, we also recommend having a mail client installed that can handle plain text patch format. Our recommendation is a text-based email client called mutt: {{{ sudo apt-get install mutt}}} You may want to send patches with the git send-email command, so you need to install the git-email package: {{{ sudo apt-get install git-email}}} = Optional tools = {{{ sudo apt-get install gitk }}} gitk is a graphical git repository browser. You can use it to look at the state of your repository and the commits you've made on top of upstream. Just type {{{gitk}}} from within your kernel source directory. = Make ctags = In the {{{git/kernels/staging/}}} directory, run {{{ make tags }}} That will make ctags for the source code. When you start editing code in vim from the base directory ({{{git/kernels/staging/}}}), you can use the CTRL+] to look up the definition of a function. See the [[http://vim.wikia.com/wiki/Browsing_programs_with_tags|ctags entry]] in the vim tips wiki for more info. = Done! = Yay, you're done setting up your kernel development environment! Now go start at [[OPWfirstpatch#kernel-setup-done|these directions]] to get more instructions for how to modify the Linux kernel and send your first patch.