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The Linux Kernel HOWTO


Brian Ward, bri@cs.uchicago.edu

v1.0, 5 June 1999

This is a detailed guide to kernel configuration, compilation,

upgrades, and troubleshooting for ix86-based systems.

______________________________________________________________________

Table of Contents

1. Introduction

1.1 Read this first! (I mean it)

1.2 A word on style

2. Important questions and their answers

2.1 What does the kernel do, anyway?

2.2 Why would I want to upgrade my kernel?

2.3 What kind of hardware do the newer kernels support?

2.4 What version of gcc and libc do I need?

2.5 What's a loadable module?

2.6 How much disk space do I need?

2.7 How long does it take?

3. How to actually configure the kernel

3.1 Getting the source

3.2 Unpacking the source

3.3 Configuring the kernel

3.3.1 Kernel math emulation (Processor type and features)

3.3.2 Enhanced (MFM/RLL) disk and IDE disk/cdrom support (Block Devices)

3.3.3 Networking support (General Setup)

3.3.4 System V IPC (General Setup)

3.3.5 Processor family (Processor type and features)

3.3.6 SCSI support

3.3.7 Network device support

3.3.8 Filesystems

3.3.8.1 But I don't know which filesystems I need!

3.3.9 Character devices

3.3.10 Sound

3.3.11 Other configuration options

3.3.12 Kernel hacking

3.4 Now what? (The Makefile)

4. Compiling the kernel

4.1 Cleaning and depending

4.2 Compile time

4.3 Other ``make''ables

4.4 Installing the kernel

5. Patching the kernel

5.1 Applying a patch

5.2 If something goes wrong

5.3 Getting rid of the .orig files

5.4 Other patches

6. Additional packages

6.1 kbd

6.2 util-linux

6.3 hdparm

6.4 gpm

7. Some pitfalls

7.1 make clean

7.2 Huge or slow kernels

7.3 The parallel port doesn't work/my printer doesn't work

7.4 Kernel doesn't compile

7.5 New version of the kernel doesn't seem to boot

7.6 You forgot to run LILO, or system doesn't boot at all

7.7 It says `warning: bdflush not running'

7.8 I can't get my IDE/ATAPI CD-ROM drive to work

7.9 It says weird things about obsolete routing requests

7.10 Firewalling not working in 1.2.0

7.11 ``Not a compressed kernel Image file''

7.12 Problems with console terminal after upgrade to 1.3.x

7.13 Can't seem to compile things after kernel upgrade

7.14 Increasing limits

8. Note for upgrade to version 2.0.x, 2.2.x

9. Modules

9.1 Installing the module utilities

9.2 Modules distributed with the kernel

10. Tips and tricks

10.1 Redirecting output of the make or patch commands

10.2 Conditional kernel install

10.3 Kernel updates

11. Other relevant HOWTOs that might be useful

12. Misc

12.1 Author

12.2 To do

12.3 Contributions

12.4 Copyright notice, License, and all that stuff

 

______________________________________________________________________

1. Introduction

 

Should you read this document? Well, see if you've got any of the

following symptoms:

 

 

· ``Arg! This wizzo-46.5.6 package says it needs kernel release

2.8.193 and I still only have release 1.0.9!''

· There's a device driver in one of the newer kernels that you just

gotta have

· You really have no idea at all how to compile a kernel

· ``Is this stuff in the README really the whole story?''

· You came, you tried, it didn't work

· You need something to give to people who insist on asking you to

install their kernels for them

 

1.1. Read this first! (I mean it)

Some of the examples in this document assume that you have GNU tar,

find, and xargs. These are quite standard; this should not cause

problems. It is also assumed that you know your system's filesystem

structure; if you don't, it is critical that you keep a written copy

of the mount command's output during normal system operation (or a

listing of /etc/fstab, if you can read it). This information is

important, and does not change unless you repartition your disk, add a

new one, reinstall your system, or something similar.

The latest ``production'' kernel version at the time of this writing

was 2.2.9, meaning that the references and examples correspond to that

release. Even though I try to make this document as version-

independent as possible, the kernel is constantly under development,

so if you get a newer release, it will inevitably have some

differences. Again, this should not cause major problems, but it may

create some confusion.

 

There are two versions of the linux kernel source, ``production'' and

``development.'' Production releases are the even-minor-numbered

releases; 1.2.x was production, 2.0.x is production, as well as 2.2.x.

These kernels are considered to be the most stable, bug-free versions

available at the time of release. The development kernels (2.1.x,

2.3.x, etc) are meant as testing kernels, for people willing to test

out new and possibly very buggy kernels. You have been warned.

 

 

1.2. A word on style

Text that looks like this is either something that appears on your

screen, a filename, or something that can be directly typed in, such

as a command, or options to a command (if you're looking at a plain-

text file, it doesn't look any different). Commands and other input

are frequently quoted (with ` '), which causes the following classic

punctuation problem: if such an item appears at the end of a sentence

in quotes, people often type a `.' along with the command, because the

American quoting style says to put the period inside of the quotation

marks. Even though common sense (and unfortunately, this assumes that

the one with the ``common sense'' is used to the so-called American

style of quotation) should tell one to strip off the punctuation

first, many people simply do not remember, so I will place it outside

the quotation marks in such cases. In other words, when indicating

that you should type ``make config'' I would write `make config', not

`make config.'

 

 

2. Important questions and their answers

 

 

2.1. What does the kernel do, anyway?

 

The Unix kernel acts as a mediator for your programs and your

hardware. First, it does (or arranges for) the memory management for

all of the running programs (processes), and makes sure that they all

get a fair (or unfair, if you please) share of the processor's cycles.

In addition, it provides a nice, fairly portable interface for

programs to talk to your hardware.

 

There is certainly more to the kernel's operation than this, but these

basic functions are the most important to know.

 

 

2.2. Why would I want to upgrade my kernel?

 

Newer kernels generally offer the ability to talk to more types of

hardware (that is, they have more device drivers), they can have

better process management, they can run faster than the older

versions, they could be more stable than the older versions, and they

fix silly bugs in the older versions. Most people upgrade kernels

because they want the device drivers and the bug fixes.

 

 

2.3. What kind of hardware do the newer kernels support?

 

See the Hardware-HOWTO. Alternatively, you can look at the `config.in'

file in the linux source, or just find out when you try `make config'.

This shows you all hardware supported by the standard kernel

distribution, but not everything that linux supports; many common

device drivers (such as the PCMCIA drivers and some tape drivers) are

loadable modules maintained and distributed separately.

 

 

2.4. What version of gcc and libc do I need?

 

Linus recommends a version of gcc in the README file included with the

linux source. If you don't have this version, the documentation in the

recommended version of gcc should tell you if you need to upgrade your

libc. This is not a difficult procedure, but it is important to

follow the instructions.

 

 

2.5. What's a loadable module?

 

These are pieces of kernel code which are not linked (included)

directly in the kernel. One compiles them separately, and can insert

and remove them into the running kernel at almost any time. Due to its

flexibility, this is now the preferred way to code certain kernel

features. Many popular device drivers, such as the PCMCIA drivers and

the QIC-80/40 tape driver, are loadable modules.

 

 

2.6. How much disk space do I need?

 

It depends on your particular system configuration. First, the

compressed linux source is nearly 14 megabytes large at version 2.2.9.

Many sites keep this even after unpacking. Uncompressed and built

with a moderate configuration, it takes up another 67 MB.

 

 

2.7. How long does it take?

With newer machines, the compilation takes dramatically less time than

older ones; an AMD K6-2/300 with a fast disk can do a 2.2.x kernel in

about four minutes. As for old Pentiums, 486s, and 386s, if you plan

to compile one, be prepared to wait, possibly hours, days..

If this troubles you, and you happen to have a faster machine around

to compile on, you can build on the fast machines (assuming you give

it the right parameters, that your ulilities are up-to-date, and so

on), and then transfer the kernel image to the slower machine.

 

 

 

 

3. How to actually configure the kernel

 

 

3.1. Getting the source

 

You can obtain the source via anonymous ftp from ftp.kernel.org in

/pub/linux/kernel/vx.y, where x.y is the version (eg 2.2), and as

mentioned before, the ones that end with an odd number are development

releases and may be unstable. It is typically labelled linux-

x.y.z.tar.gz, where x.y.z is the version number. The sites also

typically carry ones with a suffix of .bz2, which have been compressed

with bzip2 (these files will be smaller and take less time to

transfer).

It's best to use ftp.xx.kernel.org where xx is your country code;

examples being ftp.at.kernel.org for Austria, and ftp.us.kernel.org

for the United States.

 

 

3.2. Unpacking the source

 

Log in as or su to `root', and cd to /usr/src. If you installed

kernel source when you first installed linux (as most do), there will

already be a directory called `linux' there, which contains the entire

old source tree. If you have the disk space and you want to play it

safe, preserve that directory. A good idea is to figure out what

version your system runs now and rename the directory accordingly. The

command `uname -r' prints the current kernel version. Therefore, if

`uname -r' said `1.0.9', you would rename (with `mv') `linux' to

`linux-1.0.9'. If you feel mildly reckless, just wipe out the entire

directory. In any case, make certain there is no `linux' directory in

/usr/src before unpacking the full source code.

 

Now, in /usr/src, unpack the source with `tar zxpvf linux-

x.y.z.tar.gz' (if you've just got a .tar file with no .gz at the end,

`tar xpvf linux-x.y.z.tar' works.). The contents of the source will

fly by. When finished, there will be a new `linux' directory in

/usr/src. cd to linux and look over the README file. There will be a

section with the label `INSTALLING the kernel'. Carry out the

instructions when appropriate -- symbolic links that should be in

place, removal of stale .o files, etc.

If you have a .bz2 file and the bzip2 program (read about it at

http://www.muraroa.demon.co.uk/), do this:

 

bz2cat linux-x.y.z.tar.bz2 | tar xvf -

 

 

 

3.3. Configuring the kernel

 

Note: Some of this is reiteration/clarification of a similar section

in Linus' README file.

 

The command `make config' while in /usr/src/linux starts a configure

script which asks you many questions. It requires bash, so verify that

bash is /bin/bash, /bin/sh, or $BASH.

However, there are some much more pleasant alternatives to `make

config' and you may very well find them easier and more comfortable to

use. `make menuconfig' is probably the most widely-used. Whatever you

choose, it's best to get familiar with the interface because you may

find yourself back at it sooner than you think. For those ``running

X,'' you can try `make xconfig' if you have Tk installed (`click-o-

rama' - Nat). `make menuconfig' is for those who have (n)curses and

would prefer a text-based menu. These interfaces have a rather clear

advantage: If you goof up and make a wrong choice during

configuration, it is simple to go back and fix it.

 

The configuration options will appear in hierarchies with `make

menuconfig' and `make xconfig'.

 

You are ready to answer the questions, usually with `y' (yes) or `n'

(no). Device drivers typically have an `m' option. This means

``module,'' meaning that the system will compile it, but not directly

into the kernel, but as a loadable module. A more comical way to

describe it is as ``maybe.'' Some of the more obvious and non-critical

options are not described here; see the section ``Other configuration

options'' for short descriptions of a few others. With `make

menuconfig', the space bar toggles the selection.

 

In 2.0.x and later, there is a `?' option, which provides a brief

description of the configuration parameter. That information is likely

to be the most up-to-date. Here are a listing of some of the important

features, which hierarchy they are in, and brief description.

 

 

3.3.1. Kernel math emulation (Processor type and features)

If you don't have a math coprocessor (you have a bare 386 or 486SX),

you must say `y' to this. If you do have a coprocessor and you still

say `y', don't worry too much -- the coprocessor is still used and the

emulation ignored. For any halfway modern machine, the answer will be

no, but don't worry if you say yes accidentally; if not needed, it is

not used.

 

 

3.3.2. Enhanced (MFM/RLL) disk and IDE disk/cdrom support (Block

Devices)

 

You probably need to support this; it means that the kernel will

support standard PC hard disks, which most people have. This driver

does not include SCSI drives; they come later in the configuration.

You will then be asked about the ``old disk-only'' and ``new IDE''

drivers. You want to choose one of them; the main difference is that

the old driver only supports two disks on a single interface, and the

new one supports a secondary interface and IDE/ATAPI cdrom drives. The

new driver is 4k larger than the old one and is also supposedly

``improved,'' meaning that aside from containing a different number of

bugs, it might improve your disk performance, especially if you have

newer (EIDE-type) hardware.

 

 

 

 

 

3.3.3. Networking support (General Setup)

 

In principle, you would only say `y' if your machine is on a network

such as the internet, or you want to use SLIP, PPP, term, etc to dial

up for internet access. However, as many packages (such as the X

window system) require networking support even if your machine does

not live on a real network, you should say `y'. Later on, you will be

asked if you want to support TCP/IP networking; again, say `y' here if

you are not absolutely sure.

 

 

3.3.4. System V IPC (General Setup)

 

One of the best definitions of IPC (Interprocess Communication) is in

the Perl book's glossary. Not surprisingly, some Perl programmers

employ it to let processes talk to each other, as well as many other

packages (DOOM, most notably), so it is not a good idea to say n

unless you know exactly what you are doing.

 

 

3.3.5. Processor family (Processor type and features)

(in older kernels: Use -m486 flag for 486-specific optimizations)

 

Traditionally, this compiled in certain optimizations for a particular

processor; the kernels ran fine on other chips, but the kernel was

perhaps a bit larger. In newer kernels, however, this is no longer

true, so you should enter the processor for which you are compiling

the kernel. A ``386'' kernel will work on all machines.

 

 

3.3.6. SCSI support

 

If you have SCSI devices, say `y'. You will be prompted for further

information, such as support for CD-ROM, disks, and what kind of SCSI

adapter you have. See the SCSI-HOWTO for greater detail.

 

 

3.3.7. Network device support

 

If you have a network card, or you would like to use SLIP, PPP, or a

parallel port adapter for connecting to the Internet, say `y'. The

config script will prompt for which kind of card you have, and which

protocol to use.

 

 

3.3.8. Filesystems

 

The configure script then asks if you wish to support the following

filesystems:

 

Standard (minix) - Newer distributions don't create minix filesystems,

and many people don't use it, but it may still be a good idea to

configure this one. Some ``rescue disk'' programs use it, and still

more floppies may have a minix filesystem, since the minix filesystem

is less painful to use on a floppy.

 

Second extended - This is the standard Linux filesystem. You almost

definitely have one of these, and need to say `y'.

 

msdos - If you want to use your MS-DOS hard disk partitions, or mount

MS-DOS formatted floppy disks, say `y'.

 

There are various other foreign operating system filesystem types

available.

 

/proc - (idea from Bell Labs, I guess). One doesn't make a proc

filesystem on a disk; this is a filesystem interface to the kernel and

processes. Many process listers (such as `ps') use it. Try `cat

/proc/meminfo' or `cat /proc/devices' sometime. Some shells (rc, in

particular) use /proc/self/fd (known as /dev/fd on other systems) for

I/O. You should almost certainly say `y' to this; many important linux

tools depend on it.

 

NFS - If your machine lives on a network and you want to use

filesystems which reside on other systems with NFS, say `y'.

 

ISO9660 - Found on most CD-ROMs. If you have a CD-ROM drive and you

wish to use it under Linux, say `y'.

 

 

3.3.8.1. But I don't know which filesystems I need!

 

Ok, type `mount'. The output will look something like this:

 

 

 

blah# mount

/dev/hda1 on / type ext2 (defaults)

/dev/hda3 on /usr type ext2 (defaults)

none on /proc type proc (defaults)

/dev/fd0 on /mnt type msdos (defaults)

 

 

 

Look at each line; the word next to `type' is the filesystem type. In

this example, my / and /usr filesystems are second extended, I'm

using /proc, and there's a floppy disk mounted using the msdos (bleah)

filesystem.

You can try `cat /proc/filesystems' if you have /proc currently

enabled; it will list your current kernel's filesystems.

The configuration of rarely-used, non-critical filesystems can cause

kernel bloat; see the section on modules for a way to avoid this and

the ``Pitfalls'' section on why a bloated kernel is undesirable.

 

 

 

3.3.9. Character devices

 

Here, you enable the drivers for your printer (parallel printer, that

is), busmouse, PS/2 mouse (many notebooks use the PS/2 mouse protocol

for their built-in trackballs), some tape drives, and other such

``character'' devices. Say `y' when appropriate.

 

Note: gpm is a program which allows the use of the mouse outside of

the X window system for cut and paste between virtual consoles. It's

fairly nice if you have a serial mouse, because it coexists well with

X, but you need to do special tricks for others.

 

 

3.3.10. Sound

 

If you feel a great desire to hear biff bark, say `y', and you can

tell the configuration program all about your sound board. (A note on

sound card configuration: when it asks you if you want to install the

full version of the driver, you can say `n' and save some kernel

memory by picking only the features which you deem necessary.)

 

If you are serious about sound card support, have a look at both the

free drivers at http://www.linux.org.uk/OSS/ and the commercial Open

Sound System at http://www.opensound.com/.

 

 

3.3.11. Other configuration options

Not all of the configuration options are listed here because they

change too often or fairly self-evident (for instance, 3Com 3C509

support to compile the device drive for this particular ethernet

card). There exists a fairly comprehensive list of all the options

(plus a way to place them into the Configure script) in an effort

started and maintained by Axel Boldt (boldt@math.ucsb.edu) and it's

the online help. It's also available as one big file at the

Documentation/Configure.help in your Linux kernel source tree as of

version 2.0.

 

 

3.3.12. Kernel hacking

 

>From Linus' README:

the ``kernel hacking'' configuration details usually result in a

bigger or slower kernel (or both), and can even make the kernel less

stable by configuring some routines to actively try to break bad code

to find kernel problems (kmalloc()). Thus you should probably answer

`n' to the questions for a ``production'' kernel.

 

 

3.4. Now what? (The Makefile)

 

After you finish configuration, a message tells you that your kernel

has been configured, and to ``check the top-level Makefile for

additional configuration,'' etc.

So, look at the Makefile. You probably will not need to change it, but

it never hurts to look. You can also change its options with the

`rdev' command once the new kernel is in place. If you're feel lost

when you look at the file, then don't worry about it.

 

 

4. Compiling the kernel

 

 

4.1. Cleaning and depending

 

When the configure script ends, it also tells you to `make dep' and

(possibly) `clean'. So, do the `make dep'. This insures that all of

the dependencies, such the include files, are in place. It does not

take long, unless your computer is fairly slow to begin with. For

older versions of the kernel, when finished, you should do a `make

clean'. This removes all of the object files and some other things

that an old version leaves behind. In any case, do not forget this

step before attempting to recompile a kernel.

 

 

4.2. Compile time

 

After depending and cleaning, you may now `make bzImage' or `make

bzdisk' (this is the part that takes a long time.). `make bzImage'

will compile the kernel, and leave a file in arch/i386/boot called

`bzImage' (among other things). This is the new compressed kernel.

`make bzdisk' does the same thing, but also places the new bzImage on

a floppy disk which you hopefully put in drive ``A:''. `bzdisk' is

fairly handy for testing new kernels; if it bombs (or just doesn't

work right), just remove the floppy and boot with your old kernel. It

can also be a handy way to boot if you accidentally remove your kernel

(or something equally as dreadful). You can also use it to install new

systems when you just dump the contents of one disk onto the other

(``all this and more! NOW how much would you pay?'').

 

All even halfway reasonably recent kernels are compressed, hence the

`bz' in front of the names. A compressed kernel automatically

decompresses itself when executed.

In older kernels, you don't have the option to build a bzImage; it was

simply a zImage. That option is at the moment still available,

however, given the code size of newer kernels, it is now more or less

mandatory to build a bzImage because the older methods can't handle a

kernel that's just too large.

 

 

4.3. Other ``make''ables

 

`make mrproper' will do a more extensive `clean'ing. It is sometimes

necessary; you may wish to do it at every patch. `make mrproper' will

also delete your configuration file, so you might want to make a

backup of it (.config) if you see it as valuable.

 

`make oldconfig' will attempt to configure the kernel from an old

configuration file; it will run through the `make config' process for

you. If you haven't ever compiled a kernel before or don't have an old

config file, then you probably shouldn't do this, as you will most

likely want to change the default configuration.

 

See the section on modules for a description of `make modules'.

 

 

4.4. Installing the kernel

After you have a new kernel that seems to work the way you want it to,

it's time to install it. Most people use LILO (Linux Loader) for this.

`make bzlilo' will install the kernel, run LILO on it, and get you all

ready to boot, BUT ONLY if lilo is configured in the following way on

your system: kernel is /vmlinuz, lilo is in /sbin, and your lilo

config (/etc/lilo.conf) agrees with this.

 

Otherwise, you need to use LILO directly. It's a fairly easy package

to install and work with, but it has a tendency to confuse people with

the configuration file. Look at the config file (either

/etc/lilo/config for older versions or /etc/lilo.conf for new

versions), and see what the current setup is. The config file looks

like this:

 

 

image = /vmlinuz

label = Linux

root = /dev/hda1

...

 

 

The `image =' is set to the currently installed kernel. Most people

use /vmlinuz. `label' is used by lilo to determine which kernel or

operating system to boot, and `root' is the / of that particular

operating system. Make a backup copy of your old kernel and copy the

bzImage which you just made into place (you would say `cp bzImage

/vmlinuz' if you use `/vmlinuz'). Then, rerun lilo -- on newer

systems, you can just run `lilo', but on older stuff, you might have

to do an /etc/lilo/install or even an /etc/lilo/lilo -C

/etc/lilo/config.

 

If you would like to know more about LILO's configuration, or you

don't have LILO, get the newest version from your favorite ftp site

and follow the instructions.

 

To boot one of your old kernels off the hard disk (another way to save

yourself in case you screw up the new kernel), copy the lines below

(and including) `image = xxx' in the LILO config file to the bottom of

the file, and change the `image = xxx' to `image = yyy', where `yyy'

is the full pathname of the file you saved your backup kernel to.

Then, change the `label = zzz' to `label = linux-backup' and rerun

lilo. You may need to put a line in the config file saying `delay=x',

where x is an amount in tenths of a second, which tells LILO to wait

that much time before booting, so that you can interrupt it (with the

shift key, for example), and type in the label of the backup boot

image (in case unpleasant things happen).

 

 

 

 

5. Patching the kernel

 

 

5.1. Applying a patch

 

Incremental upgrades of the kernel are distributed as patches. For

example, if you have version 1.1.45, and you notice that there's a

`patch46.gz' out there for it, it means you can upgrade to version

1.1.46 through application of the patch. You might want to make a

backup of the source tree first (`make clean' and then `cd /usr/src;

tar zcvf old-tree.tar.gz linux' will make a compressed tar archive for

you.).

 

So, continuing with the example above, let's suppose that you have

`patch46.gz' in /usr/src. cd to /usr/src and do a `zcat patch46.gz |

patch -p0' (or `patch -p0 < patch46' if the patch isn't compressed).

You'll see things whizz by (or flutter by, if your system is that

slow) telling you that it is trying to apply hunks, and whether it

succeeds or not. Usually, this action goes by too quickly for you to

read, and you're not too sure whether it worked or not, so you might

want to use the -s flag to patch, which tells patch to only report

error messages (you don't get as much of the ``hey, my computer is

actually doing something for a change!'' feeling, but you may prefer

this..). To look for parts which might not have gone smoothly, cd to

/usr/src/linux and look for files with a .rej extension. Some

versions of patch (older versions which may have been compiled with on

an inferior filesystem) leave the rejects with a # extension. You can

use `find' to look for you;

find . -name '*.rej' -print

 

prints all files who live in the current directory or any subdirecto&SHY;

ries with a .rej extension to the standard output.

 

If everything went right, do a `make clean', `config', and `dep' as

described in sections 3 and 4.

 

There are quite a few options to the patch command. As mentioned

above, patch -s will suppress all messages except the errors. If you

keep your kernel source in some other place than /usr/src/linux, patch

-p1 (in that directory) will patch things cleanly. Other patch options

are well-documented in the manual page.

 

 

5.2. If something goes wrong

 

(Note: this section refers mostly to quite old kernels)

 

The most frequent problem that used to arise was when a patch modified

a file called `config.in' and it didn't look quite right, because you

changed the options to suit your machine. This has been taken care of,

but one still might encounter it with an older release. To fix it,

look at the config.in.rej file, and see what remains of the original

patch. The changes will typically be marked with `+' and `-' at the

beginning of the line. Look at the lines surrounding it, and remember

if they were set to `y' or `n'. Now, edit config.in, and change `y' to

`n' and `n' to `y' when appropriate. Do a

patch -p0 < config.in.rej

 

and if it reports that it succeeded (no fails), then you can continue

on with a configuration and compilation. The config.in.rej file will

remain, but you can get delete it.

 

If you encounter further problems, you might have installed a patch

out of order. If patch says `previously applied patch detected: Assume

-R?', you are probably trying to apply a patch which is below your

current version number; if you answer `y', it will attempt to degrade

your source, and will most likely fail; thus, you will need to get a

whole new source tree (which might not have been such a bad idea in

the first place).

 

To back out (unapply) a patch, use `patch -R' on the original patch.

 

The best thing to do when patches really turn out wrong is to start

over again with a clean, out-of-the-box source tree (for example, from

one of the linux-x.y.z.tar.gz files), and start again.

 

 

5.3. Getting rid of the .orig files

 

After just a few patches, the .orig files will start to pile up. For

example, one 1.1.51 tree I had was once last cleaned out at 1.1.48.

Removing the .orig files saved over a half a meg.

find . -name '*.orig' -exec rm -f {} ';'

 

will take care of it for you. Versions of patch which use # for

rejects use a tilde instead of .orig.

There are better ways to get rid of the .orig files, which depend on

GNU xargs:

find . -name '*.orig' | xargs rm

 

or the ``quite secure but a little more verbose'' method:

find . -name '*.orig' -print0 | xargs --null rm --

 

 

 

 

5.4. Other patches

 

There are other patches (I'll call them ``nonstandard'') than the ones

Linus distributes. If you apply these, Linus' patches may not work

correctly and you'll have to either back them out, fix the source or

the patch, install a new source tree, or a combination of the above.

This can become very frustrating, so if you do not want to modify the

source (with the possibility of a very bad outcome), back out the

nonstandard patches before applying Linus', or just install a new

tree. Then, you can see if the nonstandard patches still work. If they

don't, you are either stuck with an old kernel, playing with the patch

or source to get it to work, or waiting (possibly begging) for a new

version of the patch to come out.

 

How common are the patches not in the standard distribution? You will

probably hear of them. I used to use the noblink patch for my virtual

consoles because I hate blinking cursors (This patch is (or at least

was) frequently updated for new kernel releases.). With most newer

device drivers being developed as loadable modules, though, the

frequecy of ``nonstandard'' patches is decreasing significantly.

 

 

6. Additional packages

Your linux kernel has many features which are not explained in the

kernel source itself; these features are typically utilized through

external packages. Some of the most common are listed here.

 

 

6.1. kbd

The linux console probably has more features than it deserves. Among

these are the ability to switch fonts, remap your keyboard, switch

video modes (in newer kernels), etc. The kbd package has programs

which allow the user to do all of this, plus many fonts and keyboard

maps for almost any keyboard, and is available from the same sites

that carry the kernel source.

 

 

6.2. util-linux

Rik Faith (faith@cs.unc.edu) put together a large collection of linux

utilities which are, by odd coincidence, called util-linux. These are

now maintained by Andries Brouwer (util-linux@math.uio.no). Available

via anonymous ftp from sunsite.unc.edu in /pub/Linux/system/misc, it

contains programs such as setterm, rdev, and ctrlaltdel, which are

relevant to the kernel. As Rik says, do not install without thinking;

you do not need to install everything in the package, and it could

very well cause serious problems if you do.

 

 

6.3. hdparm

As with many packages, this was once a kernel patch and support

programs. The patches made it into the official kernel, and the

programs to optimize and play with your hard disk are distributed

separately.

 

 

6.4. gpm

gpm stands for general purpose mouse. This program allows you to cut

and paste text between virtual consoles and do other things with a

large variety of mouse types.

 

 

7. Some pitfalls

 

 

 

7.1. make clean

If your new kernel does really weird things after a routine kernel

upgrade, chances are you forgot to make clean before compiling the new

kernel. Symptoms can be anything from your system outright crashing,

strange I/O problems, to crummy performance. Make sure you do a make

dep, too.

 

 

7.2. Huge or slow kernels

If your kernel is sucking up a lot of memory, is too large, and/or

just takes forever to compile even when you've got your new

Quadbazillium-III/4400 working on it, you've probably got lots of

unneeded stuff (device drivers, filesystems, etc) configured. If you

don't use it, don't configure it, because it does take up memory. The

most obvious symptom of kernel bloat is extreme swapping in and out of

memory to disk; if your disk is making a lot of noise and it's not one

of those old Fujitsu Eagles that sound like like a jet landing when

turned off, look over your kernel configuration.

 

You can find out how much memory the kernel is using by taking the

total amount of memory in your machine and subtracting from it the

amount of ``total mem'' in /proc/meminfo or the output of the command

`free'.

 

 

7.3. The parallel port doesn't work/my printer doesn't work

Configuration options for PCs are: First, under the category `General

Setup', select `Parallel port support' and `PC-style hardware'. Then

under `Character devices', select `Parallel printer support'.

Then there are the names. Linux 2.2 names the printer devices

differently than previous releases. The upshot of this is that if you

had an lp1 under your old kernel, it's probably an lp0 under your new

one. Use `dmesg' or look through the logs in /var/log to find out.

 

 

7.4. Kernel doesn't compile

 

If it does not compile, then it is likely that a patch failed, or your

source is somehow corrupt. Your version of gcc also might not be

correct, or could also be corrupt (for example, the include files

might be in error). Make sure that the symbolic links which Linus

describes in the README are set up correctly. In general, if a

standard kernel does not compile, something is seriously wrong with

the system, and reinstallation of certain tools is probably necessary.

 

In some cases, gcc can crash due to hardware problems. The error

message will be something like ``xxx exited with signal 15'' and it

will generally look very mysterious. I probably would not mention

this, except that it happened to me once - I had some bad cache

memory, and the compiler would occasionally barf at random. Try

reinstalling gcc first if you experience problems. You should only get

suspicious if your kernel compiles fine with external cache turned

off, a reduced amount of RAM, etc.

 

 

It tends to disturb people when it's suggested that their hardware has

problems. Well, I'm not making this up. There is an FAQ for it -- it's

at http://www.bitwizard.nl/sig11/.

 

 

7.5. New version of the kernel doesn't seem to boot

 

You did not run LILO, or it is not configured correctly. One thing

that ``got'' me once was a problem in the config file; it said `boot =

/dev/hda1' instead of `boot = /dev/hda' (This can be really annoying

at first, but once you have a working config file, you shouldn't need

to change it.).

 

 

7.6. You forgot to run LILO, or system doesn't boot at all

 

Ooops! The best thing you can do here is to boot off of a floppy disk

or CDROM and prepare another bootable floppy (such as `make zdisk'

would do). You need to know where your root (/) filesystem is and

what type it is (e.g. second extended, minix). In the example below,

you also need to know what filesystem your /usr/src/linux source tree

is on, its type, and where it is normally mounted.

 

In the following example, / is /dev/hda1, and the filesystem which

holds /usr/src/linux is /dev/hda3, normally mounted at /usr. Both are

second extended filesystems. The working kernel image in

/usr/src/linux/arch/i386/boot is called bzImage.

 

The idea is that if there is a functioning bzImage, it is possible to

use that for the new floppy. Another alternative, which may or may not

work better (it depends on the particular method in which you messed

up your system) is discussed after the example.

 

First, boot from a boot/root disk combo or rescue disk, and mount the

filesystem which contains the working kernel image:

 

 

mkdir /mnt

mount -t ext2 /dev/hda3 /mnt

 

 

If mkdir tells you that the directory already exists, just ignore it.

Now, cd to the place where the working kernel image was. Note that

/mnt + /usr/src/linux/arch/i386/boot - /usr = /mnt/src/linux/arch/i386/boot

 

Place a formatted disk in drive ``A:'' (not your boot or root disk!),

dump the image to the disk, and configure it for your root filesystem:

 

 

cd /mnt/src/linux/arch/i386/boot

dd if=bzImage of=/dev/fd0

rdev /dev/fd0 /dev/hda1

 

cd to / and unmount the normal /usr filesystem:

 

cd /

umount /mnt

 

 

You should now be able to reboot your system as normal from this

floppy. Don't forget to run lilo (or whatever it was that you did

wrong) after the reboot!

 

As mentioned above, there is another common alternative. If you

happened to have a working kernel image in / (/vmlinuz for example),

you can use that for a boot disk. Supposing all of the above

conditions, and that my kernel image is /vmlinuz, just make these

alterations to the example above: change /dev/hda3 to /dev/hda1 (the /

filesystem), /mnt/src/linux to /mnt, and if=bzImage to if=vmlinuz. The

note explaining how to derive /mnt/src/linux may be ignored.

 

Using LILO with big drives (more than 1024 cylinders) can cause

problems. See the LILO mini-HOWTO or documentation for help on that.

 

 

7.7. It says `warning: bdflush not running'

 

This can be a severe problem. Starting with a kernel release after 1.0

(around 20 Apr 1994), a program called `update' which periodically

flushes out the filesystem buffers, was upgraded/replaced. Get the

sources to `bdflush' (you should find it where you got your kernel

source), and install it (you probably want to run your system under

the old kernel while doing this). It installs itself as `update' and

after a reboot, the new kernel should no longer complain.

 

 

7.8. I can't get my IDE/ATAPI CD-ROM drive to work

Strangely enough, lots of people cannot get their ATAPI drives

working, probably because there are a number of things that can go

wrong.

If your CD-ROM drive is the only device on a particular IDE interface,

it must be jumpered as ``master'' or ``single.'' Supposedly, this is

the most common error.

Creative Labs (for one) has put IDE interfaces on their sound cards

now. However, this leads to the interesting problem that while some

people only have one interface to being with, many have two IDE

interfaces built-in to their motherboards (at IRQ15, usually), so a

common practice is to make the soundblaster interface a third IDE port

(IRQ11, or so I'm told).

This causes problems with linux in that versions 1.2.x don't support a

third IDE interface (there is support in starting somewhere in the

1.3.x series but that's development, remember, and it doesn't auto-

probe). To get around this, you have a few choices.

 

If you have a second IDE port already, chances are that you are not

using it or it doesn't already have two devices on it. Take the ATAPI

drive off the sound card and put it on the second interface. You can

then disable the sound card's interface, which saves an IRQ anyway.

If you don't have a second interface, jumper the sound card's

interface (not the sound card's sound part) as IRQ15, the second

interface. It should work.

 

 

7.9. It says weird things about obsolete routing requests

 

Get new versions of the route program and any other programs which do

route manipulation. /usr/include/linux/route.h (which is actually a

file in /usr/src/linux) has changed.

 

 

7.10. Firewalling not working in 1.2.0

Upgrade to at least version 1.2.1.

 

 

7.11. ``Not a compressed kernel Image file''

Don't use the vmlinux file created in /usr/src/linux as your boot

image; [..]/arch/i386/boot/bzImage is the right one.

 

 

7.12. Problems with console terminal after upgrade to 1.3.x

Change the word dumb to linux in the console termcap entry in

/etc/termcap. You may also have to make a terminfo entry.

 

 

7.13. Can't seem to compile things after kernel upgrade

The linux kernel source includes a number of include files (the things

that end with .h) which are referenced by the standard ones in

/usr/include. They are typically referenced like this (where xyzzy.h

would be something in /usr/include/linux):

#include <linux/xyzzy.h>

 

Normally, there is a link called linux in /usr/include to the

include/linux directory of your kernel source

(/usr/src/linux/include/linux in the typical system). If this link is

not there, or points to the wrong place, most things will not compile

at all. If you decided that the kernel source was taking too much room

on the disk and deleted it, this will obviously be a problem. Another

way it might go wrong is with file permissions; if your root has a

umask which doesn't allow other users to see its files by default, and

you extracted the kernel source without the p (preserve filemodes)

option, those users also won't be able to use the C compiler. Although

you could use the chmod command to fix this, it is probably easier to

re-extract the include files. You can do this the same way you did the

whole source at the beginning, only with an additional argument:

 

blah# tar zxvpf linux.x.y.z.tar.gz linux/include

 

 

Note: ``make config'' will recreate the /usr/src/linux link if it

isn't there.

 

 

7.14. Increasing limits

The following few example commands may be helpful to those wondering

how to increase certain soft limits imposed by the kernel:

echo 4096 > /proc/sys/kernel/file-max

echo 12288 > /proc/sys/kernel/inode-max

echo 300 400 500 > /proc/sys/vm/freepages

 

 

 

 

8. Note for upgrade to version 2.0.x, 2.2.x

Kernel versions 2.0.x and 2.2.x introduced quite a bit of changes for

kernel installation. The file Documentation/Changes in the 2.0.x

source tree contains information that you should know when upgrading

to either of these versions. You will most likely need to upgrade

several key packages, such as gcc, libc, and SysVInit, and perhaps

alter some system files, so expect this. Don't panic, though.

 

 

9. Modules

Loadable kernel modules can save memory and ease configuration. The

scope of modules has grown to include filesystems, ethernet card

drivers, tape drivers, printer drivers, and more.

 

 

9.1. Installing the module utilities

The module utilities are available from wherever you got your kernel

source as modutils-x.y.z.tar.gz; choose the highest patchlevel x.y.z

that is equal to or below that of your current kernel. Unpack it with

`tar zxvf modutils-x.y.z.tar.gz', cd to the directory it creates

(modutils-x.y.z), look over the README, and carry out its installation

instructions (which is usually something simple, such as make

install). You should now have the programs insmod, rmmod, ksyms,

lsmod, genksyms, modprobe, and depmod in /sbin. If you wish, test out

the utilities with the ``hw'' example driver in insmod; look over the

INSTALL file in that subdirectory for details.

insmod inserts a module into the running kernel. Modules usually have

a .o extension; the example driver mentioned above is called

drv_hello.o, so to insert this, one would say `insmod drv_hello.o'. To

see the modules that the kernel is currently using, use lsmod. The

output looks like this:

blah# lsmod

Module: #pages: Used by:

drv_hello 1

 

`drv_hello' is the name of the module, it uses one page (4k) of mem&SHY;

ory, and no other kernel modules depend on it at the moment. To remove

this module, use `rmmod drv_hello'. Note that rmmod wants a module

name, not a filename; you get this from lsmod's listing. The other

module utilities' purposes are documented in their manual pages.

9.2. Modules distributed with the kernel

As of version 2.0.30, most of everything is available as a loadable

modules. To use them, first make sure that you don't configure them

into the regular kernel; that is, don't say y to it during `make

config'. Compile a new kernel and reboot with it. Then, cd to

/usr/src/linux again, and do a `make modules'. This compiles all of

the modules which you did not specify in the kernel configuration, and

places links to them in /usr/src/linux/modules. You can use them

straight from that directory or execute `make modules_install', which

installs them in /lib/modules/x.y.z, where x.y.z is the kernel

release.

 

This can be especially handy with filesystems. You may not use the

minix or msdos filesystems frequently. For example, if I encountered

an msdos (shudder) floppy, I would insmod

/usr/src/linux/modules/msdos.o, and then rmmod msdos when finished.

This procedure saves about 50k of RAM in the kernel during normal

operation. A small note is in order for the minix filesystem: you

should always configure it directly into the kernel for use in

``rescue'' disks.

 

 

10. Tips and tricks

 

 

10.1. Redirecting output of the make or patch commands

 

If you would like logs of what those `make' or `patch' commands did,

you can redirect output to a file. First, find out what shell you're

running: `grep root /etc/passwd' and look for something like

`/bin/csh'.

 

If you use sh or bash,

(command) 2>&1 | tee (output file)

 

will place a copy of (command)'s output in the file `(output file)'.

 

For csh or tcsh, use

(command) |& tee (output file)

 

 

 

For rc (Note: you probably do not use rc) it's

(command) >[2=1] | tee (output file)

 

 

 

 

10.2. Conditional kernel install

Other than using floppy disks, there are several methods of testing

out a new kernel without touching the old one. Unlike many other Unix

flavors, LILO has the ability to boot a kernel from anywhere on the

disk (if you have a large (500 MB or above) disk, please read over the

LILO documentation on how this may cause problems). So, if you add

something similar to

image = /usr/src/linux/arch/i386/boot/bzImage

label = new_kernel

 

to the end of your LILO configuration file, you can choose to run a

newly compiled kernel without touching your old /vmlinuz (after run&SHY;

ning lilo, of course). The easiest way to tell LILO to boot a new ker&SHY;

nel is to press the shift key at bootup time (when it says LILO on the

screen, and nothing else), which gives you a prompt. At this point,

you can enter `new_kernel' to boot the new kernel.

If you wish to keep several different kernel source trees on your

system at the same time (this can take up a lot of disk space; be

careful), the most common way is to name them /usr/src/linux-x.y.z,

where x.y.z is the kernel version. You can then ``select'' a source

tree with a symbolic link; for example, `ln -sf linux-1.2.2

/usr/src/linux' would make the 1.2.2 tree current. Before creating a

symbolic link like this, make certain that the last argument to ln is

not a real directory (old symbolic links are fine); the result will

not be what you expect.

 

 

10.3. Kernel updates

Russell Nelson (nelson@crynwr.com) summarizes the changes in new

kernel releases. These are short, and you might like to look at them

before an upgrade. They are available with anonymous ftp from

ftp.emlist.com in pub/kchanges or through the URL

http://www.crynwr.com/kchanges

 

 

 

 

11. Other relevant HOWTOs that might be useful

 

· Sound-HOWTO: sound cards and utilities

· SCSI-HOWTO: all about SCSI controllers and devices

· NET-2-HOWTO: networking

· PPP-HOWTO: PPP networking in particular

· PCMCIA-HOWTO: about the drivers for your notebook

· ELF-HOWTO: ELF: what it is, converting..

· Hardware-HOWTO: overview of supported hardware

· Module mini-HOWTO: more on kernel modules

· Kerneld mini-HOWTO: about kerneld

· BogoMips mini-HOWTO: in case you were wondering

 

 

 

12. Misc

 

 

12.1. Author

 

The author and maintainer of the Linux Kernel-HOWTO is Brian Ward

(bri@cs.uchicago.edu). Please send me any comments, additions,

corrections (Corrections are, in particular, the most important to

me.).

 

You can take a look at my `home page' at one of these URLs:

http://www.math.psu.edu/bri/

http://blah.math.tu-graz.ac.at/~bri/

 

 

 

Even though I try to be attentive as possible with mail, please

remember that I get a lot of it every day, so it may take a little

time to get back to you. Especially when emailing me with a question,

please try extra hard to be clear and detailed in your message. If

you're writing about non-working hardware (or something like that), I

need to know what your hardware configureation is. If you report an

error, don't just say ``I tried this but it gave an error;'' I need to

know what the error was. I would also like to know what versions of

the kernel, gcc, and libc you're using. If you just tell me you're

using this-or-that distribution, it won't tell me much at all. I don't

care if you ask simple questions; remember, if you don't ask, you may

never get an answer! I'd like to thank everyone who has given me

feedback.

If your question does not relate to the kernel, or is in some language

that I don't understand, I may not answer.

 

If you mailed me and did not get an answer within a resonable amount

of time (three weeks or more), then chances are that I accidentally

deleted your message or something (sorry). Please try again.

 

I get a lot of mail about thing which are actually hardware problems

or issues. That's OK, but please try to keep in mind that I'm not

familiar with all of the hardware in the world. I use AMD processors,

Adaptec and Sybios SCSI controllers, and IBM SCSI disks.

 

Version -0.1 was written on October 3, 1994. This document is

available in SGML, PostScript, TeX, roff, and plain-text formats.

 

 

12.2. To do

The ``Tips and tricks'' section is a little small. I hope to expand on

it with suggestions from others.

So is ``Additional packages.''

More debugging/crash recovery info needed.

 

 

12.3. Contributions

A small part of Linus' README (kernel hacking options) is inclusive.

(Thanks, Linus!)

uc@brian.lunetix.de (Ulrich Callmeier): patch -s and xargs.

quinlan@yggdrasil.com (Daniel Quinlan): corrections and additions in

many sections.

nat@nat@nataa.fr.eu.org (Nat Makarevitch): mrproper, tar -p, many

other things

boldt@math.ucsb.edu (Axel Boldt): collected descriptions of kernel

configuration options on the net; then provided me with the list

lembark@wrkhors.psyber.com (Steve Lembark): multiple boot suggestion

kbriggs@earwax.pd.uwa.edu.au (Keith Briggs): some corrections and

suggestions

rmcguire@freenet.columbus.oh.us (Ryan McGuire): makeables additions

dumas@excalibur.ibp.fr (Eric Dumas): French translation

simazaki@ab11.yamanashi.ac.jp (Yasutada Shimazaki): Japanese

translation

jjamor@lml.ls.fi.upm.es (Juan Jose Amor Iglesias): Spanish translation

mva@sbbs.se (Martin Wahlen): Swedish translation

jzp1218@stud.u-szeged.hu (Zoltan Vamosi): Hungarian translation

bart@mat.uni.torun.pl (Bartosz Maruszewski): Polish translation

donahue@tiber.nist.gov (Michael J Donahue): typos, winner of the

``sliced bread competition''

rms@gnu.ai.mit.edu (Richard Stallman): ``free'' documentation

concept/distribution notice

dak@Pool.Informatik.RWTH-Aachen.DE (David Kastrup): NFS thing

esr@snark.thyrsus.com (Eric Raymond): various tidbits

 

The people who have sent me mail with questions and problems have also

been quite helpful.

 

 

12.4. Copyright notice, License, and all that stuff

Copyright © Brian Ward, 1994-1999.

Permission is granted to make and distribute copies of this manual

provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved

on all copies.

 

Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this

manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the

derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice

identical to this one. Translations fall under the catagory of

``modified versions.''

Warranty: None.

 

Recommendations: Commercial redistribution is allowed and encouraged;

however, it is strongly recommended that the redistributor contact the

author before the redistribution, in the interest of keeping things

up-to-date (you could send me a copy of the thing you're making while

you're at it). Translators are also advised to contact the author

before translating. The printed version looks nicer. Recycle.


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