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Linux/Documentation/Changes

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  1 .. _changes:
  2 
  3 Minimal requirements to compile the Kernel
  4 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
  5 
  6 Intro
  7 =====
  8 
  9 This document is designed to provide a list of the minimum levels of
 10 software necessary to run the current kernel version.
 11 
 12 This document is originally based on my "Changes" file for 2.0.x kernels
 13 and therefore owes credit to the same people as that file (Jared Mauch,
 14 Axel Boldt, Alessandro Sigala, and countless other users all over the
 15 'net).
 16 
 17 Current Minimal Requirements
 18 ****************************
 19 
 20 Upgrade to at **least** these software revisions before thinking you've
 21 encountered a bug!  If you're unsure what version you're currently
 22 running, the suggested command should tell you.
 23 
 24 Again, keep in mind that this list assumes you are already functionally
 25 running a Linux kernel.  Also, not all tools are necessary on all
 26 systems; obviously, if you don't have any PC Card hardware, for example,
 27 you probably needn't concern yourself with pcmciautils.
 28 
 29 ====================== ===============  ========================================
 30         Program        Minimal version       Command to check the version
 31 ====================== ===============  ========================================
 32 GNU C                  5.1              gcc --version
 33 Clang/LLVM (optional)  13.0.1           clang --version
 34 Rust (optional)        1.78.0           rustc --version
 35 bindgen (optional)     0.65.1           bindgen --version
 36 GNU make               4.0              make --version
 37 bash                   4.2              bash --version
 38 binutils               2.25             ld -v
 39 flex                   2.5.35           flex --version
 40 bison                  2.0              bison --version
 41 pahole                 1.16             pahole --version
 42 util-linux             2.10o            mount --version
 43 kmod                   13               depmod -V
 44 e2fsprogs              1.41.4           e2fsck -V
 45 jfsutils               1.1.3            fsck.jfs -V
 46 reiserfsprogs          3.6.3            reiserfsck -V
 47 xfsprogs               2.6.0            xfs_db -V
 48 squashfs-tools         4.0              mksquashfs -version
 49 btrfs-progs            0.18             btrfsck
 50 pcmciautils            004              pccardctl -V
 51 quota-tools            3.09             quota -V
 52 PPP                    2.4.0            pppd --version
 53 nfs-utils              1.0.5            showmount --version
 54 procps                 3.2.0            ps --version
 55 udev                   081              udevd --version
 56 grub                   0.93             grub --version || grub-install --version
 57 mcelog                 0.6              mcelog --version
 58 iptables               1.4.2            iptables -V
 59 openssl & libcrypto    1.0.0            openssl version
 60 bc                     1.06.95          bc --version
 61 Sphinx\ [#f1]_         2.4.4            sphinx-build --version
 62 cpio                   any              cpio --version
 63 GNU tar                1.28             tar --version
 64 gtags (optional)       6.6.5            gtags --version
 65 mkimage (optional)     2017.01          mkimage --version
 66 Python (optional)      3.5.x            python3 --version
 67 GNU AWK (optional)     5.1.0            gawk --version
 68 ====================== ===============  ========================================
 69 
 70 .. [#f1] Sphinx is needed only to build the Kernel documentation
 71 
 72 Kernel compilation
 73 ******************
 74 
 75 GCC
 76 ---
 77 
 78 The gcc version requirements may vary depending on the type of CPU in your
 79 computer.
 80 
 81 Clang/LLVM (optional)
 82 ---------------------
 83 
 84 The latest formal release of clang and LLVM utils (according to
 85 `releases.llvm.org <https://releases.llvm.org>`_) are supported for building
 86 kernels. Older releases aren't guaranteed to work, and we may drop workarounds
 87 from the kernel that were used to support older versions. Please see additional
 88 docs on :ref:`Building Linux with Clang/LLVM <kbuild_llvm>`.
 89 
 90 Rust (optional)
 91 ---------------
 92 
 93 A recent version of the Rust compiler is required.
 94 
 95 Please see Documentation/rust/quick-start.rst for instructions on how to
 96 satisfy the build requirements of Rust support. In particular, the ``Makefile``
 97 target ``rustavailable`` is useful to check why the Rust toolchain may not
 98 be detected.
 99 
100 bindgen (optional)
101 ------------------
102 
103 ``bindgen`` is used to generate the Rust bindings to the C side of the kernel.
104 It depends on ``libclang``.
105 
106 Make
107 ----
108 
109 You will need GNU make 4.0 or later to build the kernel.
110 
111 Bash
112 ----
113 
114 Some bash scripts are used for the kernel build.
115 Bash 4.2 or newer is needed.
116 
117 Binutils
118 --------
119 
120 Binutils 2.25 or newer is needed to build the kernel.
121 
122 pkg-config
123 ----------
124 
125 The build system, as of 4.18, requires pkg-config to check for installed
126 kconfig tools and to determine flags settings for use in
127 'make {g,x}config'.  Previously pkg-config was being used but not
128 verified or documented.
129 
130 Flex
131 ----
132 
133 Since Linux 4.16, the build system generates lexical analyzers
134 during build.  This requires flex 2.5.35 or later.
135 
136 
137 Bison
138 -----
139 
140 Since Linux 4.16, the build system generates parsers
141 during build.  This requires bison 2.0 or later.
142 
143 pahole
144 ------
145 
146 Since Linux 5.2, if CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO_BTF is selected, the build system
147 generates BTF (BPF Type Format) from DWARF in vmlinux, a bit later from kernel
148 modules as well.  This requires pahole v1.16 or later.
149 
150 It is found in the 'dwarves' or 'pahole' distro packages or from
151 https://fedorapeople.org/~acme/dwarves/.
152 
153 Perl
154 ----
155 
156 You will need perl 5 and the following modules: ``Getopt::Long``,
157 ``Getopt::Std``, ``File::Basename``, and ``File::Find`` to build the kernel.
158 
159 BC
160 --
161 
162 You will need bc to build kernels 3.10 and higher
163 
164 
165 OpenSSL
166 -------
167 
168 Module signing and external certificate handling use the OpenSSL program and
169 crypto library to do key creation and signature generation.
170 
171 You will need openssl to build kernels 3.7 and higher if module signing is
172 enabled.  You will also need openssl development packages to build kernels 4.3
173 and higher.
174 
175 Tar
176 ---
177 
178 GNU tar is needed if you want to enable access to the kernel headers via sysfs
179 (CONFIG_IKHEADERS).
180 
181 gtags / GNU GLOBAL (optional)
182 -----------------------------
183 
184 The kernel build requires GNU GLOBAL version 6.6.5 or later to generate
185 tag files through ``make gtags``.  This is due to its use of the gtags
186 ``-C (--directory)`` flag.
187 
188 mkimage
189 -------
190 
191 This tool is used when building a Flat Image Tree (FIT), commonly used on ARM
192 platforms. The tool is available via the ``u-boot-tools`` package or can be
193 built from the U-Boot source code. See the instructions at
194 https://docs.u-boot.org/en/latest/build/tools.html#building-tools-for-linux
195 
196 GNU AWK
197 -------
198 
199 GNU AWK is needed if you want kernel builds to generate address range data for
200 builtin modules (CONFIG_BUILTIN_MODULE_RANGES).
201 
202 System utilities
203 ****************
204 
205 Architectural changes
206 ---------------------
207 
208 DevFS has been obsoleted in favour of udev
209 (https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/kernel/hotplug/)
210 
211 32-bit UID support is now in place.  Have fun!
212 
213 Linux documentation for functions is transitioning to inline
214 documentation via specially-formatted comments near their
215 definitions in the source.  These comments can be combined with ReST
216 files the Documentation/ directory to make enriched documentation, which can
217 then be converted to PostScript, HTML, LaTex, ePUB and PDF files.
218 In order to convert from ReST format to a format of your choice, you'll need
219 Sphinx.
220 
221 Util-linux
222 ----------
223 
224 New versions of util-linux provide ``fdisk`` support for larger disks,
225 support new options to mount, recognize more supported partition
226 types, and similar goodies.
227 You'll probably want to upgrade.
228 
229 Ksymoops
230 --------
231 
232 If the unthinkable happens and your kernel oopses, you may need the
233 ksymoops tool to decode it, but in most cases you don't.
234 It is generally preferred to build the kernel with ``CONFIG_KALLSYMS`` so
235 that it produces readable dumps that can be used as-is (this also
236 produces better output than ksymoops).  If for some reason your kernel
237 is not build with ``CONFIG_KALLSYMS`` and you have no way to rebuild and
238 reproduce the Oops with that option, then you can still decode that Oops
239 with ksymoops.
240 
241 Mkinitrd
242 --------
243 
244 These changes to the ``/lib/modules`` file tree layout also require that
245 mkinitrd be upgraded.
246 
247 E2fsprogs
248 ---------
249 
250 The latest version of ``e2fsprogs`` fixes several bugs in fsck and
251 debugfs.  Obviously, it's a good idea to upgrade.
252 
253 JFSutils
254 --------
255 
256 The ``jfsutils`` package contains the utilities for the file system.
257 The following utilities are available:
258 
259 - ``fsck.jfs`` - initiate replay of the transaction log, and check
260   and repair a JFS formatted partition.
261 
262 - ``mkfs.jfs`` - create a JFS formatted partition.
263 
264 - other file system utilities are also available in this package.
265 
266 Reiserfsprogs
267 -------------
268 
269 The reiserfsprogs package should be used for reiserfs-3.6.x
270 (Linux kernels 2.4.x). It is a combined package and contains working
271 versions of ``mkreiserfs``, ``resize_reiserfs``, ``debugreiserfs`` and
272 ``reiserfsck``. These utils work on both i386 and alpha platforms.
273 
274 Xfsprogs
275 --------
276 
277 The latest version of ``xfsprogs`` contains ``mkfs.xfs``, ``xfs_db``, and the
278 ``xfs_repair`` utilities, among others, for the XFS filesystem.  It is
279 architecture independent and any version from 2.0.0 onward should
280 work correctly with this version of the XFS kernel code (2.6.0 or
281 later is recommended, due to some significant improvements).
282 
283 PCMCIAutils
284 -----------
285 
286 PCMCIAutils replaces ``pcmcia-cs``. It properly sets up
287 PCMCIA sockets at system startup and loads the appropriate modules
288 for 16-bit PCMCIA devices if the kernel is modularized and the hotplug
289 subsystem is used.
290 
291 Quota-tools
292 -----------
293 
294 Support for 32 bit uid's and gid's is required if you want to use
295 the newer version 2 quota format.  Quota-tools version 3.07 and
296 newer has this support.  Use the recommended version or newer
297 from the table above.
298 
299 Intel IA32 microcode
300 --------------------
301 
302 A driver has been added to allow updating of Intel IA32 microcode,
303 accessible as a normal (misc) character device.  If you are not using
304 udev you may need to::
305 
306   mkdir /dev/cpu
307   mknod /dev/cpu/microcode c 10 184
308   chmod 0644 /dev/cpu/microcode
309 
310 as root before you can use this.  You'll probably also want to
311 get the user-space microcode_ctl utility to use with this.
312 
313 udev
314 ----
315 
316 ``udev`` is a userspace application for populating ``/dev`` dynamically with
317 only entries for devices actually present. ``udev`` replaces the basic
318 functionality of devfs, while allowing persistent device naming for
319 devices.
320 
321 FUSE
322 ----
323 
324 Needs libfuse 2.4.0 or later.  Absolute minimum is 2.3.0 but mount
325 options ``direct_io`` and ``kernel_cache`` won't work.
326 
327 Networking
328 **********
329 
330 General changes
331 ---------------
332 
333 If you have advanced network configuration needs, you should probably
334 consider using the network tools from ip-route2.
335 
336 Packet Filter / NAT
337 -------------------
338 The packet filtering and NAT code uses the same tools like the previous 2.4.x
339 kernel series (iptables).  It still includes backwards-compatibility modules
340 for 2.2.x-style ipchains and 2.0.x-style ipfwadm.
341 
342 PPP
343 ---
344 
345 The PPP driver has been restructured to support multilink and to
346 enable it to operate over diverse media layers.  If you use PPP,
347 upgrade pppd to at least 2.4.0.
348 
349 If you are not using udev, you must have the device file /dev/ppp
350 which can be made by::
351 
352   mknod /dev/ppp c 108 0
353 
354 as root.
355 
356 NFS-utils
357 ---------
358 
359 In ancient (2.4 and earlier) kernels, the nfs server needed to know
360 about any client that expected to be able to access files via NFS.  This
361 information would be given to the kernel by ``mountd`` when the client
362 mounted the filesystem, or by ``exportfs`` at system startup.  exportfs
363 would take information about active clients from ``/var/lib/nfs/rmtab``.
364 
365 This approach is quite fragile as it depends on rmtab being correct
366 which is not always easy, particularly when trying to implement
367 fail-over.  Even when the system is working well, ``rmtab`` suffers from
368 getting lots of old entries that never get removed.
369 
370 With modern kernels we have the option of having the kernel tell mountd
371 when it gets a request from an unknown host, and mountd can give
372 appropriate export information to the kernel.  This removes the
373 dependency on ``rmtab`` and means that the kernel only needs to know about
374 currently active clients.
375 
376 To enable this new functionality, you need to::
377 
378   mount -t nfsd nfsd /proc/fs/nfsd
379 
380 before running exportfs or mountd.  It is recommended that all NFS
381 services be protected from the internet-at-large by a firewall where
382 that is possible.
383 
384 mcelog
385 ------
386 
387 On x86 kernels the mcelog utility is needed to process and log machine check
388 events when ``CONFIG_X86_MCE`` is enabled. Machine check events are errors
389 reported by the CPU. Processing them is strongly encouraged.
390 
391 Kernel documentation
392 ********************
393 
394 Sphinx
395 ------
396 
397 Please see :ref:`sphinx_install` in :ref:`Documentation/doc-guide/sphinx.rst <sphinxdoc>`
398 for details about Sphinx requirements.
399 
400 rustdoc
401 -------
402 
403 ``rustdoc`` is used to generate the documentation for Rust code. Please see
404 Documentation/rust/general-information.rst for more information.
405 
406 Getting updated software
407 ========================
408 
409 Kernel compilation
410 ******************
411 
412 gcc
413 ---
414 
415 - <ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gcc/>
416 
417 Clang/LLVM
418 ----------
419 
420 - :ref:`Getting LLVM <getting_llvm>`.
421 
422 Rust
423 ----
424 
425 - Documentation/rust/quick-start.rst.
426 
427 bindgen
428 -------
429 
430 - Documentation/rust/quick-start.rst.
431 
432 Make
433 ----
434 
435 - <ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/make/>
436 
437 Bash
438 ----
439 
440 - <ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/bash/>
441 
442 Binutils
443 --------
444 
445 - <https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/devel/binutils/>
446 
447 Flex
448 ----
449 
450 - <https://github.com/westes/flex/releases>
451 
452 Bison
453 -----
454 
455 - <ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/bison/>
456 
457 OpenSSL
458 -------
459 
460 - <https://www.openssl.org/>
461 
462 System utilities
463 ****************
464 
465 Util-linux
466 ----------
467 
468 - <https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/>
469 
470 Kmod
471 ----
472 
473 - <https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/kernel/kmod/>
474 - <https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/utils/kernel/kmod/kmod.git>
475 
476 Ksymoops
477 --------
478 
479 - <https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/kernel/ksymoops/v2.4/>
480 
481 Mkinitrd
482 --------
483 
484 - <https://code.launchpad.net/initrd-tools/main>
485 
486 E2fsprogs
487 ---------
488 
489 - <https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/tytso/e2fsprogs/>
490 - <https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/fs/ext2/e2fsprogs.git/>
491 
492 JFSutils
493 --------
494 
495 - <https://jfs.sourceforge.net/>
496 
497 Reiserfsprogs
498 -------------
499 
500 - <https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/jeffm/reiserfsprogs.git/>
501 
502 Xfsprogs
503 --------
504 
505 - <https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/fs/xfs/xfsprogs-dev.git>
506 - <https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/fs/xfs/xfsprogs/>
507 
508 Pcmciautils
509 -----------
510 
511 - <https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/kernel/pcmcia/>
512 
513 Quota-tools
514 -----------
515 
516 - <https://sourceforge.net/projects/linuxquota/>
517 
518 
519 Intel P6 microcode
520 ------------------
521 
522 - <https://downloadcenter.intel.com/>
523 
524 udev
525 ----
526 
527 - <https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/udev.html>
528 
529 FUSE
530 ----
531 
532 - <https://github.com/libfuse/libfuse/releases>
533 
534 mcelog
535 ------
536 
537 - <https://www.mcelog.org/>
538 
539 cpio
540 ----
541 
542 - <https://www.gnu.org/software/cpio/>
543 
544 Networking
545 **********
546 
547 PPP
548 ---
549 
550 - <https://download.samba.org/pub/ppp/>
551 - <https://git.ozlabs.org/?p=ppp.git>
552 - <https://github.com/paulusmack/ppp/>
553 
554 NFS-utils
555 ---------
556 
557 - <https://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=14>
558 - <https://nfs.sourceforge.net/>
559 
560 Iptables
561 --------
562 
563 - <https://netfilter.org/projects/iptables/index.html>
564 
565 Ip-route2
566 ---------
567 
568 - <https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/net/iproute2/>
569 
570 OProfile
571 --------
572 
573 - <https://oprofile.sf.net/download/>
574 
575 Kernel documentation
576 ********************
577 
578 Sphinx
579 ------
580 
581 - <https://www.sphinx-doc.org/>

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