1 .. SPDX-License-Identifier: (GPL-2.0+ OR CC-BY-4.0) 2 .. [see the bottom of this file for redistribution information] 3 4 =========================================== 5 How to quickly build a trimmed Linux kernel 6 =========================================== 7 8 This guide explains how to swiftly build Linux kernels that are ideal for 9 testing purposes, but perfectly fine for day-to-day use, too. 10 11 The essence of the process (aka 'TL;DR') 12 ======================================== 13 14 *[If you are new to compiling Linux, ignore this TLDR and head over to the next 15 section below: it contains a step-by-step guide, which is more detailed, but 16 still brief and easy to follow; that guide and its accompanying reference 17 section also mention alternatives, pitfalls, and additional aspects, all of 18 which might be relevant for you.]* 19 20 If your system uses techniques like Secure Boot, prepare it to permit starting 21 self-compiled Linux kernels; install compilers and everything else needed for 22 building Linux; make sure to have 12 Gigabyte free space in your home directory. 23 Now run the following commands to download fresh Linux mainline sources, which 24 you then use to configure, build and install your own kernel:: 25 26 git clone --depth 1 -b master \ 27 https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/stable/linux.git ~/linux/ 28 cd ~/linux/ 29 # Hint: if you want to apply patches, do it at this point. See below for details. 30 # Hint: it's recommended to tag your build at this point. See below for details. 31 yes "" | make localmodconfig 32 # Hint: at this point you might want to adjust the build configuration; you'll 33 # have to, if you are running Debian. See below for details. 34 make -j $(nproc --all) 35 # Note: on many commodity distributions the next command suffices, but on Arch 36 # Linux, its derivatives, and some others it does not. See below for details. 37 command -v installkernel && sudo make modules_install install 38 reboot 39 40 If you later want to build a newer mainline snapshot, use these commands:: 41 42 cd ~/linux/ 43 git fetch --depth 1 origin 44 # Note: the next command will discard any changes you did to the code: 45 git checkout --force --detach origin/master 46 # Reminder: if you want to (re)apply patches, do it at this point. 47 # Reminder: you might want to add or modify a build tag at this point. 48 make olddefconfig 49 make -j $(nproc --all) 50 # Reminder: the next command on some distributions does not suffice. 51 command -v installkernel && sudo make modules_install install 52 reboot 53 54 Step-by-step guide 55 ================== 56 57 Compiling your own Linux kernel is easy in principle. There are various ways to 58 do it. Which of them actually work and is the best depends on the circumstances. 59 60 This guide describes a way perfectly suited for those who want to quickly 61 install Linux from sources without being bothered by complicated details; the 62 goal is to cover everything typically needed on mainstream Linux distributions 63 running on commodity PC or server hardware. 64 65 The described approach is great for testing purposes, for example to try a 66 proposed fix or to check if a problem was already fixed in the latest codebase. 67 Nonetheless, kernels built this way are also totally fine for day-to-day use 68 while at the same time being easy to keep up to date. 69 70 The following steps describe the important aspects of the process; a 71 comprehensive reference section later explains each of them in more detail. It 72 sometimes also describes alternative approaches, pitfalls, as well as errors 73 that might occur at a particular point -- and how to then get things rolling 74 again. 75 76 .. 77 Note: if you see this note, you are reading the text's source file. You 78 might want to switch to a rendered version, as it makes it a lot easier to 79 quickly look something up in the reference section and afterwards jump back 80 to where you left off. Find a the latest rendered version here: 81 https://docs.kernel.org/admin-guide/quickly-build-trimmed-linux.html 82 83 .. _backup_sbs: 84 85 * Create a fresh backup and put system repair and restore tools at hand, just 86 to be prepared for the unlikely case of something going sideways. 87 88 [:ref:`details<backup>`] 89 90 .. _secureboot_sbs: 91 92 * On platforms with 'Secure Boot' or similar techniques, prepare everything to 93 ensure the system will permit your self-compiled kernel to boot later. The 94 quickest and easiest way to achieve this on commodity x86 systems is to 95 disable such techniques in the BIOS setup utility; alternatively, remove 96 their restrictions through a process initiated by 97 ``mokutil --disable-validation``. 98 99 [:ref:`details<secureboot>`] 100 101 .. _buildrequires_sbs: 102 103 * Install all software required to build a Linux kernel. Often you will need: 104 'bc', 'binutils' ('ld' et al.), 'bison', 'flex', 'gcc', 'git', 'openssl', 105 'pahole', 'perl', and the development headers for 'libelf' and 'openssl'. The 106 reference section shows how to quickly install those on various popular Linux 107 distributions. 108 109 [:ref:`details<buildrequires>`] 110 111 .. _diskspace_sbs: 112 113 * Ensure to have enough free space for building and installing Linux. For the 114 latter 150 Megabyte in /lib/ and 100 in /boot/ are a safe bet. For storing 115 sources and build artifacts 12 Gigabyte in your home directory should 116 typically suffice. If you have less available, be sure to check the reference 117 section for the step that explains adjusting your kernels build 118 configuration: it mentions a trick that reduce the amount of required space 119 in /home/ to around 4 Gigabyte. 120 121 [:ref:`details<diskspace>`] 122 123 .. _sources_sbs: 124 125 * Retrieve the sources of the Linux version you intend to build; then change 126 into the directory holding them, as all further commands in this guide are 127 meant to be executed from there. 128 129 *[Note: the following paragraphs describe how to retrieve the sources by 130 partially cloning the Linux stable git repository. This is called a shallow 131 clone. The reference section explains two alternatives:* :ref:`packaged 132 archives<sources_archive>` *and* :ref:`a full git clone<sources_full>` *; 133 prefer the latter, if downloading a lot of data does not bother you, as that 134 will avoid some* :ref:`peculiar characteristics of shallow clones the 135 reference section explains<sources_shallow>` *.]* 136 137 First, execute the following command to retrieve a fresh mainline codebase:: 138 139 git clone --no-checkout --depth 1 -b master \ 140 https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/stable/linux.git ~/linux/ 141 cd ~/linux/ 142 143 If you want to access recent mainline releases and pre-releases, deepen you 144 clone's history to the oldest mainline version you are interested in:: 145 146 git fetch --shallow-exclude=v6.0 origin 147 148 In case you want to access a stable/longterm release (say v6.1.5), simply add 149 the branch holding that series; afterwards fetch the history at least up to 150 the mainline version that started the series (v6.1):: 151 152 git remote set-branches --add origin linux-6.1.y 153 git fetch --shallow-exclude=v6.0 origin 154 155 Now checkout the code you are interested in. If you just performed the 156 initial clone, you will be able to check out a fresh mainline codebase, which 157 is ideal for checking whether developers already fixed an issue:: 158 159 git checkout --detach origin/master 160 161 If you deepened your clone, you instead of ``origin/master`` can specify the 162 version you deepened to (``v6.0`` above); later releases like ``v6.1`` and 163 pre-release like ``v6.2-rc1`` will work, too. Stable or longterm versions 164 like ``v6.1.5`` work just the same, if you added the appropriate 165 stable/longterm branch as described. 166 167 [:ref:`details<sources>`] 168 169 .. _patching_sbs: 170 171 * In case you want to apply a kernel patch, do so now. Often a command like 172 this will do the trick:: 173 174 patch -p1 < ../proposed-fix.patch 175 176 If the ``-p1`` is actually needed, depends on how the patch was created; in 177 case it does not apply thus try without it. 178 179 If you cloned the sources with git and anything goes sideways, run ``git 180 reset --hard`` to undo any changes to the sources. 181 182 [:ref:`details<patching>`] 183 184 .. _tagging_sbs: 185 186 * If you patched your kernel or have one of the same version installed already, 187 better add a unique tag to the one you are about to build:: 188 189 echo "-proposed_fix" > localversion 190 191 Running ``uname -r`` under your kernel later will then print something like 192 '6.1-rc4-proposed_fix'. 193 194 [:ref:`details<tagging>`] 195 196 .. _configuration_sbs: 197 198 * Create the build configuration for your kernel based on an existing 199 configuration. 200 201 If you already prepared such a '.config' file yourself, copy it to 202 ~/linux/ and run ``make olddefconfig``. 203 204 Use the same command, if your distribution or somebody else already tailored 205 your running kernel to your or your hardware's needs: the make target 206 'olddefconfig' will then try to use that kernel's .config as base. 207 208 Using this make target is fine for everybody else, too -- but you often can 209 save a lot of time by using this command instead:: 210 211 yes "" | make localmodconfig 212 213 This will try to pick your distribution's kernel as base, but then disable 214 modules for any features apparently superfluous for your setup. This will 215 reduce the compile time enormously, especially if you are running an 216 universal kernel from a commodity Linux distribution. 217 218 There is a catch: 'localmodconfig' is likely to disable kernel features you 219 did not use since you booted your Linux -- like drivers for currently 220 disconnected peripherals or a virtualization software not haven't used yet. 221 You can reduce or nearly eliminate that risk with tricks the reference 222 section outlines; but when building a kernel just for quick testing purposes 223 it is often negligible if such features are missing. But you should keep that 224 aspect in mind when using a kernel built with this make target, as it might 225 be the reason why something you only use occasionally stopped working. 226 227 [:ref:`details<configuration>`] 228 229 .. _configmods_sbs: 230 231 * Check if you might want to or have to adjust some kernel configuration 232 options: 233 234 * Evaluate how you want to handle debug symbols. Enable them, if you later 235 might need to decode a stack trace found for example in a 'panic', 'Oops', 236 'warning', or 'BUG'; on the other hand disable them, if you are short on 237 storage space or prefer a smaller kernel binary. See the reference section 238 for details on how to do either. If neither applies, it will likely be fine 239 to simply not bother with this. [:ref:`details<configmods_debugsymbols>`] 240 241 * Are you running Debian? Then to avoid known problems by performing 242 additional adjustments explained in the reference section. 243 [:ref:`details<configmods_distros>`]. 244 245 * If you want to influence the other aspects of the configuration, do so now 246 by using make targets like 'menuconfig' or 'xconfig'. 247 [:ref:`details<configmods_individual>`]. 248 249 .. _build_sbs: 250 251 * Build the image and the modules of your kernel:: 252 253 make -j $(nproc --all) 254 255 If you want your kernel packaged up as deb, rpm, or tar file, see the 256 reference section for alternatives. 257 258 [:ref:`details<build>`] 259 260 .. _install_sbs: 261 262 * Now install your kernel:: 263 264 command -v installkernel && sudo make modules_install install 265 266 Often all left for you to do afterwards is a ``reboot``, as many commodity 267 Linux distributions will then create an initramfs (also known as initrd) and 268 an entry for your kernel in your bootloader's configuration; but on some 269 distributions you have to take care of these two steps manually for reasons 270 the reference section explains. 271 272 On a few distributions like Arch Linux and its derivatives the above command 273 does nothing at all; in that case you have to manually install your kernel, 274 as outlined in the reference section. 275 276 If you are running a immutable Linux distribution, check its documentation 277 and the web to find out how to install your own kernel there. 278 279 [:ref:`details<install>`] 280 281 .. _another_sbs: 282 283 * To later build another kernel you need similar steps, but sometimes slightly 284 different commands. 285 286 First, switch back into the sources tree:: 287 288 cd ~/linux/ 289 290 In case you want to build a version from a stable/longterm series you have 291 not used yet (say 6.2.y), tell git to track it:: 292 293 git remote set-branches --add origin linux-6.2.y 294 295 Now fetch the latest upstream changes; you again need to specify the earliest 296 version you care about, as git otherwise might retrieve the entire commit 297 history:: 298 299 git fetch --shallow-exclude=v6.0 origin 300 301 Now switch to the version you are interested in -- but be aware the command 302 used here will discard any modifications you performed, as they would 303 conflict with the sources you want to checkout:: 304 305 git checkout --force --detach origin/master 306 307 At this point you might want to patch the sources again or set/modify a build 308 tag, as explained earlier. Afterwards adjust the build configuration to the 309 new codebase using olddefconfig, which will now adjust the configuration file 310 you prepared earlier using localmodconfig (~/linux/.config) for your next 311 kernel:: 312 313 # reminder: if you want to apply patches, do it at this point 314 # reminder: you might want to update your build tag at this point 315 make olddefconfig 316 317 Now build your kernel:: 318 319 make -j $(nproc --all) 320 321 Afterwards install the kernel as outlined above:: 322 323 command -v installkernel && sudo make modules_install install 324 325 [:ref:`details<another>`] 326 327 .. _uninstall_sbs: 328 329 * Your kernel is easy to remove later, as its parts are only stored in two 330 places and clearly identifiable by the kernel's release name. Just ensure to 331 not delete the kernel you are running, as that might render your system 332 unbootable. 333 334 Start by deleting the directory holding your kernel's modules, which is named 335 after its release name -- '6.0.1-foobar' in the following example:: 336 337 sudo rm -rf /lib/modules/6.0.1-foobar 338 339 Now try the following command, which on some distributions will delete all 340 other kernel files installed while also removing the kernel's entry from the 341 bootloader configuration:: 342 343 command -v kernel-install && sudo kernel-install -v remove 6.0.1-foobar 344 345 If that command does not output anything or fails, see the reference section; 346 do the same if any files named '*6.0.1-foobar*' remain in /boot/. 347 348 [:ref:`details<uninstall>`] 349 350 .. _submit_improvements: 351 352 Did you run into trouble following any of the above steps that is not cleared up 353 by the reference section below? Or do you have ideas how to improve the text? 354 Then please take a moment of your time and let the maintainer of this document 355 know by email (Thorsten Leemhuis <linux@leemhuis.info>), ideally while CCing the 356 Linux docs mailing list (linux-doc@vger.kernel.org). Such feedback is vital to 357 improve this document further, which is in everybody's interest, as it will 358 enable more people to master the task described here. 359 360 Reference section for the step-by-step guide 361 ============================================ 362 363 This section holds additional information for each of the steps in the above 364 guide. 365 366 .. _backup: 367 368 Prepare for emergencies 369 ----------------------- 370 371 *Create a fresh backup and put system repair and restore tools at hand* 372 [:ref:`... <backup_sbs>`] 373 374 Remember, you are dealing with computers, which sometimes do unexpected things 375 -- especially if you fiddle with crucial parts like the kernel of an operating 376 system. That's what you are about to do in this process. Hence, better prepare 377 for something going sideways, even if that should not happen. 378 379 [:ref:`back to step-by-step guide <backup_sbs>`] 380 381 .. _secureboot: 382 383 Dealing with techniques like Secure Boot 384 ---------------------------------------- 385 386 *On platforms with 'Secure Boot' or similar techniques, prepare everything to 387 ensure the system will permit your self-compiled kernel to boot later.* 388 [:ref:`... <secureboot_sbs>`] 389 390 Many modern systems allow only certain operating systems to start; they thus by 391 default will reject booting self-compiled kernels. 392 393 You ideally deal with this by making your platform trust your self-built kernels 394 with the help of a certificate and signing. How to do that is not described 395 here, as it requires various steps that would take the text too far away from 396 its purpose; 'Documentation/admin-guide/module-signing.rst' and various web 397 sides already explain this in more detail. 398 399 Temporarily disabling solutions like Secure Boot is another way to make your own 400 Linux boot. On commodity x86 systems it is possible to do this in the BIOS Setup 401 utility; the steps to do so are not described here, as they greatly vary between 402 machines. 403 404 On mainstream x86 Linux distributions there is a third and universal option: 405 disable all Secure Boot restrictions for your Linux environment. You can 406 initiate this process by running ``mokutil --disable-validation``; this will 407 tell you to create a one-time password, which is safe to write down. Now 408 restart; right after your BIOS performed all self-tests the bootloader Shim will 409 show a blue box with a message 'Press any key to perform MOK management'. Hit 410 some key before the countdown exposes. This will open a menu and choose 'Change 411 Secure Boot state' there. Shim's 'MokManager' will now ask you to enter three 412 randomly chosen characters from the one-time password specified earlier. Once 413 you provided them, confirm that you really want to disable the validation. 414 Afterwards, permit MokManager to reboot the machine. 415 416 [:ref:`back to step-by-step guide <secureboot_sbs>`] 417 418 .. _buildrequires: 419 420 Install build requirements 421 -------------------------- 422 423 *Install all software required to build a Linux kernel.* 424 [:ref:`...<buildrequires_sbs>`] 425 426 The kernel is pretty stand-alone, but besides tools like the compiler you will 427 sometimes need a few libraries to build one. How to install everything needed 428 depends on your Linux distribution and the configuration of the kernel you are 429 about to build. 430 431 Here are a few examples what you typically need on some mainstream 432 distributions: 433 434 * Debian, Ubuntu, and derivatives:: 435 436 sudo apt install bc binutils bison dwarves flex gcc git make openssl \ 437 pahole perl-base libssl-dev libelf-dev 438 439 * Fedora and derivatives:: 440 441 sudo dnf install binutils /usr/include/{libelf.h,openssl/pkcs7.h} \ 442 /usr/bin/{bc,bison,flex,gcc,git,openssl,make,perl,pahole} 443 444 * openSUSE and derivatives:: 445 446 sudo zypper install bc binutils bison dwarves flex gcc git make perl-base \ 447 openssl openssl-devel libelf-dev 448 449 In case you wonder why these lists include openssl and its development headers: 450 they are needed for the Secure Boot support, which many distributions enable in 451 their kernel configuration for x86 machines. 452 453 Sometimes you will need tools for compression formats like bzip2, gzip, lz4, 454 lzma, lzo, xz, or zstd as well. 455 456 You might need additional libraries and their development headers in case you 457 perform tasks not covered in this guide. For example, zlib will be needed when 458 building kernel tools from the tools/ directory; adjusting the build 459 configuration with make targets like 'menuconfig' or 'xconfig' will require 460 development headers for ncurses or Qt5. 461 462 [:ref:`back to step-by-step guide <buildrequires_sbs>`] 463 464 .. _diskspace: 465 466 Space requirements 467 ------------------ 468 469 *Ensure to have enough free space for building and installing Linux.* 470 [:ref:`... <diskspace_sbs>`] 471 472 The numbers mentioned are rough estimates with a big extra charge to be on the 473 safe side, so often you will need less. 474 475 If you have space constraints, remember to read the reference section when you 476 reach the :ref:`section about configuration adjustments' <configmods>`, as 477 ensuring debug symbols are disabled will reduce the consumed disk space by quite 478 a few gigabytes. 479 480 [:ref:`back to step-by-step guide <diskspace_sbs>`] 481 482 483 .. _sources: 484 485 Download the sources 486 -------------------- 487 488 *Retrieve the sources of the Linux version you intend to build.* 489 [:ref:`...<sources_sbs>`] 490 491 The step-by-step guide outlines how to retrieve Linux' sources using a shallow 492 git clone. There is :ref:`more to tell about this method<sources_shallow>` and 493 two alternate ways worth describing: :ref:`packaged archives<sources_archive>` 494 and :ref:`a full git clone<sources_full>`. And the aspects ':ref:`wouldn't it 495 be wiser to use a proper pre-release than the latest mainline code 496 <sources_snapshot>`' and ':ref:`how to get an even fresher mainline codebase 497 <sources_fresher>`' need elaboration, too. 498 499 Note, to keep things simple the commands used in this guide store the build 500 artifacts in the source tree. If you prefer to separate them, simply add 501 something like ``O=~/linux-builddir/`` to all make calls; also adjust the path 502 in all commands that add files or modify any generated (like your '.config'). 503 504 [:ref:`back to step-by-step guide <sources_sbs>`] 505 506 .. _sources_shallow: 507 508 Noteworthy characteristics of shallow clones 509 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 510 511 The step-by-step guide uses a shallow clone, as it is the best solution for most 512 of this document's target audience. There are a few aspects of this approach 513 worth mentioning: 514 515 * This document in most places uses ``git fetch`` with ``--shallow-exclude=`` 516 to specify the earliest version you care about (or to be precise: its git 517 tag). You alternatively can use the parameter ``--shallow-since=`` to specify 518 an absolute (say ``'2023-07-15'``) or relative (``'12 months'``) date to 519 define the depth of the history you want to download. As a second 520 alternative, you can also specify a certain depth explicitly with a parameter 521 like ``--depth=1``, unless you add branches for stable/longterm kernels. 522 523 * When running ``git fetch``, remember to always specify the oldest version, 524 the time you care about, or an explicit depth as shown in the step-by-step 525 guide. Otherwise you will risk downloading nearly the entire git history, 526 which will consume quite a bit of time and bandwidth while also stressing the 527 servers. 528 529 Note, you do not have to use the same version or date all the time. But when 530 you change it over time, git will deepen or flatten the history to the 531 specified point. That allows you to retrieve versions you initially thought 532 you did not need -- or it will discard the sources of older versions, for 533 example in case you want to free up some disk space. The latter will happen 534 automatically when using ``--shallow-since=`` or 535 ``--depth=``. 536 537 * Be warned, when deepening your clone you might encounter an error like 538 'fatal: error in object: unshallow cafecaca0c0dacafecaca0c0dacafecaca0c0da'. 539 In that case run ``git repack -d`` and try again`` 540 541 * In case you want to revert changes from a certain version (say Linux 6.3) or 542 perform a bisection (v6.2..v6.3), better tell ``git fetch`` to retrieve 543 objects up to three versions earlier (e.g. 6.0): ``git describe`` will then 544 be able to describe most commits just like it would in a full git clone. 545 546 [:ref:`back to step-by-step guide <sources_sbs>`] [:ref:`back to section intro <sources>`] 547 548 .. _sources_archive: 549 550 Downloading the sources using a packages archive 551 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 552 553 People new to compiling Linux often assume downloading an archive via the 554 front-page of https://kernel.org is the best approach to retrieve Linux' 555 sources. It actually can be, if you are certain to build just one particular 556 kernel version without changing any code. Thing is: you might be sure this will 557 be the case, but in practice it often will turn out to be a wrong assumption. 558 559 That's because when reporting or debugging an issue developers will often ask to 560 give another version a try. They also might suggest temporarily undoing a commit 561 with ``git revert`` or might provide various patches to try. Sometimes reporters 562 will also be asked to use ``git bisect`` to find the change causing a problem. 563 These things rely on git or are a lot easier and quicker to handle with it. 564 565 A shallow clone also does not add any significant overhead. For example, when 566 you use ``git clone --depth=1`` to create a shallow clone of the latest mainline 567 codebase git will only retrieve a little more data than downloading the latest 568 mainline pre-release (aka 'rc') via the front-page of kernel.org would. 569 570 A shallow clone therefore is often the better choice. If you nevertheless want 571 to use a packaged source archive, download one via kernel.org; afterwards 572 extract its content to some directory and change to the subdirectory created 573 during extraction. The rest of the step-by-step guide will work just fine, apart 574 from things that rely on git -- but this mainly concerns the section on 575 successive builds of other versions. 576 577 [:ref:`back to step-by-step guide <sources_sbs>`] [:ref:`back to section intro <sources>`] 578 579 .. _sources_full: 580 581 Downloading the sources using a full git clone 582 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 583 584 If downloading and storing a lot of data (~4,4 Gigabyte as of early 2023) is 585 nothing that bothers you, instead of a shallow clone perform a full git clone 586 instead. You then will avoid the specialties mentioned above and will have all 587 versions and individual commits at hand at any time:: 588 589 curl -L \ 590 https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/stable/linux.git/clone.bundle \ 591 -o linux-stable.git.bundle 592 git clone linux-stable.git.bundle ~/linux/ 593 rm linux-stable.git.bundle 594 cd ~/linux/ 595 git remote set-url origin \ 596 https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/stable/linux.git 597 git fetch origin 598 git checkout --detach origin/master 599 600 [:ref:`back to step-by-step guide <sources_sbs>`] [:ref:`back to section intro <sources>`] 601 602 .. _sources_snapshot: 603 604 Proper pre-releases (RCs) vs. latest mainline 605 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 606 607 When cloning the sources using git and checking out origin/master, you often 608 will retrieve a codebase that is somewhere between the latest and the next 609 release or pre-release. This almost always is the code you want when giving 610 mainline a shot: pre-releases like v6.1-rc5 are in no way special, as they do 611 not get any significant extra testing before being published. 612 613 There is one exception: you might want to stick to the latest mainline release 614 (say v6.1) before its successor's first pre-release (v6.2-rc1) is out. That is 615 because compiler errors and other problems are more likely to occur during this 616 time, as mainline then is in its 'merge window': a usually two week long phase, 617 in which the bulk of the changes for the next release is merged. 618 619 [:ref:`back to step-by-step guide <sources_sbs>`] [:ref:`back to section intro <sources>`] 620 621 .. _sources_fresher: 622 623 Avoiding the mainline lag 624 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 625 626 The explanations for both the shallow clone and the full clone both retrieve the 627 code from the Linux stable git repository. That makes things simpler for this 628 document's audience, as it allows easy access to both mainline and 629 stable/longterm releases. This approach has just one downside: 630 631 Changes merged into the mainline repository are only synced to the master branch 632 of the Linux stable repository every few hours. This lag most of the time is 633 not something to worry about; but in case you really need the latest code, just 634 add the mainline repo as additional remote and checkout the code from there:: 635 636 git remote add mainline \ 637 https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git 638 git fetch mainline 639 git checkout --detach mainline/master 640 641 When doing this with a shallow clone, remember to call ``git fetch`` with one 642 of the parameters described earlier to limit the depth. 643 644 [:ref:`back to step-by-step guide <sources_sbs>`] [:ref:`back to section intro <sources>`] 645 646 .. _patching: 647 648 Patch the sources (optional) 649 ---------------------------- 650 651 *In case you want to apply a kernel patch, do so now.* 652 [:ref:`...<patching_sbs>`] 653 654 This is the point where you might want to patch your kernel -- for example when 655 a developer proposed a fix and asked you to check if it helps. The step-by-step 656 guide already explains everything crucial here. 657 658 [:ref:`back to step-by-step guide <patching_sbs>`] 659 660 .. _tagging: 661 662 Tagging this kernel build (optional, often wise) 663 ------------------------------------------------ 664 665 *If you patched your kernel or already have that kernel version installed, 666 better tag your kernel by extending its release name:* 667 [:ref:`...<tagging_sbs>`] 668 669 Tagging your kernel will help avoid confusion later, especially when you patched 670 your kernel. Adding an individual tag will also ensure the kernel's image and 671 its modules are installed in parallel to any existing kernels. 672 673 There are various ways to add such a tag. The step-by-step guide realizes one by 674 creating a 'localversion' file in your build directory from which the kernel 675 build scripts will automatically pick up the tag. You can later change that file 676 to use a different tag in subsequent builds or simply remove that file to dump 677 the tag. 678 679 [:ref:`back to step-by-step guide <tagging_sbs>`] 680 681 .. _configuration: 682 683 Define the build configuration for your kernel 684 ---------------------------------------------- 685 686 *Create the build configuration for your kernel based on an existing 687 configuration.* [:ref:`... <configuration_sbs>`] 688 689 There are various aspects for this steps that require a more careful 690 explanation: 691 692 Pitfalls when using another configuration file as base 693 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 694 695 Make targets like localmodconfig and olddefconfig share a few common snares you 696 want to be aware of: 697 698 * These targets will reuse a kernel build configuration in your build directory 699 (e.g. '~/linux/.config'), if one exists. In case you want to start from 700 scratch you thus need to delete it. 701 702 * The make targets try to find the configuration for your running kernel 703 automatically, but might choose poorly. A line like '# using defaults found 704 in /boot/config-6.0.7-250.fc36.x86_64' or 'using config: 705 '/boot/config-6.0.7-250.fc36.x86_64' tells you which file they picked. If 706 that is not the intended one, simply store it as '~/linux/.config' 707 before using these make targets. 708 709 * Unexpected things might happen if you try to use a config file prepared for 710 one kernel (say v6.0) on an older generation (say v5.15). In that case you 711 might want to use a configuration as base which your distribution utilized 712 when they used that or an slightly older kernel version. 713 714 Influencing the configuration 715 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 716 717 The make target olddefconfig and the ``yes "" |`` used when utilizing 718 localmodconfig will set any undefined build options to their default value. This 719 among others will disable many kernel features that were introduced after your 720 base kernel was released. 721 722 If you want to set these configurations options manually, use ``oldconfig`` 723 instead of ``olddefconfig`` or omit the ``yes "" |`` when utilizing 724 localmodconfig. Then for each undefined configuration option you will be asked 725 how to proceed. In case you are unsure what to answer, simply hit 'enter' to 726 apply the default value. 727 728 Big pitfall when using localmodconfig 729 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 730 731 As explained briefly in the step-by-step guide already: with localmodconfig it 732 can easily happen that your self-built kernel will lack modules for tasks you 733 did not perform before utilizing this make target. That's because those tasks 734 require kernel modules that are normally autoloaded when you perform that task 735 for the first time; if you didn't perform that task at least once before using 736 localmodonfig, the latter will thus assume these modules are superfluous and 737 disable them. 738 739 You can try to avoid this by performing typical tasks that often will autoload 740 additional kernel modules: start a VM, establish VPN connections, loop-mount a 741 CD/DVD ISO, mount network shares (CIFS, NFS, ...), and connect all external 742 devices (2FA keys, headsets, webcams, ...) as well as storage devices with file 743 systems you otherwise do not utilize (btrfs, ext4, FAT, NTFS, XFS, ...). But it 744 is hard to think of everything that might be needed -- even kernel developers 745 often forget one thing or another at this point. 746 747 Do not let that risk bother you, especially when compiling a kernel only for 748 testing purposes: everything typically crucial will be there. And if you forget 749 something important you can turn on a missing feature later and quickly run the 750 commands to compile and install a better kernel. 751 752 But if you plan to build and use self-built kernels regularly, you might want to 753 reduce the risk by recording which modules your system loads over the course of 754 a few weeks. You can automate this with `modprobed-db 755 <https://github.com/graysky2/modprobed-db>`_. Afterwards use ``LSMOD=<path>`` to 756 point localmodconfig to the list of modules modprobed-db noticed being used:: 757 758 yes "" | make LSMOD="${HOME}"/.config/modprobed.db localmodconfig 759 760 Remote building with localmodconfig 761 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 762 763 If you want to use localmodconfig to build a kernel for another machine, run 764 ``lsmod > lsmod_foo-machine`` on it and transfer that file to your build host. 765 Now point the build scripts to the file like this: ``yes "" | make 766 LSMOD=~/lsmod_foo-machine localmodconfig``. Note, in this case 767 you likely want to copy a base kernel configuration from the other machine over 768 as well and place it as .config in your build directory. 769 770 [:ref:`back to step-by-step guide <configuration_sbs>`] 771 772 .. _configmods: 773 774 Adjust build configuration 775 -------------------------- 776 777 *Check if you might want to or have to adjust some kernel configuration 778 options:* 779 780 Depending on your needs you at this point might want or have to adjust some 781 kernel configuration options. 782 783 .. _configmods_debugsymbols: 784 785 Debug symbols 786 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 787 788 *Evaluate how you want to handle debug symbols.* 789 [:ref:`...<configmods_sbs>`] 790 791 Most users do not need to care about this, it's often fine to leave everything 792 as it is; but you should take a closer look at this, if you might need to decode 793 a stack trace or want to reduce space consumption. 794 795 Having debug symbols available can be important when your kernel throws a 796 'panic', 'Oops', 'warning', or 'BUG' later when running, as then you will be 797 able to find the exact place where the problem occurred in the code. But 798 collecting and embedding the needed debug information takes time and consumes 799 quite a bit of space: in late 2022 the build artifacts for a typical x86 kernel 800 configured with localmodconfig consumed around 5 Gigabyte of space with debug 801 symbols, but less than 1 when they were disabled. The resulting kernel image and 802 the modules are bigger as well, which increases load times. 803 804 Hence, if you want a small kernel and are unlikely to decode a stack trace 805 later, you might want to disable debug symbols to avoid above downsides:: 806 807 ./scripts/config --file .config -d DEBUG_INFO \ 808 -d DEBUG_INFO_DWARF_TOOLCHAIN_DEFAULT -d DEBUG_INFO_DWARF4 \ 809 -d DEBUG_INFO_DWARF5 -e CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO_NONE 810 make olddefconfig 811 812 You on the other hand definitely want to enable them, if there is a decent 813 chance that you need to decode a stack trace later (as explained by 'Decode 814 failure messages' in Documentation/admin-guide/tainted-kernels.rst in more 815 detail):: 816 817 ./scripts/config --file .config -d DEBUG_INFO_NONE -e DEBUG_KERNEL 818 -e DEBUG_INFO -e DEBUG_INFO_DWARF_TOOLCHAIN_DEFAULT -e KALLSYMS -e KALLSYMS_ALL 819 make olddefconfig 820 821 Note, many mainstream distributions enable debug symbols in their kernel 822 configurations -- make targets like localmodconfig and olddefconfig thus will 823 often pick that setting up. 824 825 [:ref:`back to step-by-step guide <configmods_sbs>`] 826 827 .. _configmods_distros: 828 829 Distro specific adjustments 830 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 831 832 *Are you running* [:ref:`... <configmods_sbs>`] 833 834 The following sections help you to avoid build problems that are known to occur 835 when following this guide on a few commodity distributions. 836 837 **Debian:** 838 839 * Remove a stale reference to a certificate file that would cause your build to 840 fail:: 841 842 ./scripts/config --file .config --set-str SYSTEM_TRUSTED_KEYS '' 843 844 Alternatively, download the needed certificate and make that configuration 845 option point to it, as `the Debian handbook explains in more detail 846 <https://debian-handbook.info/browse/stable/sect.kernel-compilation.html>`_ 847 -- or generate your own, as explained in 848 Documentation/admin-guide/module-signing.rst. 849 850 [:ref:`back to step-by-step guide <configmods_sbs>`] 851 852 .. _configmods_individual: 853 854 Individual adjustments 855 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 856 857 *If you want to influence the other aspects of the configuration, do so 858 now* [:ref:`... <configmods_sbs>`] 859 860 You at this point can use a command like ``make menuconfig`` to enable or 861 disable certain features using a text-based user interface; to use a graphical 862 configuration utilize, use the make target ``xconfig`` or ``gconfig`` instead. 863 All of them require development libraries from toolkits they are based on 864 (ncurses, Qt5, Gtk2); an error message will tell you if something required is 865 missing. 866 867 [:ref:`back to step-by-step guide <configmods_sbs>`] 868 869 .. _build: 870 871 Build your kernel 872 ----------------- 873 874 *Build the image and the modules of your kernel* [:ref:`... <build_sbs>`] 875 876 A lot can go wrong at this stage, but the instructions below will help you help 877 yourself. Another subsection explains how to directly package your kernel up as 878 deb, rpm or tar file. 879 880 Dealing with build errors 881 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 882 883 When a build error occurs, it might be caused by some aspect of your machine's 884 setup that often can be fixed quickly; other times though the problem lies in 885 the code and can only be fixed by a developer. A close examination of the 886 failure messages coupled with some research on the internet will often tell you 887 which of the two it is. To perform such a investigation, restart the build 888 process like this:: 889 890 make V=1 891 892 The ``V=1`` activates verbose output, which might be needed to see the actual 893 error. To make it easier to spot, this command also omits the ``-j $(nproc 894 --all)`` used earlier to utilize every CPU core in the system for the job -- but 895 this parallelism also results in some clutter when failures occur. 896 897 After a few seconds the build process should run into the error again. Now try 898 to find the most crucial line describing the problem. Then search the internet 899 for the most important and non-generic section of that line (say 4 to 8 words); 900 avoid or remove anything that looks remotely system-specific, like your username 901 or local path names like ``/home/username/linux/``. First try your regular 902 internet search engine with that string, afterwards search Linux kernel mailing 903 lists via `lore.kernel.org/all/ <https://lore.kernel.org/all/>`_. 904 905 This most of the time will find something that will explain what is wrong; quite 906 often one of the hits will provide a solution for your problem, too. If you 907 do not find anything that matches your problem, try again from a different angle 908 by modifying your search terms or using another line from the error messages. 909 910 In the end, most trouble you are to run into has likely been encountered and 911 reported by others already. That includes issues where the cause is not your 912 system, but lies the code. If you run into one of those, you might thus find a 913 solution (e.g. a patch) or workaround for your problem, too. 914 915 Package your kernel up 916 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 917 918 The step-by-step guide uses the default make targets (e.g. 'bzImage' and 919 'modules' on x86) to build the image and the modules of your kernel, which later 920 steps of the guide then install. You instead can also directly build everything 921 and directly package it up by using one of the following targets: 922 923 * ``make -j $(nproc --all) bindeb-pkg`` to generate a deb package 924 925 * ``make -j $(nproc --all) binrpm-pkg`` to generate a rpm package 926 927 * ``make -j $(nproc --all) tarbz2-pkg`` to generate a bz2 compressed tarball 928 929 This is just a selection of available make targets for this purpose, see 930 ``make help`` for others. You can also use these targets after running 931 ``make -j $(nproc --all)``, as they will pick up everything already built. 932 933 If you employ the targets to generate deb or rpm packages, ignore the 934 step-by-step guide's instructions on installing and removing your kernel; 935 instead install and remove the packages using the package utility for the format 936 (e.g. dpkg and rpm) or a package management utility build on top of them (apt, 937 aptitude, dnf/yum, zypper, ...). Be aware that the packages generated using 938 these two make targets are designed to work on various distributions utilizing 939 those formats, they thus will sometimes behave differently than your 940 distribution's kernel packages. 941 942 [:ref:`back to step-by-step guide <build_sbs>`] 943 944 .. _install: 945 946 Install your kernel 947 ------------------- 948 949 *Now install your kernel* [:ref:`... <install_sbs>`] 950 951 What you need to do after executing the command in the step-by-step guide 952 depends on the existence and the implementation of an ``installkernel`` 953 executable. Many commodity Linux distributions ship such a kernel installer in 954 ``/sbin/`` that does everything needed, hence there is nothing left for you 955 except rebooting. But some distributions contain an installkernel that does 956 only part of the job -- and a few lack it completely and leave all the work to 957 you. 958 959 If ``installkernel`` is found, the kernel's build system will delegate the 960 actual installation of your kernel's image and related files to this executable. 961 On almost all Linux distributions it will store the image as '/boot/vmlinuz- 962 <your kernel's release name>' and put a 'System.map-<your kernel's release 963 name>' alongside it. Your kernel will thus be installed in parallel to any 964 existing ones, unless you already have one with exactly the same release name. 965 966 Installkernel on many distributions will afterwards generate an 'initramfs' 967 (often also called 'initrd'), which commodity distributions rely on for booting; 968 hence be sure to keep the order of the two make targets used in the step-by-step 969 guide, as things will go sideways if you install your kernel's image before its 970 modules. Often installkernel will then add your kernel to the bootloader 971 configuration, too. You have to take care of one or both of these tasks 972 yourself, if your distributions installkernel doesn't handle them. 973 974 A few distributions like Arch Linux and its derivatives totally lack an 975 installkernel executable. On those just install the modules using the kernel's 976 build system and then install the image and the System.map file manually:: 977 978 sudo make modules_install 979 sudo install -m 0600 $(make -s image_name) /boot/vmlinuz-$(make -s kernelrelease) 980 sudo install -m 0600 System.map /boot/System.map-$(make -s kernelrelease) 981 982 If your distribution boots with the help of an initramfs, now generate one for 983 your kernel using the tools your distribution provides for this process. 984 Afterwards add your kernel to your bootloader configuration and reboot. 985 986 [:ref:`back to step-by-step guide <install_sbs>`] 987 988 .. _another: 989 990 Another round later 991 ------------------- 992 993 *To later build another kernel you need similar, but sometimes slightly 994 different commands* [:ref:`... <another_sbs>`] 995 996 The process to build later kernels is similar, but at some points slightly 997 different. You for example do not want to use 'localmodconfig' for succeeding 998 kernel builds, as you already created a trimmed down configuration you want to 999 use from now on. Hence instead just use ``oldconfig`` or ``olddefconfig`` to 1000 adjust your build configurations to the needs of the kernel version you are 1001 about to build. 1002 1003 If you created a shallow-clone with git, remember what the :ref:`section that 1004 explained the setup described in more detail <sources>`: you need to use a 1005 slightly different ``git fetch`` command and when switching to another series 1006 need to add an additional remote branch. 1007 1008 [:ref:`back to step-by-step guide <another_sbs>`] 1009 1010 .. _uninstall: 1011 1012 Uninstall the kernel later 1013 -------------------------- 1014 1015 *All parts of your installed kernel are identifiable by its release name and 1016 thus easy to remove later.* [:ref:`... <uninstall_sbs>`] 1017 1018 Do not worry installing your kernel manually and thus bypassing your 1019 distribution's packaging system will totally mess up your machine: all parts of 1020 your kernel are easy to remove later, as files are stored in two places only and 1021 normally identifiable by the kernel's release name. 1022 1023 One of the two places is a directory in /lib/modules/, which holds the modules 1024 for each installed kernel. This directory is named after the kernel's release 1025 name; hence, to remove all modules for one of your kernels, simply remove its 1026 modules directory in /lib/modules/. 1027 1028 The other place is /boot/, where typically one to five files will be placed 1029 during installation of a kernel. All of them usually contain the release name in 1030 their file name, but how many files and their name depends somewhat on your 1031 distribution's installkernel executable (:ref:`see above <install>`) and its 1032 initramfs generator. On some distributions the ``kernel-install`` command 1033 mentioned in the step-by-step guide will remove all of these files for you -- 1034 and the entry for your kernel in the bootloader configuration at the same time, 1035 too. On others you have to take care of these steps yourself. The following 1036 command should interactively remove the two main files of a kernel with the 1037 release name '6.0.1-foobar':: 1038 1039 rm -i /boot/{System.map,vmlinuz}-6.0.1-foobar 1040 1041 Now remove the belonging initramfs, which often will be called something like 1042 ``/boot/initramfs-6.0.1-foobar.img`` or ``/boot/initrd.img-6.0.1-foobar``. 1043 Afterwards check for other files in /boot/ that have '6.0.1-foobar' in their 1044 name and delete them as well. Now remove the kernel from your bootloader's 1045 configuration. 1046 1047 Note, be very careful with wildcards like '*' when deleting files or directories 1048 for kernels manually: you might accidentally remove files of a 6.0.11 kernel 1049 when all you want is to remove 6.0 or 6.0.1. 1050 1051 [:ref:`back to step-by-step guide <uninstall_sbs>`] 1052 1053 .. _faq: 1054 1055 FAQ 1056 === 1057 1058 Why does this 'how-to' not work on my system? 1059 --------------------------------------------- 1060 1061 As initially stated, this guide is 'designed to cover everything typically 1062 needed [to build a kernel] on mainstream Linux distributions running on 1063 commodity PC or server hardware'. The outlined approach despite this should work 1064 on many other setups as well. But trying to cover every possible use-case in one 1065 guide would defeat its purpose, as without such a focus you would need dozens or 1066 hundreds of constructs along the lines of 'in case you are having <insert 1067 machine or distro>, you at this point have to do <this and that> 1068 <instead|additionally>'. Each of which would make the text longer, more 1069 complicated, and harder to follow. 1070 1071 That being said: this of course is a balancing act. Hence, if you think an 1072 additional use-case is worth describing, suggest it to the maintainers of this 1073 document, as :ref:`described above <submit_improvements>`. 1074 1075 1076 .. 1077 end-of-content 1078 .. 1079 This document is maintained by Thorsten Leemhuis <linux@leemhuis.info>. If 1080 you spot a typo or small mistake, feel free to let him know directly and 1081 he'll fix it. You are free to do the same in a mostly informal way if you 1082 want to contribute changes to the text -- but for copyright reasons please CC 1083 linux-doc@vger.kernel.org and 'sign-off' your contribution as 1084 Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst explains in the section 'Sign 1085 your work - the Developer's Certificate of Origin'. 1086 .. 1087 This text is available under GPL-2.0+ or CC-BY-4.0, as stated at the top 1088 of the file. If you want to distribute this text under CC-BY-4.0 only, 1089 please use 'The Linux kernel development community' for author attribution 1090 and link this as source: 1091 https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/plain/Documentation/admin-guide/quickly-build-trimmed-linux.rst 1092 .. 1093 Note: Only the content of this RST file as found in the Linux kernel sources 1094 is available under CC-BY-4.0, as versions of this text that were processed 1095 (for example by the kernel's build system) might contain content taken from 1096 files which use a more restrictive license. 1097
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