From 0310b312a7e5dffcdf24ae835ed732f7a6a9c471 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jeremy Cline Date: Tue, 14 Apr 2020 17:53:23 -0400 Subject: kernel-5.7.0-0.rc1.20200414git8632e9b5645b.1 This is an automated commit generated from the kernel-5.7.0-0.rc1.20200414git8632e9b5645b.1 tag in https://gitlab.com/cki-project/kernel-ark.git --- README.txt | 78 -------------------------------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 78 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 README.txt (limited to 'README.txt') diff --git a/README.txt b/README.txt deleted file mode 100644 index c64729edf..000000000 --- a/README.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,78 +0,0 @@ - - Kernel package tips & tricks. - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -The kernel is one of the more complicated packages in the distro, and -for the newcomer, some of the voodoo in the spec file can be somewhat scary. -This file attempts to document some of the magic. - - -Speeding up make prep ---------------------- -The kernel is nearly 500MB of source code, and as such, 'make prep' -takes a while. The spec file employs some trickery so that repeated -invocations of make prep don't take as long. Ordinarily the %prep -phase of a package will delete the tree it is about to untar/patch. -The kernel %prep keeps around an unpatched version of the tree, -and makes a symlink tree clone of that clean tree and than applies -the patches listed in the spec to the symlink tree. -This makes a huge difference if you're doing multiple make preps a day. -As an added bonus, doing a diff between the clean tree and the symlink -tree is slightly faster than it would be doing two proper copies of the tree. - - -Build logs. ------------ -There's a convenience helper script in scripts/grab-logs.sh -that will grab the build logs from koji for the kernel version reported -by make verrel - - -Config hierarchy. ------------------ -Instead of having to maintain a config file for every arch variant we build on, -the kernel spec uses a nested system of configs. Each option CONFIG_FOO is -represented by a single file named CONFIG_FOO which contains the state (=y, =m, -=n). These options are collected in the folder base-generic. Architecture -specific options are set in nested folders. An option set in a nested folder -will override the same option set in one of the higher levels. - -The individual CONFIG_FOO files only exist in the pkg-git repository. The RPM -contains kernel-foo.config files which are the result of combining all the -CONFIG_FOO files. The files are combined by running build_configs.sh. This -script _must_ be run each time one of the options is changed. - -Example flow: - -# Enable the option CONFIG_ABC123 as a module for all arches -echo "CONFIG_ABC123=m" > configs/base-generic/CONFIG_ABC1234 -# enable the option CONFIG_XYZ321 for only x86 -echo "# CONFIG_XYZ321 is not set" > configs/base-generic/CONFIG_XYZ321 -echo "CONFIG_XYZ321=m" > configs/base-generic/x86/CONFIG_XYZ321 -# regenerate the combined config files -./build_configs.sh - -The file config_generation gives a listing of what folders go into each -config file generated. - -Debug options. --------------- -This is a little complicated, as the purpose & meaning of this changes -depending on where we are in the release cycle. -If we are building for a current stable release, 'make release' has -typically been run already, which sets up the following.. -- Two builds occur, a 'kernel' and a 'kernel-debug' flavor. -- kernel-debug will get various heavyweight debugging options like - lockdep etc turned on. - -If we are building for rawhide, 'make debug' has been run, which changes -the status quo to: -- We only build one kernel 'kernel' -- The debug options are always turned on. -This is done to increase coverage testing, as not many people actually -run kernel-debug. - -The debug options are managed in a separate heierarchy under base-debug. This -works in a similar manner to base-generic. More deeply nested folders, again, -override options. The file config_generation gives a listing of what folders -go into each config file generated. -- cgit