1 | <sect2><title> </title><para> </para></sect2>
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2 |
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3 | <sect2>
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4 | <title>Installation of the kernel headers</title>
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5 |
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6 | <para>We won't be compiling a new kernel yet -- we'll do that when we have
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7 | finished the installation of all the packages. But as some packages need the
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8 | kernel header files, we're going to unpack the kernel archive now, set it up
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9 | and copy the header files so they can be found by these packages.</para>
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10 |
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11 | <para>It is important to note that the files in the kernel source directory
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12 | are not owned by <emphasis>root</emphasis>. Whenever you unpack a package as
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13 | user <emphasis>root</emphasis> (like we do here inside chroot), the files end
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14 | up having the user and group IDs of whatever they were on the packager's
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15 | computer. This is usually not a
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16 | problem for any other package you install because you remove the source
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17 | tree after the installation. But the Linux kernel source tree is often kept
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18 | around for a long time, so there's a chance that whatever user ID the packager
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19 | used will be assigned to somebody on your machine and then that person would
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20 | have write access to the kernel source.</para>
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21 |
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22 | <para>In light of this, you might want to run <userinput>chown -R 0:0</userinput>
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23 | on the <filename>linux-&kernel-version;</filename> directory
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24 | to ensure all files are owned by user <emphasis>root</emphasis>.</para>
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25 |
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26 | <para>Prepare for header installation:</para>
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27 |
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28 | <para><screen><userinput>make mrproper</userinput></screen></para>
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29 |
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30 | <para>This ensures that the kernel tree is absolutely clean. The kernel team
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31 | recommends that this command be issued prior to <emphasis>each</emphasis> kernel
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32 | compilation. You shouldn't rely on the source tree being clean after
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33 | untarring.</para>
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34 |
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35 | <para>Create the <filename>include/linux/version.h</filename> file:</para>
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36 |
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37 | <para><screen><userinput>make include/linux/version.h</userinput></screen></para>
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38 |
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39 | <para>Create the platform-specific <filename>include/asm</filename>
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40 | symlink:</para>
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41 |
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42 | <para><screen><userinput>make symlinks</userinput></screen></para>
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43 |
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44 | <para>Install the platform specific-header files:</para>
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45 |
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46 | <para><screen><userinput>cp -HR include/asm /usr/include
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47 | cp -R include/asm-generic /usr/include</userinput></screen></para>
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48 |
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49 | <para>Install the cross-platform kernel header files:</para>
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50 |
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51 | <para><screen><userinput>cp -R include/linux /usr/include</userinput></screen></para>
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52 |
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53 | <para>There are a few kernel header files which make use of the
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54 | <filename>autoconf.h</filename> header file. Since we do not yet configure the
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55 | kernel, we need to create this file ourselves in order to avoid compilation
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56 | failures. Create an empty <filename>autoconf.h</filename> file:</para>
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57 |
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58 | <para><screen><userinput>touch /usr/include/linux/autoconf.h</userinput></screen></para>
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59 |
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60 | <para>Since the <filename>/bin/pwd</filename> symlink we created earlier
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61 | was only temporary, it can now be removed:</para>
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62 |
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63 | </sect2>
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64 |
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