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Difference between revisions of "Funtoo Linux Kernels"
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This is a RHEL6-based kernel with OpenVZ support. This kernel is now the preferred kernel for production OpenVZ deployments. It requires gcc-4.4.5 to build, which it will use automatically without the user needing to use ''<code>gcc-config</code>''. We use this version of gcc since this is the version of gcc used by Red Hat to build this kernel. | This is a RHEL6-based kernel with OpenVZ support. This kernel is now the preferred kernel for production OpenVZ deployments. It requires gcc-4.4.5 to build, which it will use automatically without the user needing to use ''<code>gcc-config</code>''. We use this version of gcc since this is the version of gcc used by Red Hat to build this kernel. | ||
=== ubuntu-server --> {{Package|sys-kernel/ubuntu-server}} === | === ubuntu-server --> {{Package|sys-kernel/ubuntu-server}} === |
Revision as of 03:31, June 25, 2014
This Section will give you an overview of kernels used in funtoo.
Funtoo Linux provides a number of new kernels for your use. This is the official page for all Funtoo Linux kernel information.
Some points of interest:
- Most Funtoo Linux kernels support the handy
binary
USE flag, described below. - Funtoo Linux offers quality kernels from other Linux Distributions, like
ubuntu-server
anddebian-sources
. - A detailed Kernel Features and Stability table can be found below.
- Advanced users may want to take a look at Additional Kernel Resources.
- There is a quick'n dirty howto to compile your own kernel with initramfs the funtoo way.
Overview of Kernels
sysrescue-std-sources --> No results
This kernel is from the SystemRescueCD project, and is based on Fedora 14/15, plus some other patches related to booting from a live CD. It is a quality kernel, and is generally pretty stable. It is not suitable for production servers but is a good choice for Funtoo Linux desktops. Earlier,the Funtoo Linux Installation Guide recommended this kernel for general users, but now 'debian-sources' is recommended. Note however, that by design all audio functions are removed from SystemRescue, ie no sound when using this kernel when you build it using the "binary" USE flag.
vanilla-sources --> sys-kernel/vanilla-sources
This will install the "vanilla" (unmodified) Linux kernel sources. Current recommended version is 3.x. Funtoo Linux fully supports Linux 3.x. The advantages of this kernel include recent improvements to Linux Containers, a very modern networking stack with lots of bug fixes, and high reliability for desktops and servers. The downside is that this kernel must be manually configured by the user and does not have built-in genkernel
support via the binary
USE flag at this time.
gentoo-sources --> No results
This kernel tree is based on stable kernels from kernel.org with genpatches applied genpatches. Gentoo patchset aims to support the entire range of Gentoo-supported architectures. List of available genpatched kernels: genpatches-kernels
openvz-rhel6-stable --> No results
This is a RHEL6-based kernel with OpenVZ support. This kernel is now the preferred kernel for production OpenVZ deployments. It requires gcc-4.4.5 to build, which it will use automatically without the user needing to use gcc-config
. We use this version of gcc since this is the version of gcc used by Red Hat to build this kernel.
ubuntu-server --> No results
This is the kernel from Ubuntu Server. Version 2.6.32.32.62
is the same version used in Ubuntu Server 10.04 LTS, and version 2.6.35.28.50
is the one used in Ubuntu Server 10.10 (currently masked). In our testing of 2.6.32.32.62
, it has been very reliable and offers very good performance. One exception, which is common among 2.6.32-based kernels, is that it's recommended that you emerge No results if you have any Broadcom-based NICs, as the in-kernel drivers have compatibility issues with certain models. This kernel is a very good option if you want a relatively modern server kernel and do not need OpenVZ support. We use gcc-4.4.5 to build this kernel. It will use gcc-4.4.5 automatically, without requiring the user to use gcc-config
.
debian-sources --> sys-kernel/debian-sources
This is the Debian kernel. These ebuilds now support the binary
USE flag. Daniel has added a special config-extract command which can be used to list all available official Debian kernel configurations, and generate them from the Debian files included with the kernel. This kernel has optional OpenVZ support, but it is much better to use openvz-rhel6-stable if you want a production-quality OpenVZ installation. For more information about how to use debian-sources and config-extract, see Using debian-sources with Genkernel below.
debian-sources-lts --> No results
This is the Debian long-term stable kernel. These ebuilds now support the binary USE flag. Daniel has added a special config-extract command which can be used to list all available official Debian kernel configurations, and generate them from the Debian files included with the kernel.
Binary USE
Many of the kernel ebuilds in Funtoo Linux support the very useful binary
USE flag. By enabling this USE flag and emerging the kernel, the ebuild will automatically build a binary kernel image, initramfs and kernel modules and install them to /boot
. The binary kernel image and initramfs can be used to boot your Funtoo Linux system without requiring any additional configuration. This is a great way to get a Funtoo Linux system up and running quickly. Here's how to do it:
root # echo "sys-kernel/openvz-rhel5-stable binary" >> /etc/portage/package.use root # emerge openvz-rhel5-stable root # nano -w /etc/boot.conf root # boot-update
More information can be found in the Funtoo Linux Installation Guide.
Funtoo Linux Genkernel
Funtoo Linux contains a forked/enhanced version of genkernel with the following new capabilities:
- genkernel can use a build directory that is separate from the kernel source directory. This is enabled using the new --build-dst option.
--build-src
is a new option that is equivalent to the --kerneldir option.--fullname
can be used to specify the entire name of the kernel and initramfs images -- everything after kernel- and initramfs-.--firmware-src
- a new option that works identically to --firmware-dir.--firmware-dst
- a new capability - you can now define where genkernel installs firmware.- Genkernel uses Funtoo Linux
lvm2
rather than building its own. - Some compile fixes.
Kernel Features and Stability Overview
SPARC64: All kernels beyond 3.9 series and before 3.14-rc8 are subject to a bug that stalls the kernel on sun4v machines only. Those latter are machines provided with UltraSPARC T1 and later CPUs (e.g. SunFire T1000, SunFire T2000, SunFire T52x0/T54x0 series...), all sun4u machines (UltraSPARC IV and prior CPUs) are not subject to this problem and any kernel version is functional.
Kernel Name | Version | USE flags | Stability | Extra Features | Req'd udev | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
sys-kernel/vanilla-sources | 3.13.1 | N/A | Excellent - recommended for desktops and servers. | N/A | Any | Recommended for modern networking stack, hardware and Linux Containers support. This kernel must be manually configured by the user. New Features: kernelnewbies.org/linux_3.12 New Drivers: kernelnewbies/Linux_3.12-DriversArch |
No results | 3.13.1 | N/A | Excellent - recommended for desktops and workstations | N/A | Any | Recommended for modern networking stack, hardware and Linux Containers support. This kernel must be manually configured by the user. New Features: kernelnewbies.org/linux_3.12 New Drivers: kernelnewbies/Linux_3.12-DriversArch |
No results | 3.0.21.302 | binary | Good - recommended for desktops | N/A | Any | Nvidia card users: binary use flag installs nouveau drivers. Not compatible with nvidia-drivers. |
No results | 2.6.32.042.079.5 | binary | Excellent - recommended for production servers | N/A | Any | This kernel is built with gcc-4.4.5. emerge broadcom-netxtreme2 for reliable BCM5709+ support (integrated NIC) |
No results | 2.6.18.028.095.1 | binary | Excellent - recommended for production servers | OpenVZ | =sys-fs/udev-146* | Broadcom bnx2 driver module bundled with kernel appears to be OK. This kernel is built with gcc-4.1.2. Enabling the binary USE flag will cause gcc-4.1.2 to be emerged and used for building the kernel. |
No results | 2.6.32.32.62 | binary | Excellent - recommended for production servers (still in extended testing) | N/A | Any | This kernel is built with gcc-4.4.5. emerge broadcom-netxtreme2 for reliable BCM5709+ support (integrated NIC) |
No results | 2.6.35.28.50 | binary | not yet tested | N/A | Any | This kernel is built with gcc-4.4.5. emerge broadcom-netxtreme2 for reliable BCM5709+ support (integrated NIC) |
sys-kernel/debian-sources | 3.12.3 | openvz | Good - default kernel recommended by Funtoo | OpenVZ (optional) | Any | See #Using debian-sources with Genkernel, below. |
Using Debian-Sources with Genkernel
Debian-sources is now fully compatible with the binary USE flag and recommended for desktop users. The below example is valid for manual installation. At least 12G of /var/tmp required to build
This section describes how to build a binary kernel with debian-sources
and genkernel
, and it also explains how to use Funtoo Linux's config-extract
tool to list and create official Debian kernel configurations.
First step: emerging the required packages
The first step is to emerge:
- The Debian sources
- Genkernel itself
This is achieved by running the following:
root # emerge -av sys-kernel/debian-sources sys-kernel/genkernel
Once the Debian kernel sources are deployed, you should find a directory named linux-debian-version (e.g. linux-debian-2.6.32.30) under /usr/src
. Update your the linux
symlink to point on this directory:
root # cd /usr/src root # rm linux root # ln -s linux-debian-2.6.32.30 linux
Alternatively, emerge the debian-sources with the symlink
USE flag.
Second step: Grabbing a configuration file
If is now time to download the kernel configuration file. For this tutorial we will use a configuration file for AMD64 (several others architectures like MIPS or SPARC64 are available.) To view a complete list of available kernel configurations, type ./config-extract -l
in the Debian kernel source directory:
ninja1 linux-debian-2.6.32.30 # ./config-extract -l ====== standard featureset ====== alpha: alpha-generic, alpha-legacy, alpha-smp amd64 armel: iop32x, ixp4xx, kirkwood, orion5x, versatile hppa: parisc, parisc-smp, parisc64, parisc64-smp i386: 486, 686, 686-bigmem, amd64 ia64: itanium, mckinley m68k: amiga, atari, bvme6000, mac, mvme147, mvme16x mips: 4kc-malta, 5kc-malta, r4k-ip22, r5k-ip32, sb1-bcm91250a, sb1a-bcm91480b mipsel: 4kc-malta, 5kc-malta, r5k-cobalt, sb1-bcm91250a, sb1a-bcm91480b powerpc: powerpc, powerpc-smp, powerpc64 s390: s390x, s390x-tape sh4: sh7751r, sh7785lcr sparc: sparc64, sparc64-smp sparc64: sparc64, sparc64-smp ====== vserver featureset ====== amd64 i386: 686, 686-bigmem ia64: itanium, mckinley powerpc: powerpc, powerpc64 s390 sparc sparc64 ====== xen featureset ====== amd64 i386 ====== openvz featureset ====== amd64 i386
Type config-extract -h for extended usage information:
ninja1 linux-debian-2.6.32.30 # ./config-extract -h This work is free software. Copyright 2011 Funtoo Technologies. You can redistribute and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 3 as published by the Free Software Foundation. Alternatively you may (at your option) use any other license that has been publicly approved for use with this program by Funtoo Technologies (or its successors, if any.) usage: config-extract [options] arch [featureset] [subarch] -h --help print this usage and exit -l --list list all available kernel configurations -o --outfile specify kernel config outfile -- defaults to .config in current directory [featureset] defaults to "none" if not specified [subarch] defaults to the only one available; otherwise required This program was written by Daniel Robbins for Funtoo Linux, for the purpose of easily and conveniently extracting Debian kernel configurations. To see a nice list of all available kernel configurations, use the --list option. Debian's kernel configs are specified internally in arch_featureset_flavor format, such as: "amd64_openvz_amd64". The featureset typically describes an optional kernel configuration such as "xen" or "openvz", while the flavor in Debian terminology typically refers to the sub-architecture of the CPU. When using this command, you must specify an arch. A featureset of "none" is assumed unless you specify one, and by default this program will pick the only available subarch if there is only one to choose from. If not, you will need to pick one (and the program will remind you to do this.) The kernel configuration will be written to ".config" in the current directory, or the location you specified using the -o/--outfile option.
Let's use config-extract to create a kernel configuration for an amd64 system:
root # cd linux root # ./config-extract amd64 Wrote amd64_none_amd64 kernel configuration to /usr/src/linux-debian-2.6.32.30/.config.
config-extract also allows you to extract special Debian featuresets, such as settings for Xen and OpenVZ kernels:
root # ./config-extract amd64 openvz Wrote amd64_openvz_amd64 kernel configuration to /usr/src/linux-debian-2.6.32.30/.config.
It is necessary to name the kernel configuration file something other than ".config" to avoid errors with genkernel.
After using config-extract, run make oldconfig and accept all default options by hitting Enter at all prompts.
if you are using the XFS file system as your root partition: Run make menuconfig and ensure that "File Systems --> XFS filesystem support" and "Library Routines --> CRC32c (Castagnoli, et al) Cyclic Redundancy-Check" are both set to * (and not [m]).
This is needed to ensure that your system can boot up correctly for kernel versions >= 3.10.11.
Third step: Building and installing the kernel
This is simply achieved by:
root # genkernel --kernel-config=config-2.6.32-5-amd64 all
- --kernel-config: use the given configfile. If you only give a filename here, it is searched for in your current working dir. You can also use a relative or an absolute path leading to your configfile here (for example: "--kernel-config=/usr/src/linux/configfile").
- all: rebuild the kernel image and the initramfs ramdisk image (aside of kernel modules, the ramdisk image contains tools such as BusyBox and some generic startup scripts, depending on options you use on the command line several additional tools like lvm or raid volume management can be incorporated as well).
Unless explicitly stated via --no-clean or --no-mrproper, Genkernel will do a make mrproper in the kernel source tree, thus cleaning a previous build and removing the previous kernel configuration file in it.
If you use Genkernel to rebuild a Linux kernel on SPARC64, remember to either:
- Set sparc64-unknown-linux-gnu- in General setup --> Cross-compiler tool prefix
- Put --kernel-cross-compile=sparc64-unknown-linux-gnu- on the Genkernel command line
Once the kernel has been compiled and the ram disk has been generated, the kernel image plus its companion files (initramfs image and System.map) are placed in the /boot directory. You can use your favourite tool to update your bootloader configuration files.