Commit 0d8aa321 authored by Thorsten Leemhuis's avatar Thorsten Leemhuis Committed by Jonathan Corbet

docs: quickly-build-trimmed-linux: various small fixes and improvements

* improve the short description of localmodconfig in the step-by-step
  guide while fixing its broken first sentence

* briefly mention immutable Linux distributions

* use '--shallow-exclude=v6.0' throughout the document

* instead of "git reset --hard; git checkout ..." use "git checkout
  --force ..." in the step-by-step guide: this matches the TLDR and is
  one command less to execute. This led to a few small adjustments to
  the text and the flow in the surrounding area.

* fix two thinkos in the section explaining full git clones
Signed-off-by: default avatarThorsten Leemhuis <linux@leemhuis.info>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/6f4684b9a5d11d3adb04e0af3cfc60db8b28eeb2.1684140700.git.linux@leemhuis.infoSigned-off-by: default avatarJonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
parent 96e3cc27
......@@ -215,12 +215,14 @@ again.
reduce the compile time enormously, especially if you are running an
universal kernel from a commodity Linux distribution.
There is a catch: the make target 'localmodconfig' will disable kernel
features you have not directly or indirectly through some program utilized
since you booted the system. You can reduce or nearly eliminate that risk by
using tricks outlined in the reference section; for quick testing purposes
that risk is often negligible, but it is an aspect you want to keep in mind
in case your kernel behaves oddly.
There is a catch: 'localmodconfig' is likely to disable kernel features you
did not use since you booted your Linux -- like drivers for currently
disconnected peripherals or a virtualization software not haven't used yet.
You can reduce or nearly eliminate that risk with tricks the reference
section outlines; but when building a kernel just for quick testing purposes
it is often negligible if such features are missing. But you should keep that
aspect in mind when using a kernel built with this make target, as it might
be the reason why something you only use occasionally stopped working.
[:ref:`details<configuration>`]
......@@ -271,6 +273,9 @@ again.
does nothing at all; in that case you have to manually install your kernel,
as outlined in the reference section.
If you are running a immutable Linux distribution, check its documentation
and the web to find out how to install your own kernel there.
[:ref:`details<install>`]
.. _another_sbs:
......@@ -291,29 +296,29 @@ again.
version you care about, as git otherwise might retrieve the entire commit
history::
git fetch --shallow-exclude=v6.1 origin
If you modified the sources (for example by applying a patch), you now need
to discard those modifications; that's because git otherwise will not be able
to switch to the sources of another version due to potential conflicting
changes::
git reset --hard
git fetch --shallow-exclude=v6.0 origin
Now checkout the version you are interested in, as explained above::
Now switch to the version you are interested in -- but be aware the command
used here will discard any modifications you performed, as they would
conflict with the sources you want to checkout::
git checkout --detach origin/master
git checkout --force --detach origin/master
At this point you might want to patch the sources again or set/modify a build
tag, as explained earlier; afterwards adjust the build configuration to the
new codebase and build your next kernel::
tag, as explained earlier. Afterwards adjust the build configuration to the
new codebase using olddefconfig, which will now adjust the configuration file
you prepared earlier using localmodconfig (~/linux/.config) for your next
kernel::
# reminder: if you want to apply patches, do it at this point
# reminder: you might want to update your build tag at this point
make olddefconfig
Now build your kernel::
make -j $(nproc --all)
Install the kernel as outlined above::
Afterwards install the kernel as outlined above::
command -v installkernel && sudo make modules_install install
......@@ -584,11 +589,11 @@ versions and individual commits at hand at any time::
curl -L \
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/stable/linux.git/clone.bundle \
-o linux-stable.git.bundle
git clone clone.bundle ~/linux/
git clone linux-stable.git.bundle ~/linux/
rm linux-stable.git.bundle
cd ~/linux/
git remote set-url origin
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/stable/linux.git
git remote set-url origin \
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/stable/linux.git
git fetch origin
git checkout --detach origin/master
......
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