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author | Florian Fainelli <florian@openwrt.org> | 2009-06-28 16:05:35 +0000 |
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committer | Florian Fainelli <florian@openwrt.org> | 2009-06-28 16:05:35 +0000 |
commit | 091929ce0e3be9fe9b4b49191d3fd800d60e9a31 (patch) | |
tree | d9fad8c9bf2f267d28877c17749306d720209a8a | |
parent | b09970a3d8539dd4107a53ffcdd6c402c25236a7 (diff) | |
download | upstream-091929ce0e3be9fe9b4b49191d3fd800d60e9a31.tar.gz upstream-091929ce0e3be9fe9b4b49191d3fd800d60e9a31.tar.bz2 upstream-091929ce0e3be9fe9b4b49191d3fd800d60e9a31.zip |
add a short note on how to use OpenWrt for daily work, covering the use of quilt inside of OpenWrt, updating kernel, packages and patches
SVN-Revision: 16606
-rw-r--r-- | docs/openwrt.sty | 1 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/openwrt.tex | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/working.tex | 112 |
3 files changed, 115 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/docs/openwrt.sty b/docs/openwrt.sty index d73ba43807..261af86857 100644 --- a/docs/openwrt.sty +++ b/docs/openwrt.sty @@ -5,5 +5,6 @@ \usepackage[T1]{fontenc} \usepackage{ae,aecompl,aeguill} \usepackage{fancyvrb} +\usepackage{enumerate} \setlength{\parindent}{0pt} \setlength{\parskip}\medskipamount diff --git a/docs/openwrt.tex b/docs/openwrt.tex index f6dd60fb7d..946387b4d6 100644 --- a/docs/openwrt.tex +++ b/docs/openwrt.tex @@ -27,6 +27,8 @@ \section{Extra tools} \subsection{Image Builder} \subsection{SDK} + \section{Working with OpenWrt} + \input{working} \section{Adding platform support} \input{adding} \section{Debugging and debricking} diff --git a/docs/working.tex b/docs/working.tex new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..3d3fc42e2d --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/working.tex @@ -0,0 +1,112 @@ +The following section gives some tips and tricks on how to use efficiently +OpenWrt on a regular basis and for daily work. + +\subsection{Compiling/recompiling components} + +The buildroot allows you to recompile the full environment or only parts of it +like the toolchain, the kernel modules, the kernel or some packages. + +For instance if you want to recompile the toolchain after you made any change to it +issue the following command: + +\begin{Verbatim} +make toolchain/{clean,compile,install} +\end{Verbatim} + +Which will clean, compile and install the toolchain. The command actually expands to the +following: + +\begin{Verbatim} +make[1] toolchain/clean +make[2] -C toolchain/kernel-headers clean +make[2] -C toolchain/binutils clean +make[2] -C toolchain/gcc clean +make[2] -C toolchain/uClibc clean (glibc or eglibc when chosen) +\end{Verbatim} + +Of course, you could only choose to recompile one or several of the toolchain components +(binutils, kernel-headers gcc, C library) individually. + +The exact same idea works for packages: + +\begin{Verbatim} +make package/busybox/{clean,compile,install} +\end{Verbatim} + +will clean, compile and install buysbox (if selected to be installed on the final rootfs). + +Supposing that you made changes to the Linux kernel, but do not want to recompile everything, +you can recompile only the kernel modules by issuing: + +\begin{Verbatim} +make target/linux/compile +\end{Verbatim} + +To recompile the static part of the kernel use the following command: + +\begin{Verbatim} +make target/linux/install +\end{Verbatim} + +\subsection{Using quilt inside OpenWrt} + +OpenWrt integrates quilt in order to ease the package, kernel and toolchain +patches maintenance when migrating over new versions of the software. + +Quilt intends to replace an old workflow, where you would download the new +source file, create an original copy of it, an a working copy, then try to +apply by hand old patches and resolve conflicts manually. Additionnaly, using +quilt allows you to update and fold patches into other patches easily. + +Quilt is used by default to apply Linux kernel patches, but not for the other +components (toolchain and packages). + +\subsubsection{Using quilt with kernel patches} + +Assuming that you have everything setup for your new kernel version: +\begin{itemize} +\item \texttt{LINUX\_VERSION} set in the target Makefile +\item config-2.6.x.y existing +\item patches-2.6.x.y containing the previous patches +\end{itemize} + +Some patches are likely to fail since the vanilla kernel we are patching +received modifications so some hunks of the patches are no longer applying. +We will use quilt to get them applying cleanly again. Follow this procedure +whenever you want to upgrade the kernel using previous patches: + +\begin{enumerate} +\item make target/linux/clean (removes the old version) +\item make target/linux/compile (uncompress the kernel and try to apply patches) +\item if patches failed to apply: +\item cd build\_dir/linux-target/linux-2.6.x.y +\item quilt push -a (to apply patches where quilt stopped) +\item quilt push -f (to force applying patches) +\item edit .rej files, apply the necessary changes to the files +\item remove .rej files +\item quilt refresh +\item repeat operation 3 and following until all patches have been applied +\item when all patches did apply cleanly: make target/linux/refresh +\end{enumerate} + +Note that generic (target/linux/generic-2.6/linux-2.6.x/) patches can be found in +\texttt{build\_dir/linux-target/linux-2.6.x.y/patches/generic} and platform specific +patches in \texttt{build\_dir/linux-target/linux-2.6.x.y/patches/platform}. + +\subsubsection{Using quilt with packages} + +As we mentionned earlier, quilt is enabled by default for kernel patches, but not for +packages. If you want to use quilt in the same way, you should set the QUILT environment +variable to 1, e.g: + +\begin{Verbatim} +make package/buysbox/{clean,compile} QUILT=1 +\end{Verbatim} + +Will generate the patch series file and allow you to update patches just like we described +before in the kernel case. Note that once all patches apply cleanly you should refresh them +as well using the following command: + +\begin{Verbatim} +make package/buysbox/refresh QUILT=1 +\end{Verbatim} |