General Kernel Configuration

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Revision as of 16:22, 7 November 2018 by Elvanor (talk | contribs)
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This page helps with the configuration of the Linux kernel. Remember, configuring the kernel is easy - you just have to know which hardware you have quite well.

General Information

The kernel sources are unpacked in /usr/src (at least on Gentoo).

  • Once you are in the kernel source directory, use the following command to configure graphically your kernel:
make menuconfig
  • When migrating to a new kernel, copy your old .config file from the old kernel directory to the new one and type:
make oldconfig
  • The "/" key can be very useful for finding where a configuration option is present when using make menuconfig.

Hardware Detection

  • Basically, emerge pciutils lshw usbutils, which gives you lspci, lshw, and lsusb.

Kernel Configuration

Mandatory Gentoo options

  • Tmpfs support is required (TMPFS in File systems -> Pseudo filesystems).

Networking

  • If you use connection tracking, there is a maximum number of connections that can be tracked. If you have a server with a large number of connections and exceed this maximum, some packets will be dropped, and general network instability will happen. You can increase the number of maximum connections or completely disable this module to solve the problem.
  • Note that to be able to use iptables and use the "state" tracking, you need kernel support (at least on recent 4.x kernels).

HyperThreading Support

  • On certain hardware (maybe all new boxes), HT support will only work if you enable ACPI. It can be confusing, but this is really like this.
  • On newer kernels (3.5.7 and more), it seems HyperThreading support cannot be disabled. There is an option for SMT sheduler support, but this is only for the sheduler, it does not disable HyperThreading if you leave it off.

Choice of the scheduler

  • There is an I/O scheduler in the section Block Layer. This is different from the CPU scheduler. The SD scheduler is a *CPU* scheduler.
  • In vanilla-sources, apparently there is no choice for the CPU scheduler. Same is true for ck-sources (where SD scheduler is mandatory).

Real Time Clock (RTC) support

  • With recent kernels (2.6.25+), there are two areas for this configuration.
    • Device Drivers -> Character Devices
    • Device Drivers -> Real Time Clock
  • If Gentoo hangs when starting (when running the clock init script) and you are using the support in Character Devices, change it to use the one in Real Time Clock (which I guess is newer and better).

SD/MMC card reader

  • You need to activate this support in the kernel if you have an integrated card reader (not an USB external reader). If lspci lists the host controller, build that module. Else, you need to build the SDHCI support on the platform specific bus module.

Device Drivers

  • Apparently you need CONFIG_BLK_DEV_SD (in SCSI / SCSI disk support), even if you use only SATA disks.

Executable file formats / Emulations

  • CONFIG_BINFMT_SCRIPT seems to be mandatory for booting.

Reading foreign partition tables

  • Each OS creates its own partition table format when initializing / formatting a disk. You can build support for reading these partition table formats with Linux; it's under File Systems -> Partition Types. Note that I don't really know what partition table format Linux uses.

Startup Parameters

  • The /etc/modprobe.d directory contains files filed with options that can be passed to the appropriate kernel module. For example, the ALSA modules. If you built the drivers not as a module, but directly into the kernel, you can pass these options as kernel startup parameters. The syntax is the following one:
snd-hda-intel.model=asus
  • Additional documentation can be found in /usr/src/linux/Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt.