Handbook:PPC64/Installation/Kernel/ko
선택: 펌웨어 설치
Firmware
Linux Firmware
일부 드라이버는 동작하기 전에 시스템에 추가 펌웨어를 설치해야 합니다. 네트워크 인터페이스에 흔히 있는 경우이며 특히 무선 네트워크 인터페이스의 경우 그렇습니다. 또한 AMD, nVidia, 인텔에서 나오는 대부분의 최신 비디오 칩셋의 경우 오픈 소스 드라이버를 사용할 때 종종 외부 펌웨어 파일이 필요합니다. 대부분의 펌웨어는 sys-kernel/linux-firmware에 있습니다:
It is recommended to have the sys-kernel/linux-firmware package installed before the initial system reboot in order to have the firmware available in the event that it is necessary:
root #
emerge --ask sys-kernel/linux-firmware
Installing certain firmware packages often requires accepting the associated firmware licenses. If necessary, visit the license handling section of the Handbook for help on accepting licenses.
It is important to note that kernel symbols that are built as modules (M) will load their associated firmware files from the filesystem when they are loaded by the kernel. It is not necessary to include the device's firmware files into the kernel's binary image for symbols loaded as modules.
Microcode
In addition to discrete graphics hardware and network interfaces, CPUs also can require firmware updates. Typically this kind of firmware is referred to as microcode. Newer revisions of microcode are sometimes necessary to patch instability, security concerns, or other miscellaneous bugs in CPU hardware.
Microcode updates for AMD CPUs are distributed within the aforementioned sys-kernel/linux-firmware package. Microcode for Intel CPUs can be found within the sys-firmware/intel-microcode package, which will need to be installed separately. See the Microcode article for more information on how to apply microcode updates.
Kernel configuration and compilation
이제 커널 소스를 설정하고 컴파일 할 차례입니다. 두가지 방식으로 접근할 수 있습니다:
Ranked from least involved to most involved:
- 직접 설정하고 빌드하는 방법, 또는
- genkernel 도구를 사용하여 자동으로 리눅스 커널을 빌드하고 설치하는 방법
주변에 빌드한 모든 배포판의 핵심은 리눅스 커널입니다. 이는 사용자 프로그램과 여러분의 시스템 하드웨어 사이에 있는 계층입니다. 젠투는 사용자에게 최대한 다양한 커널 소스코드를 제공합니다. 설명을 포함한 전체 목록은 커널 개요 페이지에 있습니다.
Kernel installation tasks such as, copying the kernel image to /boot or the EFI System Partition, generating an initramfs and/or Unified Kernel Image, updating bootloader configuration, can be automated with installkernel. Users may wish to configure and install sys-kernel/installkernel before proceeding. See the Kernel installation section below for more more information.
Distribution kernels
Distribution Kernels are ebuilds that cover the complete process of unpacking, configuring, compiling, and installing the kernel. The primary advantage of this method is that the kernels are updated to new versions by the package manager as part of @world upgrade. This requires no more involvement than running an emerge command. Distribution kernels default to a configuration supporting the majority of hardware, however two mechanisms are offered for customization: savedconfig and config snippets. See the project page for more details on configuration.
Optional: Signed kernel modules
The kernel modules in the prebuilt distribution kernel (sys-kernel/gentoo-kernel-bin) are already signed. To sign the modules of kernels built from source enable the modules-sign USE flag, and optionally specify which key to use for signing in /etc/portage/make.conf:
USE="modules-sign"
# Optionally, to use custom signing keys.
MODULES_SIGN_KEY="/path/to/kernel_key.pem"
MODULES_SIGN_CERT="/path/to/kernel_key.pem" # Only required if the MODULES_SIGN_KEY does not also contain the certificate.
MODULES_SIGN_HASH="sha512" # Defaults to sha512.
If MODULES_SIGN_KEY is not specified the kernel build system will generate a key, it will be stored in /usr/src/linux-x.y.z/certs. It is recommended to manually generate a key to ensure that it will be the same for each kernel release. A key may be generated with:
root #
openssl req -new -nodes -utf8 -sha256 -x509 -outform PEM -out kernel_key.pem -keyout kernel_key.pem
The MODULES_SIGN_KEY and MODULES_SIGN_CERT may be different files. For this example the pem file generated by OpenSSL includes both the key and the accompanying certificate, and thus both variables are set to the same value.
OpenSSL will ask some questions about the user generating the key, it is recommended to fill in these questions as detailed as possible.
Store the key in a safe location, at the very least the key should be readable only by the root user. Verify this with:
root #
ls -l kernel_key.pem
-r-------- 1 root root 3164 Jan 4 10:38 kernel_key.pem
If this outputs anything other then the above, correct the permissions with:
root #
chown root:root kernel_key.pem
root #
chmod 400 kernel_key.pem
Installing a distribution kernel
To build a kernel with Gentoo patches from source, type:
root #
emerge --ask sys-kernel/gentoo-kernel
System administrators who want to avoid compiling the kernel sources locally can instead use precompiled kernel images:
root #
emerge --ask sys-kernel/gentoo-kernel-bin
Distribution Kernels, such as sys-kernel/gentoo-kernel and sys-kernel/gentoo-kernel-bin, by default, expect to be installed alongside an initramfs. Before running emerge to install the kernel users should ensure that sys-kernel/installkernel has been configured to utilize an initramfs generator (for example Dracut) as described in the installkernel section.
Upgrading and cleaning up
Once the kernel is installed, the package manager will automatically update it to newer versions. The previous versions will be kept until the package manager is requested to clean up stale packages. To reclaim disk space, stale packages can be trimmed by periodically running emerge with the --depclean
option:
root #
emerge --depclean
Alternatively, to specifically clean up old kernel versions:
root #
emerge --prune sys-kernel/gentoo-kernel sys-kernel/gentoo-kernel-bin
By design, emerge only removes the kernel build directory. It does not actually remove the kernel modules, nor the installed kernel image. To completely clean-up old kernels, the app-admin/eclean-kernel tool may be used.
Post-install/upgrade tasks
An upgrade of a distribution kernel is capable of triggering an automatic rebuild for external kernel modules installed by other packages (for example: sys-fs/zfs-kmod or x11-drivers/nvidia-drivers). This automated behaviour is enabled by enabling the dist-kernel USE flag. When required, this same flag will also trigger re-generation of the initramfs.
It is highly recommended to enable this flag globally via /etc/portage/make.conf when using a distribution kernel:
USE="dist-kernel"
Manually rebuilding the initramfs or Unified Kernel Image
If required, manually trigger such rebuilds by, after a kernel upgrade, executing:
root #
emerge --ask @module-rebuild
If any kernel modules (e.g. ZFS) are needed at early boot, rebuild the initramfs afterward via:
root #
emerge --config sys-kernel/gentoo-kernel
root #
emerge --config sys-kernel/gentoo-kernel-bin
소스 코드 설치
This section is only relevant when using the following genkernel (hybrid) or manual kernel management approach.
The use of sys-kernel/installkernel is not strictly required, but highly recommended. When this package is installed, the kernel installation process will be delegated to installkernel. This allows for installing several different kernel versions side-by-side as well as managing and automating several tasks relating to kernel installation described later in the handbook. Install it now with:
root #
emerge --ask sys-kernel/installkernel
When installing and compiling the kernel for ppc64-based systems, Gentoo recommends the sys-kernel/gentoo-sources package.
Choose an appropriate kernel source and install it using emerge:
root #
emerge --ask sys-kernel/gentoo-sources
/usr/src를 들여다보면 설치한 커널 소스를 가리키는 linux 심볼릭 링크를 볼 수 있습니다:
It is conventional for a /usr/src/linux symlink to be maintained, such that it refers to whichever sources correspond with the currently running kernel. However, this symbolic link will not be created by default. An easy way to create the symbolic link is to utilize eselect's kernel module.
For further information regarding the purpose of the symlink, and how to manage it, please refer to Kernel/Upgrade.
First, list all installed kernels:
root #
eselect kernel list
Available kernel symlink targets: [1] linux-6.6.21-gentoo
In order to create a symbolic link called linux, use:
root #
eselect kernel set 1
root #
ls -l /usr/src/linux
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 12 Oct 13 11:04 /usr/src/linux -> linux-6.6.21-gentoo
기본: 직접 설정
도입부
In case it was missed, this section requires the kernel sources to be installed. Be sure to obtain the relevant kernel sources, then return here for the rest of section.
커널을 직접 설정하는 방법은 리눅스 사용자가 해본 일중에 가장 어려운 과정으로 보입니다. 아니라고 하는것도 조금은 맞습니다 - 커널을 여러번 설정해본 사람중에는 이게 어려웠는지 기억하는 사람이 없습니다.
그러나 맞는 이야기이기도 합니다. 커널을 직접 설정했을 때 시스템을 알아둘 필요가 있습니다. 대부분의 정보는 lspci 명령이 들어있는 sys-apps/pciutils를 이머지하여 수집할 수 있습니다:
root #
emerge --ask sys-apps/pciutils
chroot를 하고 나면, lspci가 출력하는 (pcilib: cannot open /sys/bus/pci/devices와 같은) pcilib 경고를 무시하는게 안전합니다.
시스템 정보를 알아볼 수 있는 또 다른 부분은 설치 CD에서 사용하는 커널 모듈이 무엇인지 보여주는 lsmod를 실행했을 때 나타나는 활성화 할 모듈에 대한 바람직한 실마리입니다.
이제 커널 소스 디렉터리로 이동하여 make menuconfig를 실행하십시오. 메뉴 기반 설정 화면을 실행합니다.
root #
cd /usr/src/linux
root #
make menuconfig
리눅스 커널 설정에는 굉장히 많은 섹션이 있습니다. 반드시 활성화해야 할 몇가지 옵션 목록을 먼저 보도록 하겠습니다(그렇지 않으면 젠투가 제 기능을 못하거나, 추가 설정 없이 제대로 동작하지 않을지도 모릅니다). 또한 더 많은 도움을 줄 젠투 커널 설정 안내서도 젠투 위키에 있습니다.
필수 옵션 활성화
When using sys-kernel/gentoo-sources, it is strongly recommend the Gentoo-specific configuration options be enabled. These ensure that a minimum of kernel features required for proper functioning is available:
Gentoo Linux --->
Generic Driver Options --->
[*] Gentoo Linux support
[*] Linux dynamic and persistent device naming (userspace devfs) support
[*] Select options required by Portage features
Support for init systems, system and service managers --->
[*] OpenRC, runit and other script based systems and managers
[*] systemd
Naturally the choice in the last two lines depends on the selected init system (OpenRC vs. systemd). It does not hurt to have support for both init systems enabled.
When using sys-kernel/vanilla-sources, the additional selections for init systems will be unavailable. Enabling support is possible, but goes beyond the scope of the handbook.
Enabling support for typical system components
시스템을 부팅할 때 살아있는 모든 드라이버(SCSI 컨트롤러 등)가 모듈로 남아있지 않고 커널에 들어갔는지 확인하십시오. 아니면 부팅을 제대로 진행할 수 없습니다.
정확한 프로세서 형식을 선택하십시오. 사용자가 하드웨어 문제 알림을 받을 수 있도록 MCE 기능 활성화(가능할 경우)를 추천합니다. 일부 아키텍처(x86_64)에서는 dmesg로 나타나지 않지만 /dev/mcelog에 나타납니다. app-admin/mcelog 꾸러미가 필요한 부분입니다.
또한 Maintain a devtmpfs file system to mount at /dev(CONFIG_DEVTMPFS 와 CONFIG_DEVTMPFS_MOUNT)를 선택하여 부팅 과정에 중요한 장치 파일을 미리 준비할 수 있게 하십시오.
Device Drivers --->
Generic Driver Options --->
[*] Maintain a devtmpfs filesystem to mount at /dev
[ ] Automount devtmpfs at /dev, after the kernel mounted the rootfs
SCSI 디스크 지원(CONFIG_BLK_DEV_SD)을 활성화했는지 확인하십시오:
Device Drivers --->
SCSI device support --->
<*> SCSI disk support
Device Drivers --->
<*> Serial ATA and Parallel ATA drivers (libata) --->
[*] ATA ACPI Support
[*] SATA Port Multiplier support
<*> AHCI SATA support (ahci)
[*] ATA BMDMA support
[*] ATA SFF support (for legacy IDE and PATA)
<*> Intel ESB, ICH, PIIX3, PIIX4 PATA/SATA support (ata_piix)
Verify basic NVMe support has been enabled:
Device Drivers --->
<*> NVM Express block device
Device Drivers --->
NVME Support --->
<*> NVM Express block device
It does not hurt to enable the following additional NVMe support:
[*] NVMe multipath support
[*] NVMe hardware monitoring
<M> NVM Express over Fabrics FC host driver
<M> NVM Express over Fabrics TCP host driver
<M> NVMe Target support
[*] NVMe Target Passthrough support
<M> NVMe loopback device support
<M> NVMe over Fabrics FC target driver
< > NVMe over Fabrics FC Transport Loopback Test driver (NEW)
<M> NVMe over Fabrics TCP target support
이제 File Systems로 가서 사용할 파일 시스템 지원을 선택하십시오. 루트 파일 시스템에서 사용할 파일 시스템을 모듈로 컴파일하지 마십시오. 그렇지 않으면 젠투 시스템에서 파티션을 마운트할 수 없습니다. 또한 Virtual memory와 /proc file system도 선택하십시오. 시스템에서 필요한 옵션(CONFIG_EXT2_FS, CONFIG_EXT3_FS, CONFIG_EXT4_FS, CONFIG_MSDOS_FS, CONFIG_VFAT_FS, CONFIG_PROC_FS, CONFIG_TMPFS) 중 하나 이상을 선택하십시오:
File systems --->
<*> Second extended fs support
<*> The Extended 3 (ext3) filesystem
<*> The Extended 4 (ext4) filesystem
<*> Reiserfs support
<*> JFS filesystem support
<*> XFS filesystem support
<*> Btrfs filesystem support
DOS/FAT/NT Filesystems --->
<*> MSDOS fs support
<*> VFAT (Windows-95) fs support
Pseudo Filesystems --->
[*] /proc file system support
[*] Tmpfs virtual memory file system support (former shm fs)
인터넷에 연결할 때 PPPoE를 사용하거나 전화걸기 모뎀을 사용한다면 다음 옵션 (CONFIG_PPP, CONFIG_PPP_ASYNC, CONFIG_PPP_SYNC_TTY)을 활성화하십시오:
Device Drivers --->
Network device support --->
<*> PPP (point-to-point protocol) support
<*> PPP support for async serial ports
<*> PPP support for sync tty ports
두 압축 옵션은 문제를 일으키진 않겠지만 꼭 필요하진 않으며, 커널 모드 PPPoE를 사용하도록 설정했을 때 PPP에서 사용하는PPP over Ethernet 옵션도 마찬가지입니다.
네트워크(유무선) 카드의 커널 지원 포함도 잊지 마십시오.
대부분의 시스템에는 구성에 따라 다중 코어를 지니고 있기도 하므로, Symmetric multi-processing support(CONFIG_SMP) 활성화도 중요합니다:
Processor type and features --->
[*] Symmetric multi-processing support
멀티코어 시스템에서는 각 코어 갯수를 하나의 프로세서로 취급합니다.
USB 입력 장치(키보드, 마우스)또는 다른 USB 장치(CONFIG_HID_GENERIC, CONFIG_USB_HID, CONFIG_USB_SUPPORT, CONFIG_USB_XHCI_HCD, CONFIG_USB_EHCI_HCD, CONFIG_USB_OHCI_HCD)를 사용한다면 마찬가지로 활성화를 잊지 마십시오:
Device Drivers --->
HID support --->
-*- HID bus support
<*> Generic HID driver
[*] Battery level reporting for HID devices
USB HID support --->
<*> USB HID transport layer
[*] USB support --->
<*> xHCI HCD (USB 3.0) support
<*> EHCI HCD (USB 2.0) support
<*> OHCI HCD (USB 1.1) support
Optional: Signed kernel modules
To automatically sign the kernel modules enable CONFIG_MODULE_SIG_ALL:
[*] Enable loadable module support
-*- Module signature verification
[*] Automatically sign all modules
Which hash algorithm should modules be signed with? (Sign modules with SHA-512) --->
Optionally change the hash algorithm if desired.
To enforce that all modules are signed with a valid signature, enable CONFIG_MODULE_SIG_FORCE as well:
[*] Enable loadable module support
-*- Module signature verification
[*] Require modules to be validly signed
[*] Automatically sign all modules
Which hash algorithm should modules be signed with? (Sign modules with SHA-512) --->
To use a custom key, specify the location of this key in CONFIG_MODULE_SIG_KEY, if unspecified the kernel build system will generate a key. It is recommended to generate one manually instead. This can be done with:
root #
openssl req -new -nodes -utf8 -sha256 -x509 -outform PEM -out kernel_key.pem -keyout kernel_key.pem
OpenSSL will ask some questions about the user generating the key, it is recommended to fill in these questions as detailed as possible.
Store the key in a safe location, at the very least the key should be readable only by the root user. Verify this with:
root #
ls -l kernel_key.pem
-r-------- 1 root root 3164 Jan 4 10:38 kernel_key.pem
If this outputs anything other then the above, correct the permissions with:
root #
chown root:root kernel_key.pem
root #
chmod 400 kernel_key.pem
-*- Cryptographic API --->
Certificates for signature checking --->
(/path/to/kernel_key.pem) File name or PKCS#11 URI of module signing key
To also sign external kernel modules installed by other packages via linux-mod-r1.eclass
, enable the modules-sign USE flag globally:
USE="modules-sign"
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<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
# Optionally, when using custom signing keys.
MODULES_SIGN_KEY="/path/to/kernel_key.pem"
MODULES_SIGN_CERT="/path/to/kernel_key.pem" # Only required if the MODULES_SIGN_KEY does not also contain the certificate
MODULES_SIGN_HASH="sha512" # Defaults to sha512
The MODULES_SIGN_KEY and MODULES_SIGN_CERT may be different files. For this example the pem file generated by OpenSSL includes both the key and the accompanying certificate, and thus both variables are set to the same value.
Optional: Signing the kernel image (Secure Boot)
When signing the kernel image (for use on systems with Secure Boot enabled) it is recommended to set the following kernel config options:
General setup --->
Kexec and crash features --->
[*] Enable kexec system call
[*] Enable kexec file based system call
[*] Verify kernel signature during kexec_file_load() syscall
[*] Require a valid signature in kexec_file_load() syscall
[*] Enable ""image"" signature verification support
</div>
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
[*] Enable loadable module support
-*- Module signature verification
[*] Require modules to be validly signed
[*] Automatically sign all modules
Which hash algorithm should modules be signed with? (Sign modules with SHA-512) --->
</div>
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
Security options --->
[*] Integrity subsystem
[*] Basic module for enforcing kernel lockdown
[*] Enable lockdown LSM early in init
Kernel default lockdown mode (Integrity) --->
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[*] Digital signature verification using multiple keyrings
[*] Enable asymmetric keys support
-*- Require all keys on the integrity keyrings be signed
[*] Provide keyring for platform/firmware trusted keys
[*] Provide a keyring to which Machine Owner Keys may be added
[ ] Enforce Machine Keyring CA Restrictions
Where ""image"" is a placeholder for the architecture specific image name. These options, from the top to the bottom: enforces that the kernel image in a kexec call must be signed (kexec allows replacing the kernel in-place), enforces that kernel modules are signed, enables lockdown integrity mode (prevents modifying the kernel at runtime), and enables various keychains.
On arches that do not natively support decompressing the kernel (e.g. arm64 and riscv), the kernel must be built with its own decompressor (zboot):
Device Drivers --->
Firmware Drivers --->
EFI (Extensible Firmware Interface) Support --->
[*] Enable the generic EFI decompressor
After compilation of the kernel, as explained in the next section, the kernel image must be signed. First install app-crypt/sbsigntools and then sign the kernel image:
root #
emerge --ask app-crypt/sbsigntools
root #
sbsign /usr/src/linux-x.y.z/path/to/kernel-image --cert /path/to/kernel_key.pem --key /path/to/kernel_key.pem --out /usr/src/linux-x.y.z/path/to/kernel-image
For this example the same key that was generated to sign the modules is used to sign the kernel image. It is also possible to generate and use a second sperate key for signing the kernel image. The same OpenSSL command as in the previous section may be used again.
Then proceed with the installation.
To automatically sign EFI executables installed by other packages, enable the secureboot USE flag globally:
USE="modules-sign secureboot"
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# Optionally, to use custom signing keys.
MODULES_SIGN_KEY="/path/to/kernel_key.pem"
MODULES_SIGN_CERT="/path/to/kernel_key.pem" # Only required if the MODULES_SIGN_KEY does not also contain the certificate.
MODULES_SIGN_HASH="sha512" # Defaults to sha512
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# Optionally, to boot with secureboot enabled, may be the same or different signing key.
SECUREBOOT_SIGN_KEY="/path/to/kernel_key.pem"
SECUREBOOT_SIGN_CERT="/path/to/kernel_key.pem"
The SECUREBOOT_SIGN_KEY and SECUREBOOT_SIGN_CERT may be different files. For this example the pem file generated by OpenSSL includes both the key and the accompanying certificate, and thus both variables are set to the same value.
When generating an Unified Kernel Image with systemd's
ukify
the kernel image will be signed automatically before inclusion in the unified kernel image and it is not necessary to sign it manually.
컴파일 및 설치
이제 커널을 설정했고 컴파일 하고 설치할 차례입니다. 설정을 빠져나간 후 컴파일 과정을 시작하십시오:
root #
make && make modules_install
make -jX
명령을 사용하고 X에 실행 가능토록 허용할 빌드 프로세스 갯수를 넣어 병렬 빌드를 활성화 할 수 있습니다. 이는 앞서 언급한 /etc/portage/make.conf의 MAKEOPTS
변수와 비슷합니다.커널 컴파일이 끝나면 /boot에 이미지를 복사하십시오:
root #
cp vmlinux /boot/kernel-6.6.21-gentoo
대안: genkernel 사용
In case it was missed, this section requires the kernel sources to be installed. Be sure to obtain the relevant kernel sources, then return here for the rest of section.
Genkernel should only be considered by users that have a required need that only Genkernel can meet, otherwise it is recommended to use the Distribution kernel or manually compile your own as it will make maintaining a Gentoo system a lot more simple. An example of why genkernel is more difficult to manage is the lack of integration with sys-kernel/installkernel. This means a user will not get the same level of automation as provided by the other methods, such as Unified Kernel Images will need to be created manually when using Genkernel.
Genkernel provides a generic kernel configuration file and will compile the kernel and initramfs, then install the resulting binaries to the appropriate locations. This results in minimal and generic hardware support for the system's first boot, and allows for additional update control and customization of the kernel's configuration in the future.
Be informed: while using genkernel to maintain the kernel provides system administrators with more update control over the system's kernel, initramfs, and other options, it will require a time and effort commitment to perform future kernel updates as new sources are released. Those looking for a hands-off approach to kernel maintenance should use a distribution kernel.
For additional clarity, it is a misconception to believe genkernel automatically generates a custom kernel configuration for the hardware on which it is run; it uses a predetermined kernel configuration that supports most generic hardware and automatically handles the make commands necessary to assemble and install the kernel, the associate modules, and the initramfs file.
Binary redistributable software license group
If the linux-firmware package has been previously installed, then skip onward to the to the installation section.
As a prerequisite, due to the firwmare
USE flag being enabled by default for the sys-kernel/genkernel package, the package manager will also attempt to pull in the sys-kernel/linux-firmware package. The binary redistributable software licenses are required to be accepted before the linux-firmware will install.
This license group can be accepted system-wide for any package by adding the @BINARY-REDISTRIBUTABLE
as an ACCEPT_LICENSE value in the /etc/portage/make.conf file. It can be exclusively accepted for the linux-firmware package by adding a specific inclusion via a /etc/portage/package.license/linux-firmware file.
If necessary, review the methods of accepting software licenses available in the Installing the base system chapter of the handbook, then make some changes for acceptable software licenses.
If in analysis paralysis, the following will do the trick:
root #
mkdir /etc/portage/package.license
sys-kernel/linux-firmware @BINARY-REDISTRIBUTABLE
Installation
이제 genkernel을 사용하는 방법을 보겠습니다. 먼저 sys-kernel/genkernel 이빌드를 이머지하십시오:
root #
emerge --ask sys-kernel/genkernel
Generation
이제 genkernel all를 실행하여 커널 소스 코드를 컴파일하십시오. genkernel은 대부분의 하드웨어를 지원하는 커널을 컴파일 하므로 컴파일이 끝나기까지 상당한 시간이 걸린다는 사실을 알아두십시오!
부트 파티션에서 ext2 또는 ext3 파일 시스템을 쓰지 않는다면 genkernel --menuconfig all 명령으로 커널을 직접 설정하고 커널에 각각의 지원 파일 시스템을 추가해야 합니다(예: 모듈 아님). LVM2 사용자는 마찬가지로 매개변수
--lvm
을 넣어야겠습니다.Users of LVM2 should add
--lvm
as an argument to the genkernel command below.root #
genkernel all
genkernel 동작이 끝나면, 모듈 전체 모음과 초기화 램 디스크(initramfs)를 만듭니다. 이 문서에서 나중에 부트로더를 설정할 때 이 커널과 initrd를 사용합니다. 부트로더 설정 파일을 편집할 때 정보로 사용하겠으니 커널과 initrd의 이름을 적어두십시오. "실제" 시스템을 시작하기 전에 하드웨어 자동 감지(설치 CD와 유사) 동작을 수행하는 즉시 initrd를 시작합니다.
root #
ls /boot/kernel* /boot/initramfs*
Kernel installation
Installkernel
Installkernel may be used to automate, the kernel installation, initramfs generation, unified kernel image generation and/or bootloader configuration among other things. sys-kernel/installkernel implements two paths of achieving this: the traditional installkernel originating from Debian and systemd's kernel-install. Which one to choose depends, among other things, on the system's bootloader. By default systemd's kernel-install is used on systemd profiles, while the traditional installkernel is the default for other profiles.
If unsure, follow the 'Traditional layout' subsection below.
systemd-boot
When using systemd-boot (formerly gummiboot) as the bootloader, systemd's kernel-install must be used. Therefore ensure the systemd and the systemd-boot USE flags are enabled on sys-kernel/installkernel, and then install the relevant package for systemd-boot.
On OpenRC systems:
sys-apps/systemd-utils boot kernel-install
sys-kernel/installkernel systemd systemd-boot
root #
emerge --ask sys-apps/systemd-utils
On systemd systems:
sys-apps/systemd boot
sys-kernel/installkernel systemd-boot
root #
emerge --ask sys-apps/systemd
GRUB
Users of GRUB can use either systemd's kernel-install or the traditional Debian installkernel. The systemd USE flag switches between these implementations. To automatically run grub-mkconfig when installing the kernel, enable the grub USE flag.
sys-kernel/installkernel grub
root #
emerge --ask sys-kernel/installkernel
Traditional layout, other bootloaders (e.g. lilo, etc.)
The traditional /boot layout (for e.g. LILO, etc.) is used by default if the grub, systemd-boot and uki USE flags are not enabled. No further action is required.
Building an initramfs
In certain cases it is necessary to build an initramfs - an initial ram-based file system. The most common reason is when important file system locations (like /usr/ or /var/) are on separate partitions. With an initramfs, these partitions can be mounted using the tools available inside the initramfs. The default configuration of the Project:Distribution Kernel requires an initramfs.
Without an initramfs, there is a risk that the system will not boot properly as the tools that are responsible for mounting the file systems require information that resides on unmounted file systems. An initramfs will pull in the necessary files into an archive which is used right after the kernel boots, but before the control is handed over to the init tool. Scripts on the initramfs will then make sure that the partitions are properly mounted before the system continues booting.
If using genkernel, it should be used for both building the kernel and the initramfs. When using genkernel only for generating an initramfs, it is crucial to pass
--kernel-config=/path/to/kernel.config
to genkernel or the generated initramfs may not work with a manually built kernel. Note that manually built kernels go beyond the scope of support for the handbook. See the kernel configuration article for more information.Installkernel can automatically generate an initramfs when installing the kernel if the dracut USE flag is enabled:
sys-kernel/installkernel dracut
Alternatively, dracut may be called manually to generate an initramfs. Install sys-kernel/dracut first, then have it generate an initramfs:
root #
emerge --ask sys-kernel/dracut
root #
dracut --kver=6.6.21-gentoo
The initramfs will be stored in /boot/. The resulting file can be found by simply listing the files starting with initramfs:
root #
ls /boot/initramfs*
Optional: Building an Unified Kernel Image
An Unified Kernel Image (UKI) combines, among other things, the kernel, the initramfs and the kernel command line into a single executable. Since the kernel command line is embedded into the unified kernel image it should be specified before generating the unified kernel image (see below). Note that any kernel command line arguments supplied by the bootloader or firmware at boot are ignored when booting with secure boot enabled.
An unified kernel image requires a stub loader, currently the only one available is systemd-stub. To enable it:
For systemd systems:
sys-apps/systemd boot
For OpenRC systems:
sys-apps/systemd-utils boot kernel-install
Installkernel can automatically generate an unified kernel image using either dracut or ukify, by enabling the respective flag. The uki USE flag should be enabled as well to install the generated unified kernel image to the $ESP/EFI/Linux directory on the EFI system partition (ESP).
For dracut:
sys-kernel/installkernel dracut uki
uefi="yes"
kernel_cmdline="some-kernel-command-line-arguments"
For ukify:
sys-apps/systemd ukify # For systemd systems
sys-apps/systemd-utils ukify # For OpenRC systems
sys-kernel/installkernel dracut ukify uki
some-kernel-command-line-arguments
Note that while dracut can generate both an initramfs and an unified kernel image, ukify can only generate the latter and therefore the initramfs must be generated separately with dracut.
Generic Unified Kernel Image
The prebuilt sys-kernel/gentoo-kernel-bin can optionally install a prebuilt generic unified kernel image containing a generic initramfs that is able to boot most systemd based systems. It can be installed by enabling the generic-uki USE flag, and configuring installkernel to not generate a custom initramfs or unified kernel image:
sys-kernel/gentoo-kernel-bin generic-uki
sys-kernel/installkernel -dracut -ukify uki
Secure Boot
The generic Unified Kernel Image optionally distributed by sys-kernel/gentoo-kernel-bin is already pre-signed. How to sign a locally generated unified kernel image depends on whether dracut or ukify is used. Note that the location of the key and certificate should be the same as the SECUREBOOT_SIGN_KEY and SECUREBOOT_SIGN_CERT as specified in /etc/portage/make.conf.
For dracut:
uefi="yes"
kernel_cmdline="some-kernel-command-line-arguments"
uefi_secureboot_key="/path/to/kernel_key.pem"
uefi_secureboot_cert="/path/to/kernel_key.pem"
For ukify:
[UKI]
SecureBootPrivateKey=/path/to/kernel_key.pem
SecureBootCertificate=/path/to/kernel_key.pem
Rebuilding external kernel modules
External kernel modules installed by other packages via linux-mod-r1.eclass
must be rebuilt for each new kernel version. When the distribution kernels are used this may be automated by enabling the dist-kernel flag globally.
*/* dist-kernel
External kernel modules may also be rebuilt manually with:
root #
emerge --ask @module-rebuild
커널 모듈
모듈 설정
하드웨어 모듈은 직접 나열해야합니다. udev 명령은 대부분 연결한 장치를 직접 찾습니다. 그러나, 대부분의 경우는 자동 감지 모듈을 찾아내는게 위험하지 않습니다만, 일부 특이한 하드웨어의 경우 자체 드라이버를 불러오도록 해야 할 때도 있습니다.
/etc/modules-load.d/*.conf에 자동으로 불러올 모듈을 한 줄에 하나씩 넣으십시오. 모듈의 추가 옵션은 필요할 경우 /etc/modprobe.d/*.conf 파일에 넣으시면 됩니다.
존재하는 모든 모듈을 보려면 다음과 같이 find 명령을 실행하십시오. 잊지 말고 "<kernel version>" 부분을 컴파일한 커널의 버전으로 바꾸십시오.
root #
find /lib/modules/<kernel version>/ -type f -iname '*.o' -or -iname '*.ko' | less
Force loading particular kernel modules
예를 들어 3c59x.ko 모듈(3COM 네트워크 카드 계열 드라이버)을 자동으로 불러오려면, /etc/modules-load.d/network.conf 파일을 편집하고 모듈 이름을 입력하십시오. 실제 파일 이름은 로더에서 크게 신경쓰지 않습니다.
root #
mkdir -p /etc/modules-load.d
root #
nano -w /etc/modules-load.d/network.conf
Note that the module's .ko file suffix is insignificant to the loading mechanism and left out of the configuration file:
3c59x
시스템 설정으로 설치 과정을 계속 진행하십시오.