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1Building External Modules
1 2
2In this document you will find information about: 3This document describes how-to build an out-of-tree kernel module.
3- how to build external modules
4- how to make your module use the kbuild infrastructure
5- how kbuild will install a kernel
6- how to install modules in a non-standard location
7 4
8=== Table of Contents 5=== Table of Contents
9 6
10 === 1 Introduction 7 === 1 Introduction
11 === 2 How to build external modules 8 === 2 How-to Build External Modules
12 --- 2.1 Building external modules 9 --- 2.1 Command Syntax
13 --- 2.2 Available targets 10 --- 2.2 Options
14 --- 2.3 Available options 11 --- 2.3 Targets
15 --- 2.4 Preparing the kernel tree for module build 12 --- 2.4 Building Separate Files
16 --- 2.5 Building separate files for a module 13 === 3. Creating a Kbuild File for an External Module
17 === 3. Example commands 14 --- 3.1 Shared Makefile
18 === 4. Creating a kbuild file for an external module 15 --- 3.2 Separate Kbuild file and Makefile
19 === 5. Include files 16 --- 3.3 Binary Blobs
20 --- 5.1 How to include files from the kernel include dir 17 --- 3.4 Building Multiple Modules
21 --- 5.2 External modules using an include/ dir 18 === 4. Include files
22 --- 5.3 External modules using several directories 19 --- 4.1 How to include files from the kernel include dir
23 === 6. Module installation 20 --- 4.2 External modules using an include/ dir
24 --- 6.1 INSTALL_MOD_PATH 21 --- 4.3 External modules using several directories
25 --- 6.2 INSTALL_MOD_DIR 22 === 5. Module installation
26 === 7. Module versioning & Module.symvers 23 --- 5.1 INSTALL_MOD_PATH
27 --- 7.1 Symbols from the kernel (vmlinux + modules) 24 --- 5.2 INSTALL_MOD_DIR
28 --- 7.2 Symbols and external modules 25 === 6. Module versioning & Module.symvers
29 --- 7.3 Symbols from another external module 26 --- 6.1 Symbols from the kernel (vmlinux + modules)
30 === 8. Tips & Tricks 27 --- 6.2 Symbols and external modules
31 --- 8.1 Testing for CONFIG_FOO_BAR 28 --- 6.3 Symbols from another external module
29 === 7. Tips & Tricks
30 --- 7.1 Testing for CONFIG_FOO_BAR
32 31
33 32
34 33
35=== 1. Introduction 34=== 1. Introduction
36 35
37kbuild includes functionality for building modules both 36"kbuild" is the build system used by the Linux kernel. Modules must use
38within the kernel source tree and outside the kernel source tree. 37kbuild to stay compatible with changes in the build infrastructure and
39The latter is usually referred to as external or "out-of-tree" 38to pick up the right flags to "gcc." Functionality for building modules
40modules and is used both during development and for modules that 39both in-tree and out-of-tree is provided. The method for building
41are not planned to be included in the kernel tree. 40either is similar, and all modules are initially developed and built
41out-of-tree.
42 42
43What is covered within this file is mainly information to authors 43Covered in this document is information aimed at developers interested
44of modules. The author of an external module should supply 44in building out-of-tree (or "external") modules. The author of an
45a makefile that hides most of the complexity, so one only has to type 45external module should supply a makefile that hides most of the
46'make' to build the module. A complete example will be presented in 46complexity, so one only has to type "make" to build the module. This is
47chapter 4, "Creating a kbuild file for an external module". 47easily accomplished, and a complete example will be presented in
48section 3.
48 49
49 50
50=== 2. How to build external modules 51=== 2. How-to Build External Modules
51 52
52kbuild offers functionality to build external modules, with the 53To build external modules, you must have a pre-built kernel available
53prerequisite that there is a pre-built kernel available with full source. 54that contains the configuration and header files used in the build.
54A subset of the targets available when building the kernel is available 55Also, the kernel must have been built with modules enabled. If you are
55when building an external module. 56using a distribution kernel, there will be a package for the kernel you
57are running provided by your distribution.
56 58
57--- 2.1 Building external modules 59An alternative is to use the "make" target "modules_prepare." This will
60make sure the kernel contains the information required. The target
61exists solely as a simple way to prepare a kernel source tree for
62building external modules.
58 63
59 Use the following command to build an external module: 64NOTE: "modules_prepare" will not build Module.symvers even if
65CONFIG_MODVERSIONS is set; therefore, a full kernel build needs to be
66executed to make module versioning work.
60 67
61 make -C <path-to-kernel> M=`pwd` 68--- 2.1 Command Syntax
62 69
63 For the running kernel use: 70 The command to build an external module is:
64 71
65 make -C /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build M=`pwd` 72 make -C <path_to_kernel_src> M=$PWD
66 73
67 For the above command to succeed, the kernel must have been 74 The kbuild system knows that an external module is being built
68 built with modules enabled. 75 due to the "M=<dir>" option given in the command.
69 76
70 To install the modules that were just built: 77 To build against the running kernel use:
71 78
72 make -C <path-to-kernel> M=`pwd` modules_install 79 make -C /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build M=$PWD
73 80
74 More complex examples will be shown later, the above should 81 Then to install the module(s) just built, add the target
75 be enough to get you started. 82 "modules_install" to the command:
76 83
77--- 2.2 Available targets 84 make -C /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build M=$PWD modules_install
78 85
79 $KDIR refers to the path to the kernel source top-level directory 86--- 2.2 Options
80 87
81 make -C $KDIR M=`pwd` 88 ($KDIR refers to the path of the kernel source directory.)
82 Will build the module(s) located in current directory.
83 All output files will be located in the same directory
84 as the module source.
85 No attempts are made to update the kernel source, and it is
86 a precondition that a successful make has been executed
87 for the kernel.
88 89
89 make -C $KDIR M=`pwd` modules 90 make -C $KDIR M=$PWD
90 The modules target is implied when no target is given.
91 Same functionality as if no target was specified.
92 See description above.
93 91
94 make -C $KDIR M=`pwd` modules_install 92 -C $KDIR
95 Install the external module(s). 93 The directory where the kernel source is located.
96 Installation default is in /lib/modules/<kernel-version>/extra, 94 "make" will actually change to the specified directory
97 but may be prefixed with INSTALL_MOD_PATH - see separate 95 when executing and will change back when finished.
98 chapter.
99 96
100 make -C $KDIR M=`pwd` clean 97 M=$PWD
101 Remove all generated files for the module - the kernel 98 Informs kbuild that an external module is being built.
102 source directory is not modified. 99 The value given to "M" is the absolute path of the
100 directory where the external module (kbuild file) is
101 located.
103 102
104 make -C $KDIR M=`pwd` help 103--- 2.3 Targets
105 help will list the available target when building external
106 modules.
107 104
108--- 2.3 Available options: 105 When building an external module, only a subset of the "make"
106 targets are available.
109 107
110 $KDIR refers to the path to the kernel source top-level directory 108 make -C $KDIR M=$PWD [target]
111 109
112 make -C $KDIR 110 The default will build the module(s) located in the current
113 Used to specify where to find the kernel source. 111 directory, so a target does not need to be specified. All
114 '$KDIR' represent the directory where the kernel source is. 112 output files will also be generated in this directory. No
115 Make will actually change directory to the specified directory 113 attempts are made to update the kernel source, and it is a
116 when executed but change back when finished. 114 precondition that a successful "make" has been executed for the
115 kernel.
117 116
118 make -C $KDIR M=`pwd` 117 modules
119 M= is used to tell kbuild that an external module is 118 The default target for external modules. It has the
120 being built. 119 same functionality as if no target was specified. See
121 The option given to M= is the directory where the external 120 description above.
122 module (kbuild file) is located.
123 When an external module is being built only a subset of the
124 usual targets are available.
125 121
126 make -C $KDIR SUBDIRS=`pwd` 122 modules_install
127 Same as M=. The SUBDIRS= syntax is kept for backwards 123 Install the external module(s). The default location is
128 compatibility. 124 /lib/modules/<kernel_release>/extra, but a prefix may
125 be added with INSTALL_MOD_PATH (discussed in section 5).
129 126
130--- 2.4 Preparing the kernel tree for module build 127 clean
128 Remove all generated files in the module directory only.
131 129
132 To make sure the kernel contains the information required to 130 help
133 build external modules the target 'modules_prepare' must be used. 131 List the available targets for external modules.
134 'modules_prepare' exists solely as a simple way to prepare
135 a kernel source tree for building external modules.
136 Note: modules_prepare will not build Module.symvers even if
137 CONFIG_MODVERSIONS is set. Therefore a full kernel build
138 needs to be executed to make module versioning work.
139 132
140--- 2.5 Building separate files for a module 133--- 2.4 Building Separate Files
141 It is possible to build single files which are part of a module.
142 This works equally well for the kernel, a module and even for
143 external modules.
144 Examples (module foo.ko, consist of bar.o, baz.o):
145 make -C $KDIR M=`pwd` bar.lst
146 make -C $KDIR M=`pwd` bar.o
147 make -C $KDIR M=`pwd` foo.ko
148 make -C $KDIR M=`pwd` /
149
150
151=== 3. Example commands
152
153This example shows the actual commands to be executed when building
154an external module for the currently running kernel.
155In the example below, the distribution is supposed to use the
156facility to locate output files for a kernel compile in a different
157directory than the kernel source - but the examples will also work
158when the source and the output files are mixed in the same directory.
159
160# Kernel source
161/lib/modules/<kernel-version>/source -> /usr/src/linux-<version>
162 134
163# Output from kernel compile 135 It is possible to build single files that are part of a module.
164/lib/modules/<kernel-version>/build -> /usr/src/linux-<version>-up 136 This works equally well for the kernel, a module, and even for
165 137 external modules.
166Change to the directory where the kbuild file is located and execute
167the following commands to build the module:
168 138
169 cd /home/user/src/module 139 Example (The module foo.ko, consist of bar.o and baz.o):
170 make -C /usr/src/`uname -r`/source \ 140 make -C $KDIR M=$PWD bar.lst
171 O=/lib/modules/`uname-r`/build \ 141 make -C $KDIR M=$PWD baz.o
172 M=`pwd` 142 make -C $KDIR M=$PWD foo.ko
143 make -C $KDIR M=$PWD /
173 144
174Then, to install the module use the following command:
175 145
176 make -C /usr/src/`uname -r`/source \ 146=== 3. Creating a Kbuild File for an External Module
177 O=/lib/modules/`uname-r`/build \
178 M=`pwd` \
179 modules_install
180 147
181If you look closely you will see that this is the same command as 148In the last section we saw the command to build a module for the
182listed before - with the directories spelled out. 149running kernel. The module is not actually built, however, because a
150build file is required. Contained in this file will be the name of
151the module(s) being built, along with the list of requisite source
152files. The file may be as simple as a single line:
183 153
184The above are rather long commands, and the following chapter 154 obj-m := <module_name>.o
185lists a few tricks to make it all easier.
186 155
156The kbuild system will build <module_name>.o from <module_name>.c,
157and, after linking, will result in the kernel module <module_name>.ko.
158The above line can be put in either a "Kbuild" file or a "Makefile."
159When the module is built from multiple sources, an additional line is
160needed listing the files:
187 161
188=== 4. Creating a kbuild file for an external module 162 <module_name>-y := <src1>.o <src2>.o ...
189 163
190kbuild is the build system for the kernel, and external modules 164NOTE: Further documentation describing the syntax used by kbuild is
191must use kbuild to stay compatible with changes in the build system 165located in Documentation/kbuild/makefiles.txt.
192and to pick up the right flags to gcc etc.
193 166
194The kbuild file used as input shall follow the syntax described 167The examples below demonstrate how-to create a build file for the
195in Documentation/kbuild/makefiles.txt. This chapter will introduce a few 168module 8123.ko, which is built from the following files:
196more tricks to be used when dealing with external modules.
197 169
198In the following a Makefile will be created for a module with the
199following files:
200 8123_if.c 170 8123_if.c
201 8123_if.h 171 8123_if.h
202 8123_pci.c 172 8123_pci.c
203 8123_bin.o_shipped <= Binary blob 173 8123_bin.o_shipped <= Binary blob
204 174
205--- 4.1 Shared Makefile for module and kernel 175--- 3.1 Shared Makefile
206 176
207 An external module always includes a wrapper Makefile supporting 177 An external module always includes a wrapper makefile that
208 building the module using 'make' with no arguments. 178 supports building the module using "make" with no arguments.
209 The Makefile provided will most likely include additional 179 This target is not used by kbuild; it is only for convenience.
210 functionality such as test targets etc. and this part shall 180 Additional functionality, such as test targets, can be included
211 be filtered away from kbuild since it may impact kbuild if 181 but should be filtered out from kbuild due to possible name
212 name clashes occurs. 182 clashes.
213 183
214 Example 1: 184 Example 1:
215 --> filename: Makefile 185 --> filename: Makefile
@@ -219,11 +189,11 @@ following files:
219 8123-y := 8123_if.o 8123_pci.o 8123_bin.o 189 8123-y := 8123_if.o 8123_pci.o 8123_bin.o
220 190
221 else 191 else
222 # Normal Makefile 192 # normal makefile
193 KDIR ?= /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build
223 194
224 KERNELDIR := /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build 195 default:
225 all:: 196 $(MAKE) -C $(KDIR) M=$$PWD
226 $(MAKE) -C $(KERNELDIR) M=`pwd` $@
227 197
228 # Module specific targets 198 # Module specific targets
229 genbin: 199 genbin:
@@ -231,15 +201,20 @@ following files:
231 201
232 endif 202 endif
233 203
234 In example 1, the check for KERNELRELEASE is used to separate 204 The check for KERNELRELEASE is used to separate the two parts
235 the two parts of the Makefile. kbuild will only see the two 205 of the makefile. In the example, kbuild will only see the two
236 assignments whereas make will see everything except the two 206 assignments, whereas "make" will see everything except these
237 kbuild assignments. 207 two assignments. This is due to two passes made on the file:
208 the first pass is by the "make" instance run on the
209 command line; the second pass is by the kbuild system, which is
210 initiated by the parameterized "make" in the default target.
238 211
239 In recent versions of the kernel, kbuild will look for a file named 212--- 3.2 Separate Kbuild File and Makefile
240 Kbuild and as second option look for a file named Makefile. 213
241 Utilising the Kbuild file makes us split up the Makefile in example 1 214 In newer versions of the kernel, kbuild will first look for a
242 into two files as shown in example 2: 215 file named "Kbuild", and only if that is not found, will it
216 then look for a makefile. Utilizing a "Kbuild" file allows us
217 to split up the makefile from example 1 into two files:
243 218
244 Example 2: 219 Example 2:
245 --> filename: Kbuild 220 --> filename: Kbuild
@@ -247,20 +222,21 @@ following files:
247 8123-y := 8123_if.o 8123_pci.o 8123_bin.o 222 8123-y := 8123_if.o 8123_pci.o 8123_bin.o
248 223
249 --> filename: Makefile 224 --> filename: Makefile
250 KERNELDIR := /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build 225 KDIR ?= /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build
251 all:: 226
252 $(MAKE) -C $(KERNELDIR) M=`pwd` $@ 227 default:
228 $(MAKE) -C $(KDIR) M=$$PWD
253 229
254 # Module specific targets 230 # Module specific targets
255 genbin: 231 genbin:
256 echo "X" > 8123_bin.o_shipped 232 echo "X" > 8123_bin.o_shipped
257 233
234 The split in example 2 is questionable due to the simplicity of
235 each file; however, some external modules use makefiles
236 consisting of several hundred lines, and here it really pays
237 off to separate the kbuild part from the rest.
258 238
259 In example 2, we are down to two fairly simple files and for simple 239 The next example shows a backward compatible version.
260 files as used in this example the split is questionable. But some
261 external modules use Makefiles of several hundred lines and here it
262 really pays off to separate the kbuild part from the rest.
263 Example 3 shows a backward compatible version.
264 240
265 Example 3: 241 Example 3:
266 --> filename: Kbuild 242 --> filename: Kbuild
@@ -269,13 +245,15 @@ following files:
269 245
270 --> filename: Makefile 246 --> filename: Makefile
271 ifneq ($(KERNELRELEASE),) 247 ifneq ($(KERNELRELEASE),)
248 # kbuild part of makefile
272 include Kbuild 249 include Kbuild
250
273 else 251 else
274 # Normal Makefile 252 # normal makefile
253 KDIR ?= /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build
275 254
276 KERNELDIR := /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build 255 default:
277 all:: 256 $(MAKE) -C $(KDIR) M=$$PWD
278 $(MAKE) -C $(KERNELDIR) M=`pwd` $@
279 257
280 # Module specific targets 258 # Module specific targets
281 genbin: 259 genbin:
@@ -283,28 +261,41 @@ following files:
283 261
284 endif 262 endif
285 263
286 The trick here is to include the Kbuild file from Makefile, so 264 Here the "Kbuild" file is included from the makefile. This
287 if an older version of kbuild picks up the Makefile, the Kbuild 265 allows an older version of kbuild, which only knows of
288 file will be included. 266 makefiles, to be used when the "make" and kbuild parts are
267 split into separate files.
289 268
290--- 4.2 Binary blobs included in a module 269--- 3.3 Binary Blobs
291 270
292 Some external modules needs to include a .o as a blob. kbuild 271 Some external modules need to include an object file as a blob.
293 has support for this, but requires the blob file to be named 272 kbuild has support for this, but requires the blob file to be
294 <filename>_shipped. In our example the blob is named 273 named <filename>_shipped. When the kbuild rules kick in, a copy
295 8123_bin.o_shipped and when the kbuild rules kick in the file 274 of <filename>_shipped is created with _shipped stripped off,
296 8123_bin.o is created as a simple copy off the 8213_bin.o_shipped file 275 giving us <filename>. This shortened filename can be used in
297 with the _shipped part stripped of the filename. 276 the assignment to the module.
298 This allows the 8123_bin.o filename to be used in the assignment to 277
299 the module. 278 Throughout this section, 8123_bin.o_shipped has been used to
279 build the kernel module 8123.ko; it has been included as
280 8123_bin.o.
300 281
301 Example 4:
302 obj-m := 8123.o
303 8123-y := 8123_if.o 8123_pci.o 8123_bin.o 282 8123-y := 8123_if.o 8123_pci.o 8123_bin.o
304 283
305 In example 4, there is no distinction between the ordinary .c/.h files 284 Although there is no distinction between the ordinary source
306 and the binary file. But kbuild will pick up different rules to create 285 files and the binary file, kbuild will pick up different rules
307 the .o file. 286 when creating the object file for the module.
287
288--- 3.4 Building Multiple Modules
289
290 kbuild supports building multiple modules with a single build
291 file. For example, if you want to build two modules, foo and
292 bar, the kbuild lines would be:
293
294 obj-m := foo.o bar.o
295 foo-y := <foo_srcs>
296 bar-y := <bar_srcs>
297
298 It is that simple!
308 299
309 300
310=== 5. Include files 301=== 5. Include files