linux/debian
Ben Hutchings 9824ebabc3 linux-image.postinst: Remove debconf warning about missing firmware
At this point, Debian users should know that they may need to install
firmware from non-free.  People using e.g. the r8169 driver may quite
reasonably choose not to install the associated firmware, either
because the driver doesn't actually request it for their chip or
because the driver can still work without it.

One thing we lose by doing this is a reminder that a firmware package
might also need to be upgraded, as a driver requires a newer version
of the firmware that has a different name.  As an alternative, we
could compare the firmware file lists for old and new modules and only
warn about newly listed files that are missing.  However, that would
also result in incorrect warnings for e.g. r8169 users, as that driver
may request a different file for each of the many chips it supports.

svn path=/dists/trunk/linux/; revision=20511
2013-08-17 11:37:04 +00:00
..
bin Use only one template syntax 2013-08-17 11:35:06 +00:00
config [armel] Disable iop32x and ixp4xx flavours (fixes FTBFS) 2013-08-15 21:46:42 +00:00
installer [armel] Disable iop32x and ixp4xx flavours (fixes FTBFS) 2013-08-15 21:46:42 +00:00
lib/python/debian_linux Don't require '.in' suffix on templates 2013-08-17 11:18:34 +00:00
patches irq: Always define devm_{request_threaded,free}_irq() (fixes FTBFS on s390,s390x) 2013-08-15 20:50:28 +00:00
source Use xz compression for upstream and Debian tarballs 2012-06-08 12:34:48 +00:00
templates linux-image.postinst: Remove debconf warning about missing firmware 2013-08-17 11:37:04 +00:00
.gitignore Setup gitignore suitable for using pkg-kernel via git svn 2013-01-17 10:04:32 +00:00
README.Debian README.Debian: Correct reference to Berkeley Database development package 2013-05-11 22:44:12 +00:00
README.source README.source: Correct name of main patch series file 2012-07-01 13:34:49 +00:00
changelog linux-image.postinst: Remove debconf warning about missing firmware 2013-08-17 11:37:04 +00:00
compat * debian/changelog: Update. 2009-03-17 18:51:02 +00:00
copyright debian/copyright: Move explanation of indirect linking of perf to OpenSSL 2013-07-02 05:00:10 +00:00
rules Use only one template syntax 2013-08-17 11:35:06 +00:00
rules.defs Revert r19546. 2012-11-27 18:22:10 +00:00
rules.real Use only one template syntax 2013-08-17 11:35:06 +00:00
watch debian/watch: Add watch file and update script 2013-06-24 02:04:54 +00:00

README.source

Updating the upstream source
============================

1) You can use either:
   a) a git repository of the kernel source
   b) a kernel tarball from kernel.org (e.g. linux-3.4.tar.bz2)
      and, optionally, a patch (e.g. patch-3.5-rc1.bz2).

2) Run ./debian/bin/genorig.py <repository>
   or  ./debian/bin/genorig.py <tarball> [patch]
   This will produce ../orig/linux_<version>.orig.tar.gz
   (e.g. linux_3.5~rc1.orig.tar.gz).

   (genorig.py requires the python and unifdef packages to be
    installed)

3) Unpack linux_<version>.orig.tar.gz, cd into the new directory,
   and do a 'svn export' to get the debian/ subdirectory.
   Alternatively unpack using "make -f debian/rules orig".

   (the orig target of the Makefiles requires rsync)

Applying patches to the Debian kernel tree
==========================================

The Debian kernel packaging uses the quilt patch system, but with
multiple series to allow for featuresets.

Patches are stored below debian/patches, loosely sorted in bugfix/,
features/ and debian/. Patches are in the standard kernel patch
format (unified diff to be applied with patch -p1) and generally have
DEP-3 headers.

The series file 'series' is used for all configurations and a series
file 'series-<featureset>' is used for each optional featureset.

If you want to generate a source tree with all patches applied, run
make -f debian/rules source

The resulting source can be found below debian/build.

Kernel config files
===================
Configuration files are constructed dynamically from a number of config
files, as listed in debian/config/<arch>/defines.

Control file
============
The master control file debian/control must be generated before
the package is uploaded. debian/rules contains the debian/control 
target, which generates the control file by invoking the 
debian/bin/gencontrol.py script, which combines the templates from
the templates directory and architecture-specific defines file to
produce the debian/control file. Note that this target is intentionally
made to fail with a non-zero exit code to make sure that it is never
run during an automatic build. The following variables are substituted
into the templates:

@version@      Upstream kernel version, for example 2.6.11.
@arch@         The Debian arch name, such as powerpc or i386.
@flavour@      The build flavour, such as 686 or k7-smp.
@class@        The CPU/architecture class; displayed in synopsis.  It should
               be fairly short, as the synopsis is supposed to be <80 chars.
               It should be in the form "foo class", and will show up in the
	       description as "foo class machines".
@longclass@    The CPU/architecture class; displayed in the extended
               description.  The same rules apply as in @class@.  If
	       this is unset, it will default to @class@.
@desc@         (Potentially) multi-line verbiage that's appended to
               -image descriptions.
@abiname@      Current abiname, a single digit.

Normally, the arch-specific contents should be controlled by
adjusting the corresponding defines file.

TODO:
- Patches applied to the upstream source
- How to define a flavour
- More detail on generation of debian/control and configs