Kernel 5, Kernel – Intel I/O Processor User Manual
Page 14
Linux - Debian—Kernel
June 2005
Intel
®
I/O Processors
Linux-Debian Installation Guide
14
Order Number: 306507001US
Kernel
5
The next step is to build an appropriate kernel. IOP Kernel patches are available at
. Grab the latest 2.6 kernel patch, and the corresponding kernel
source tarball from
.
The following commands will configure the 2.6.10 IOP kernel for an IQ80331 platform.
$ mkdir ~/work
$ cd ~/work
$ tar xjvf linux-2.6.10.tar.bz2
$ cd linux-2.6.10/
$ bzcat ../patch-2.6.10-iop1.bz2 | patch -p1
$ make iq80331_defconfig
– substitute the board name here when it is not the IQ80331
When planning on installing Debian-ARM, it is necessary to add INITRD support to the kernel.
Note:
INITRD support is only necessary for running the installer or when creating INITRD images. The
default setup does not require INITRD support in the kernel so once the base installation is
complete, it is possible to remove INITRD support from the kernel
$ make menuconfig
– Scroll down to “Block Devices” and press Return.
– Scroll down to “Initial RAM disk (initrd) support” and press the space bar until it is
selected with an '*'.
– At this point it is necessary to enable other drivers that might be needed.
– Exit all the way out of the menuconfig and save the new kernel configuration.
Now build the kernel
$ make zImage
With a multiprocessor system, increase the speed of the kernel build by allowing make to issue
multiple jobs at one. A 4-processor system has run;
$ make -j 4 zImage
Now copy the kernel to the TFTP directory
$ cp arch/arm/boot/zImage /tftpboot/zImage.iq80331