Kernel Reconfiguration
Verdex
To reconfigure the kernel with the current state of Gumstix's OE things, you will need gnome-terminal. Run this command: bitbake gumstix-kernel -c menuconfig
NOTE: You have to have ncurses and ncurses-dev installed in order for the MENUCONFIG to actually work.
NOTE: If a screen flashes infront of you and dissapears edit $OE_HOME/org.openembedded.snapshot/conf/bitbake.conf to the following
-GNOME_TERMCMDRUN = '${GNOME_TERMCMD} -x ${SHELLRCCMD}'
+GNOME_TERMCMDRUN = '${GNOME_TERMCMD} -x ${SHELLCMDS}'
NOTE: If you don't have gnome-terminal installed and wish to use xterm instead, use:
-GNOME_TERMCMD = 'gnome-terminal --disable-factory -t "$TERMWINDOWTITLE"'
-GNOME_TERMCMDRUN = '${GNOME_TERMCMD} -x ${SHELLRCCMD}'
+GNOME_TERMCMD = 'xterm -title "$TERMWINDOWTITLE"'
+GNOME_TERMCMDRUN = '${GNOME_TERMCMD} -e ${SHELLCMDS}'
The kernel config information is kept in
$OE_HOME/com.gumstix.collection/packages/linux/gumstix-kernel-2.6.XX/gumstix-custom-YYYYY/defconfig
where XX is the current default kernel version for your bitbake environment. That nugget is set in the
$OE_HOME/com.gumstix.collection/conf/machine/include/gumstix.inc file, under the PREFERRED_VERSION_gumstix-kernel
and YYYYY is usually one of connex/basix/verdex. That nugget comes from
$OE_HOME/build/conf/auto.conf
After running menuconfig, running "bitbake -c rebuild gumstix-kernel" will blow away the customizations just made. There is probably a better way to do this, but in order to preserve the customizations, you can copy the new config file and replace the default config. For example, to preserve a verdex board's config, do:
cp \
$OE_HOME/tmp/work/gumstix-custom-verdex-angstrom-linux-gnueabi/gumstix-kernel-2.6.21-r1/linux-2.6.21/.config \
$OE_HOME/com.gumstix.collection/packages/linux/gumstix-kernel-2.6.21/gumstix-custom-verdex/defconfig
Now that you have replaced the default config, the following commands will rebuild and repackage the new kernel and create new images for you:
bitbake -c rebuild gumstix-kernel
bitbake -c rebuild task-base-gumstix
bitbake gumstix-basic-image
Overo
These instructions assume you are using the default gumstix-oe kernel as defined here
$ cd $OVEROTOP $ grep linux org.openembedded/conf/machine/overo.conf PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/kernel = "linux-omap3"
And the current revision as defined here
$ bitbake --show-versions | grep linux-omap3 linux-omap3 0:2.6.32-r51
So the rest of the example will assume linux-omap3-2.6.32 revision 51.
Substitute the kernel version and revision your system is using in the following steps.
First build the kernel normally with bitbake. If you have built an image, then it's already done.
If not run this command
$ bitbake linux-omap3-2.6.32
This will create a source directory in the ${OVEROTOP}/tmp/work/overo-angstrom-linux-gnueabi directory. In this case it will be
${OVEROTOP}/tmp/work/overo-angstrom-linux-gnueabi/linux-omap3-2.6.32-r51
To modify the kernel configuration, run menuconfig via bitbake. Make your changes and save the configuration.
cd $OVEROTOP bitbake -c menuconfig linux-omap3-2.6.32
The new kernel configuration file you created can be found here.
${OVEROTOP}/tmp/work/overo-angstrom-linux-gnueabi/linux-omap3-2.6.32-r51/git/.config
Copy that file to where the bitbake recipe for the kernel will use it.
cp ${OVEROTOP}/tmp/work/overo-angstrom-linux/gnueabi/linux-omap3-2.6.32-r51/git/.config \ ${OVEROTOP}/org.openembedded.dev/recipes/linux/linux-omap3-2.6.32/overo/defconfig
Then rebuild the kernel.
bitbake -c clean linux-omap3-2.6.32 bitbake -c rebuild linux-omap3-2.6.32
Then rebuild the rootfs to get the modules installed correctly.
Substitute the image you are using, the example assumes the omap3-console-image.
bitbake omap3-console-image
Finally, install the new kernel and rootfs the way you normally would using either a microSD card or by copying to onboard nand.