Files
kata-containers/tools/packaging/kernel/configs
Eric Ernst d3c9862059 config: make virtio-fs part of standard kernel
Basic virtio-fs support has made it upstream in the Linux kernel, as
well as in QEMU and Cloud Hypervisor. Let's go ahead and add it to the
standard configuration.

Since the device driver / DAX handling is still in progress for
upstream, we will want to still build a seperate experimental kernel for
those who are comfortable trading off bleeding edge stability/kernel
updates for improved FIO numbers.

Fixes: #963

Signed-off-by: Eric Ernst <eric.g.ernst@gmail.com>
2020-10-15 12:21:41 -07:00
..

Kata Containers kernel config files

This directory contains Linux Kernel config files used to configure Kata Containers VM kernels.

Types of config files

This directory holds config files for the Kata Linux Kernel in two forms:

  • A tree of config file 'fragments' in the fragments sub-folder, that are constructed into a complete config file using the kernel scripts/kconfig/merge_config.sh script.
  • As complete config files that can be used as-is.

Kernel config fragments are the preferred method of constructing .config files to build Kata Containers kernels, due to their improved clarity and ease of maintenance over single file monolithic .configs.

How to use config files

The recommended way to set up a kernel tree, populate it with a relevant .config file, and build a kernel, is to use the build_kernel.sh script. For example:

$ ./build-kernel.sh setup

The build-kernel.sh script understands both full and fragment based config files.

Run ./build-kernel.sh help for more information.

How to modify config files

Complete config files can be modified either with an editor, or preferably using the kernel Kconfig configuration tools, for example:

$ cp x86_kata_kvm_4.14.x linux-4.14.22/.config
$ pushd linux-4.14.22
$ make menuconfig
$ popd
$ cp linux-4.14.22/.config x86_kata_kvm_4.14.x

Kernel fragments are best constructed using an editor. Tools such as grep and diff can help find the differences between two config files to be placed into a fragment.

If adding config entries for a new subsystem or feature, consider making a new fragment with an appropriately descriptive name.

If you want to disable an entire fragment for a specific architecture, you can add the tag # !${arch} in the first line of the fragment. You can also exclude multiple architectures on the same line. Note the # at the beginning of the line, this is required to avoid that the tag is interpreted as a configuration. Example of valid exclusion:

# !s390x !ppc64le

The fragment gathering tool perfoms some basic sanity checks, and the build-kernel.sh will fail and report the error in the cases of:

  • A duplicate CONFIG symbol appearing.
  • A CONFIG symbol being in a fragment, but not appearing in the final .config
    • which indicates that CONFIG variable is not a part of the kernel Kconfig setup, which can indicate a typing mistake in the name of the symbol.
  • A CONFIG symbol appearing in the fragments with multiple different values.