root/lm-sensors/tags/V2-6-0/INSTALL

Revision 1012, 14.8 kB (checked in by frodo, 8 years ago)

Better notes about mkpatch not working on 2.3 kernels

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1 These are the installation instruction for the lm_sensors package.
2
3 There are two ways in which you can compile and install this package. Each
4 has its own strong points. They are:
5
6  1. Complete separate from kernel compilation
7     This will generate a set of modules which can be inserted and removed
8     as needed; nothing will be written into the kernel tree;
9
10  2. Patching of the kernel
11     This will patch your kernel source tree. You must recompile your kernel
12     to take advantage of this. But it makes it possible to compile drivers
13     into the kernel itself, instead of having to add them as modules.
14     ** AFTER YOU COMPILED AND INSTALLED YOUR KERNEL, YOU WILL STILL HAVE TO
15     ** COMPILE THIS PACKAGE TO GET THE USERLAND UTILITIES!
16     ** NOT ALL MODULES ARE PATCHED INTO THE KERNEL. SEE BELOW.
17
18
19
20 Each of these ways will be described below in detail.
21
22 NOTE: MAKE SURE YOU HAVE THE I2C-ALGO-BIT DRIVER (PART OF THE I2C PACKAGE)
23       COMPILED INTO YOUR KERNEL OR AVAILABLE AS A MODULE; SOME SENSORS
24       DRIVERS DEPEND ON IT!
25
26 NOTE: IN EACH CASE, YOU WILL HAVE TO GET AND INSTALL THE I2C PACKAGE FIRST!
27       SET COMPILE_KERNEL TO 0 IN THE MAIN MAKEFILE FOR OPTION 2, UNLESS
28       YOU NEED ALPHA OR BETA DRIVERS (SEE BELOW)
29
30 NOTE: PLEASE READ THE DOCUMENTATION IN THE DOC SUBDIRECTORY IF YOU GET STUCK!
31
32
33 Installing the i2c package
34 ==========================
35
36 Note: as of kernel 2.3.34, the new i2c code is integrated into the
37 mainstream kernels. You MAY be able to skip this whole step if you use kernel
38 2.3.34 or later, but it is likely that you will have compilation problems.
39 We strongly recommend that you download and install the i2c package with
40 the same version number as the lm_sensors package.
41
42 As of version 2.4.0 of lm_sensors, all i2c components are distributed in
43 a separate package. There are install instructions in that package. If
44 you want to use compilation option 2 (patching the kernel) for lm_sensors,
45 you will have to use compilation option 3 (patching the kernel) for i2c
46 too. If you want to use compilation option 1 (compiling as modules) for
47 lm_sensors, you may use either compilation option 1 or 2 (compiling as
48 modules) or compilation option 3 (patching the kernel for i2c). See the
49 table below.
50
51                                           LM_SENSORS
52 I2C                      | option 1 (modules)      option 2 (patch kernel)
53 option 1 (modules)       |      YES                      NO
54 option 2 (modules)       |      YES                      YES
55 option 3 (patch kernel)  |      YES                      YES
56
57
58 If you use compilation option 1 (compiling as modules) for lm_sensors, you
59 will have to make very sure the correct i2c header files are found. If you
60 get weird compilation errors, this is almost certainly going wrong. The
61 i2c header files are in a i2c subdirectory of either /usr/local/include
62 (i2c compilation option 1) or /usr/src/linux*/include (i2c compilation
63 options 2 and 3). Especially if you have in the past placed the header
64 files in /usr/local/include, this will probably go wrong. See below on
65 how to fix this.
66
67 NOTE: option 3 only works with 2.2 and 2.4 (2.4.0 and later) kernels;
68       option 1 and 2 also work with 2.3 kernels.
69
70
71 Mixing old and new, and using beta drivers (compilation option 1)
72 =================================================================
73
74 It is possible that you are running a previously patched kernel, or
75 a very new kernel which already has limited or full i2c or lm_sensors
76 support, but you want to use newer versions of the drivers. This is
77 possible, but there are some pitfalls.
78
79 If had compiled all i2c and lm_sensors drivers as modules, you are
80 in luck. You can simply compile the newest versions of i2c and
81 lm_sensors and install them. Just make sure the right modules are
82 loaded (best bet: remove the old ones first).
83
84 If you have a certain driver compiled into your kernel, you may
85 encounter bad problems. We do not guarantee to keep internal kernel
86 interfaces unchanged. In plain language, this means that an older driver
87 may not work together with a newer driver, and your kernel may crash.
88 On the other hand, if you know what you are doing, compilation will
89 be smart. Drivers that are compiled right into your kernel will not
90 be compiled as a module again.  You could do nothing with them anyway.
91
92 Sometimes, you want to patch your kernel, but find that certain alpha
93 or beta drivers are not included in the patch. This is on purpose: we
94 do not want to polute the kernel tree with things of which we are not
95 confident they work. In this case, patch the kernel, compile it, and
96 then compile lm_sensors with COMPILE_KERNEL set to 1.
97
98
99 Having a proper kernel tree (compilation option 1)
100 ==================================================
101
102 Usually, if you compile a user-space application, you can get away with
103 having a different version of the kernel running than the version of the
104 kernel header files against which you compiled it. But a perfect match
105 is needed for the first two compilation options above.
106
107 Let's say you want to use the lm_sensors modules with the kernel 2.1.12 you
108 are running now. What you need, is the original tree in which you
109 compiled that 2.1.12 kernel. A freshly unpacked 2.1.12 kernel will not
110 cut it, because `make *config dep' creates some files that are needed.
111 And even then, you will run into trouble, because you may not have
112 selected the exact same configuration variables. Plain advise: if you
113 do not have your original kernel tree anymore, recompile your kernel
114 first.
115
116 Note that there is no need for a perfect match at compilation time, just
117 at run-time. This means you can cross-compile against a different kernel
118 version, and the Makefile does not check for this.
119
120 Usually problems if the match is imperfect, is that either this package
121 won't compile at all (because it was a freshly unpacked tree without
122 some files generated by `make *config dep'), or that you can't insert
123 modules because of either a `kernel-module version mismatch' or because
124 of `unresolved kernel symbols'. If you get either of these messages,
125 check your kernel tree!
126
127 Note that some distributions are notably bad at this. To offset this
128 somewhat, not the files in /usr/include/{linux,asm} are used, but instead
129 those in /usr/src/linux/include/{linux,asm}. It is also possible to
130 tell the Makefile the kernel is somewhere else than at /usr/src/linux.
131
132 To keep problems to a minimum, please use a 'vanilla' kernel tree,
133 as distributed on ftp://ftp.kernel/org/pub/linux/kernel, and not one
134 patched by your distribution.
135
136
137 Separate from kernel compilation (compilation option 1)
138 =======================================================
139
140 This will compile and install the complete lm_sensors package. Though
141 nothing is written to your kernel tree, a proper tree is still needed
142 for this. See earlier for what a proper kernel tree is.
143
144 At the top of the Makefile are a couple of configuration variables that
145 you may want to change. As far as possible, the Makefile tries to figure
146 out by itself their settings, but it is possible to overrule them. A list
147 is found below. Most important are the variables that determine where
148 your kernel is located (LINUX=/usr/src/linux), where the i2c header files
149 are (I2C_HEADERS=/usr/local/include) and where you want to install
150 your modules (MODDIR=/lib/modules/KERNELVERSION/misc) and
151 header files (LINUX_INCLUDE_DIR=/usr/local/include/linux). You can see
152 that the installation locations are choosen in such a way that they
153 are separate from the true kernel.
154
155 Compilation is done by `make all'; `make install' installs the package.
156 You will get a lot of warnings about files which are not found, all
157 ending on `.*d'. You can safely ignore this; they contain dependency
158 information, which is regenerated on the spot.
159
160 Please continue reading this file before you start compiling.
161
162
163 Makefile configuration variables (compilation option 1)
164 ==============================================================
165
166 SHELL (default: /bin/sh)
167   You may have to specify the full path to Bash here, if /bin/sh is some
168   other shell. There have been conflicting reports on whether this is
169   needed.
170 LINUX default: /usr/src/linux
171   The location of your kernel tree.
172 COMPILE_KERNEL
173   Determine whether you want to consider the kernel modules for compilation
174   at all. By default, compilation option 1 will only compile and install
175   those modules which are not built into the kernel.
176   If some modules are built into your kernel, and this package is much
177   newer, you may find you can not insert the newly compiled modules.
178   Sorry.
179   You may want to set this to 0 if you have just patched and compiled
180   your kernel using the same version of this package, and just want to
181   compile the user-space tools.
182 I2C_HEADERS default: /usr/local/include
183   This lists where the i2c headers are found. If you used compilation
184   option 1 for the i2c package, the default will be right. If you used
185   compilation options 2 or 3, it will not, and may actually cause
186   problems if you have the left-overs of a previous installation.
187   If you have weird compilation problems, try to change this to
188   $(LINUX_HEADERS).
189 SMP
190   This must be set to 1 for a SMP kernel. The magic invocation should
191   determine this automatically, so you should not have to bother with
192   this.
193 WARN default: 0
194   Generate additional compilation warnings; mainly interesting for
195   developers.
196 MODVER
197   This must be set to 1 if CONFIG_MODVERSIONS is defined. The magic
198   invocation should determine this automatically, so you should not
199   have to bother with this.
200 DEBUG default: 0
201   Some drivers will issue more debug information if you set this to
202   1. Don't do it, unless you are a developer or are instructed to do
203   so by the lm_sensors team.
204 PREFIX default: /usr/local
205   Prefix for almost all installation directories
206 MODDIR default: /lib/modules/KERNELVERSION/misc)
207   The location where the kernel modules will be installed.
208 ETCDIR default: /etc
209   Installation location of the sensors.conf configuration file
210 LIBDIR default: $(PREFIX)/lib
211   Installation location of all static and shared libraries.
212 BINDIR default: $(PREFIX)/bin
213   Installation directory of programs useful for users
214 SBINDIR default: $(PREFIX)/sbin
215   Installation directory of system administrator-only programs
216 INCLUDEDIR default: $(PREFIX)/include
217   Base installation directory for include files (see next two vars)
218 SYSINCLUDEDIR default: $(INCLUDEDIR)/linux
219   Installation directory for system include files
220 LIBINCLUDEDIR default: $(INCLUDEDIR)/sensors
221   Installation directory for libsensors include files.
222 MANDIR default: $(PREFIX)/man
223   Base installation directory for manual pages
224 MANOWN default: root
225   Owner of manual pages
226 MANGRP default: root
227   Group of manual pages
228
229
230
231 Handling the modules (compilation option 1)
232 ===========================================
233
234 Run the command `depmod -a' to have the new modules recognised. Most
235 distributions run this command when you boot, so if you were cross-
236 compiling, you can skip this step.
237
238 See doc/modules for a more detailed treatment.
239
240
241 Patching the kernel (compilation option 2)
242 ==========================================
243
244 There is a special script which should be able to generate diffs against
245 any 2.2 or 2.4 kernel (2.4.0 or later). Note that 2.3 kernels are no
246 longer supported for this compilation option (choose option 1 instead).
247 Please report any problems to our mailinglist. Note that it may fail,
248 and probably silently, if you have applied other patches to your kernel \
249 tree, or for very new kernels.  It *is* safe to run it if your kernel
250 already has the lm_sensors drivers.  It will only work if you applied the
251 i2c patches first.
252
253 ** Only a subset of the modules in lm_sensors are patched into the        **
254 ** kernel by the script. See the file mkpatch/FILES to see if the         **
255 ** modules you need are included. If a module you need is NOT listed      **
256 ** in mkpatch/FILES, it will not be patched, and you MUST use option 1.   **
257 ** If you are not sure what modules you need, run `sensors-detect' first. **
258
259 The kernel diffs are generated by the program `mkpatch.pl' in the mkpatch
260 subdirectory. It needs two arguments: the first one is the root of the
261 lm_sensors package, the second one is the root of the kernel tree against
262 which the diffs will be generated. For example:
263   cd /tmp/lm_sensors-2.4.0
264   mkpatch/mkpatch.pl . /usr/src/linux > /tmp/sensors-patch
265 You can apply the diffs as usual:
266   cd /usr/src/linux
267   patch -p1 -E < /tmp/sensors-patch
268 Genearation and application can easily be done in one step:
269   mkpatch/mkpatch.pl . /usr/src/linux | patch -p1 -E -d /usr/src/linux
270 The generated diffs are of course only valid for the kernel version
271 against which mkpatch.pl was run.
272
273 Once you have applied the patches, you can configure and compile your
274 kernel as usual. You will see the sensors configuration screen under the
275 `Character Devices' menu in menuconfig, but it will only be available
276 if you selected base I2C support.
277
278
279 Using the sensors package
280 =========================
281
282 You can now load the modules by using `modprobe'. For example,
283 `modprobe i2c-piix4' will load the i2c-piix4 module, and all i2c modules
284 on which it depends.
285
286 You can not use demand-loading; you will have to issue explicit modprobe
287 instructions.
288
289 If you have an older installation, you will probably have to create the
290 i2c device files in the /dev directory. They are called /dev/i2c-%d,
291 and are character devices with major device number 89 and minor device
292 number %d. The script prog/mkdev/mkdev.sh will create the files for you.
293
294 There is a special scanning program installed called sensors-detect. It
295 will scan all available I2C and SMBus adapters for all known devices,
296 and give you a list of what modules you need to insert. It is written in
297 Perl, and you will need at least Perl 5.004 to run it succesfully.
298
299 If `sensors' returns some error message about not being able to load
300 libsensors, you have to add the directory in which it is installed
301 (by default /usr/local/lib) to /etc/ld.so.conf and run `ldconfig'.
302
303 You can use the installed sensors program to get a report of all detected
304 sensor devices. There is also a manual page for this program. Calling
305 `sensors -s' will set the limits and other configuration settings
306 specified in /etc/sensors.conf. Again, read the manual pages for more
307 information.
308
309 There are many auxiliary programs not installed. You can find them under
310 the prog subdirectory. A list can be found in doc/progs.
311
312
313 Old and new I2C drivers
314 =======================
315
316 In the current 2.2 and 2.3 kernels, there are already I2C drivers, but
317 they are not the same ones as in this package. They are much older, and
318 have a very limited functionality compared with the drivers included
319 here. Fortunately, they can co-exist peacefully, so you should not worry
320 about it. Except for one thing: `#include <linux/i2c.h>' can cause the
321 wrong header file to be included. If you patched the kernel (compilation
322 option 3), you will have to use `#include <linux/i2c-old.h>' to include
323 the old ones; in all other cases, including the old ones will probably
324 be impossible without copying them explicitly to some place that will
325 be checked first.
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