MODULE-ASSISTANT
Section: (8)
Updated: 08 Januar 2007
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NAME
module-assistant - manage kernel modules packages
SYNOPSIS
module-assistant [ -fihnqstv ] [ -k source/headers directory ] [ -l kernel versions ] { update | search | prepare | auto-install | list | list-available | list-installed | auto-unpacked | get | build | install | clean | purge | fakesource } [ pkg ... ]
m-a ...
DESCRIPTION
module-assistant is the command-line tool for handling
module-source packages that have been prepared for the Debian
distribution. It helps users to build and install module package(s)
easily for one or more custom kernels.
Unless the -h, or --help option is given, one of the
commands below should be present to invoke a function explicitly. If
no (or no valid) command is specified and the dialog tool is available, a simple graphical user
interface will pop up and guide you trough the available functionality.
NOTE: don't even think about using some random kernel-source-x.y.z package contents
(or linux-x.y.z tarball from the Internet) to specify the kernel source for your
currently running kernel. Don't! Those source is not exactly what have been
used to build the running kernel and its configuration most likely does not
match yours. You need the configured kernel source directory or at least the
derived kernel-headers-... package containing the kernel configuration for
the exact kernel version (complete version string).
If you do not understand anything of the above, run "m-a prepare" and/or
look at the description and contents of some kernel-headers-... package.
Please run the module-assistant prepare command once before you do anything else.
For some packages, kernel-headers (reduced source) is not enough. You
will have the choice to run a completely customized kernel, or to
recreate the source that have been used to build the current one. The
fakesource function may be useful, see below.
In order to configure a kernel source properly, you need to
make sure that the file version.h is generated. To get it, configure the
options as usual (make menuconfig etc.) and run make dep (for kernel 2.4.x) or make prepare (for newer ones).
COMMANDS
Most commands require a specification of the package names that they should be applied on.
pkg can be a single word (package name) or multiple
names. The word all will be expanded to the list of all available
packages, the word alli to the list of currently installed
(source) packages and the word allu will be expanded to the list of packages that seem to be installed and unpacked in the base source directory.
If a source package with the given name is not
available, module-assistant (abbreviated: m-a) will extend the package name with the popular suffixes like -kernel, -driver, -module, -source and combinations of them.
Multiple commands can be specified in one
invocation, eg. "m-a clean,get,build arla cdfs" is the short way to write
"module-assistant clean arla-modules-source ; module-assistant clean cdfs-src ; module-assistant get arla-modules-source cdfs-src ; module-assistant build arla-modules-source cdfs-src" (or similar).
If you do not like the dialog/whiptail GUI, feel free to use the -t switch to disable it.
- update
-
update is used to resynchronize the version index files from
their sources. This happens with helper scripts provided by the
packages. module-assistant has a default built-in list of
the packages that it should look for but other packages can
be registered by module-assistant if the maintainer adds
the helper script.
- prepare
-
Tries to determine the name of the
required kernel-headers package (either the one matching the currently
running kernel or for the versions specified with -l), installs it if
needed and creates the /usr/src/linux symlink if needed. Also
installs the build-essential package to ensure that a sane compiler
environment is established.
- fakesource
-
Experimental function which tries to determine the name of the
required/compatible kernel-source package, installs it, modifies
the Makefile to look like the original source and runs
configuration routines as needed. Warning: DO NOT RELY ON THE
RESULTING SOURCE. It may be very different from the original version.
- list | list-available | la
-
list-available (abbreviated with la) presents
a list of details about specified packages, including
installed version, installable versions and recently built binary
packages. If the package names are omitted, shows all known
packages. With -v, prints long package paths.
- list-installed | li
-
Synonym to list alli. Acts like list-available
but limits the list to the installed source packages.
- search
-
Synonym to list -s. Looks for locally compiled packages
first and (if none found) searches for alternative installation
candidates with apt-cache.
- get
-
get followed by the package list installs the package
source, downloading source packages when needed.
- build
-
build is followed by one or more source packages that
should be built. It chooses the kernel source appropriate for the
currently running kernel unless different directories have been
specified. If the build fails, look for the most recent log file
in /var/cache/modass (or the user-specified location).
- install
-
install is followed by one or more packages desired for
installation. The last built package for the current running kernel
is chosen.
- auto-install | a-i
-
auto-install is followed by one or more packages desired for
installation. It will run prepare to configure your system to build
packages, get the package source, try to build it for the current
kernel and install it.
You can use alli or allu shortcuts to select all
installed modules source packages or only those that have been
unpacked before (similar to the make-kpkg tool normally
does, looking in $MODULE_LOC)
- auto-build | a-b
-
like auto-install but does not install the package immediately
- clean
-
clean clears the build directories of the kernel
packages.
- purge
-
purge clears the information cache of a source package
and removes all binary packages locally built from it (that
module-assistant knows about). USE WITH CARE!
OPTIONS
- -t
-
- --text-mode
-
Show pure build/install/update logs, no progress bars.
- -k
-
- --kernel-dir
-
The kernel source directories to be used for builds. You can specify
multiple directories with multiple options or separated by commas
or line separators (e.g using
-k "`echo /usr/src/kernel-headers-*`"
).
The kernel versions detected in this directories are automatically added to
the list of target kernel versions (see --kvers-list for
details).
- -l
-
- --kvers-list
-
List of kernel version strings (as in KVERS) to act on. If omitted,
the version string of the currently running kernel is inserted. If
--kernel-dir specifies additional source
directories, the kernel versions that belong to them will be inserted
too.
The locations of the kernel source (or headers) that belong to this
kernel versions are either detected by a lookup in the "usual" locations
on Linux systems, or they must be specified with the
--kernel-dir option.
- -v
-
- --verbose
-
Shows a bit more information, like full paths of the binary
packages.
- -n
-
- --no-rebuild
-
If a package that is to be generated does already exist in the
target directory (maybe in on older version), -n prevents
from building the package again.
The default behaviour is to
skip when exactly the same file (with the same filename) is to be
generated as the one that already exists, and the new filename
could be detected before starting the build process (depends on the
module package).
- -f
-
- --force
-
Never look for target file (in another version) and force a build.
For the get command, download a newer version of a package even if
it is already installed.
- -u
-
- --userdir
-
All relevant environment variables with paths will be redirected to
new directories under the one specified with this option.
- -i
-
- --non-inter
-
When the package build was not successful, just continue with other
candidates. By default, module-assistant will suggest to examine the
build log. This option may also modify the behaviour of dpkg and apt-get
to reduce the need for human interaction and install build dependencies as
needed.
- -o
-
- --unpack-once
-
Try to not unpack twice. The option needs to be also specified
when the package is being unpacked for the first time.
Experimental option, don't rely on it.
- -O
-
- --not-unpack
-
Never unpack the source tarball. Usefull after manual manipulation of module source.
- -q
-
- --quiet
-
Suppress some of the noisy messages during the processing.
- -S
-
- --sudo-cmd
-
A replacement command for superuser commands to be used instead of sudo.
- -s
-
- --apt-search
-
See search command for details.
- -h
-
- --help
-
Prints the usage overview.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
You can export the following environment variables to modify the
behaviour of the build scripts. Some packages may ignore them or
interpret them differently.
- KPKG_DEST_DIR
-
KPKG_DEST_DIR specify the target directory where the
resulting Debian package should be installed into. However, many
packages ignore this variable and install the file into the
directory above the kernel source directory or above the current
directory.
- KERNELDIRS
-
KERNELDIRS specifies or extends the list of kernel
source/header directory which m-a should build modules for. See /-k/-Option for details.
- SIGNCHANGES
-
If SIGNCHANGES is set, .changes files will be generated
(calling kdist_image rule instead of kdist) and debsign (or gpg or
pgp) will be executed to sign the changes.
- KMAINT | DEBFULLNAME | DEBNAME
-
Specifies the realname of the person building the package
(interesting for .changes file only)
- KEMAIL | DEBEMAIL
-
Specifies the email address of the person building the package
(interesting for .changes file only).
- MODULE_LOC
-
A different location for the (already extracted) module source
directories. Default is /usr/src/modules.
- MA_VARDIR
-
A different location for cached data, used by helper scripts from
module-assistant. Default is /var/cache/modass.
- MOD_SRCDIR
-
A different location for module source tarballs. Default is
/usr/src.
- ROOT_CMD
-
Wrapper command to execute command as root. If you are not root,
fakeroot is chosen automatically. This variable must be interpreted
by individual packages so some of them may ignore it. However, you
can still run module-assistant inside of the ROOT_CMD wrapper.
NON-ROOT USAGE
module-assistant can work without being root. However you
won't be able to use apt-get or dpkg to install the packages, and you
cannot write to /var/cache/modass on a normal Debian system. So the
commands are get, install,
auto-install and prepare are taboo for
regular users. However, if the sudo program is installed, it will be
invoked for apt-get and dpkg operations.
All remaining commands except of list
require additional environment variables to move the target paths to
locations writable for the user. They all can be trimmed to a
certain location (a writable directory) using the -u switch.
FILES
- /usr/share/modass/packages/*
-
List of helper scripts shipped with the module-assistant package.
- /usr/share/modass/overrides/*
-
Helper scripts installed by other packages.
SEE ALSO
make-kpkg
(1)
,
/usr/share/doc/module-assistant/RATIONALE
BUGS
See the module-assistant bug page <URL:http://bugs.debian.org/src:module-assistant>.
If you wish to report a bug in module-assistant, please use
the reportbug
(1)
command.
RETURN CODES
- 0
-
Success
- 1..249
-
various errors during the build process
- 254
-
problem with permissions
- 255
-
fixable error after user intervention
TODO
Quicklist (fast output without details)
Integration into APT and/or into the init system
"Aggressive" debianisation using the templates set (to generate a package
with guessed name from any source that looks like being compatible with
kernel 2.6 build system)
automatic transformation of kernel sources to generate .udeb packages
AUTHOR
Module-Assistant was written by Eduard Bloch <blade@debian.org> for the
Debian distribution.
Index
- NAME
-
- SYNOPSIS
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- COMMANDS
-
- OPTIONS
-
- ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
-
- NON-ROOT USAGE
-
- FILES
-
- SEE ALSO
-
- BUGS
-
- RETURN CODES
-
- TODO
-
- AUTHOR
-
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Time: 00:09:03 GMT, September 04, 2010