1HOWTO do Linux kernel development 2================================= 3 4This is the be-all, end-all document on this topic. It contains 5instructions on how to become a Linux kernel developer and how to learn 6to work with the Linux kernel development community. It tries to not 7contain anything related to the technical aspects of kernel programming, 8but will help point you in the right direction for that. 9 10If anything in this document becomes out of date, please send in patches 11to the maintainer of this file, who is listed at the bottom of the 12document. 13 14 15Introduction 16------------ 17 18So, you want to learn how to become a Linux kernel developer? Or you 19have been told by your manager, "Go write a Linux driver for this 20device." This document's goal is to teach you everything you need to 21know to achieve this by describing the process you need to go through, 22and hints on how to work with the community. It will also try to 23explain some of the reasons why the community works like it does. 24 25The kernel is written mostly in C, with some architecture-dependent 26parts written in assembly. A good understanding of C is required for 27kernel development. Assembly (any architecture) is not required unless 28you plan to do low-level development for that architecture. Though they 29are not a good substitute for a solid C education and/or years of 30experience, the following books are good for, if anything, reference: 31 32 - "The C Programming Language" by Kernighan and Ritchie [Prentice Hall] 33 - "Practical C Programming" by Steve Oualline [O'Reilly] 34 - "C: A Reference Manual" by Harbison and Steele [Prentice Hall] 35 36The kernel is written using GNU C and the GNU toolchain. While it 37adheres to the ISO C89 standard, it uses a number of extensions that are 38not featured in the standard. The kernel is a freestanding C 39environment, with no reliance on the standard C library, so some 40portions of the C standard are not supported. Arbitrary long long 41divisions and floating point are not allowed. It can sometimes be 42difficult to understand the assumptions the kernel has on the toolchain 43and the extensions that it uses, and unfortunately there is no 44definitive reference for them. Please check the gcc info pages (`info 45gcc`) for some information on them. 46 47Please remember that you are trying to learn how to work with the 48existing development community. It is a diverse group of people, with 49high standards for coding, style and procedure. These standards have 50been created over time based on what they have found to work best for 51such a large and geographically dispersed team. Try to learn as much as 52possible about these standards ahead of time, as they are well 53documented; do not expect people to adapt to you or your company's way 54of doing things. 55 56 57Legal Issues 58------------ 59 60The Linux kernel source code is released under the GPL. Please see the 61file, COPYING, in the main directory of the source tree, for details on 62the license. If you have further questions about the license, please 63contact a lawyer, and do not ask on the Linux kernel mailing list. The 64people on the mailing lists are not lawyers, and you should not rely on 65their statements on legal matters. 66 67For common questions and answers about the GPL, please see: 68 69 https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-faq.html 70 71 72Documentation 73------------- 74 75The Linux kernel source tree has a large range of documents that are 76invaluable for learning how to interact with the kernel community. When 77new features are added to the kernel, it is recommended that new 78documentation files are also added which explain how to use the feature. 79When a kernel change causes the interface that the kernel exposes to 80userspace to change, it is recommended that you send the information or 81a patch to the manual pages explaining the change to the manual pages 82maintainer at mtk.manpages@gmail.com, and CC the list 83linux-api@vger.kernel.org. 84 85Here is a list of files that are in the kernel source tree that are 86required reading: 87 88 README 89 This file gives a short background on the Linux kernel and describes 90 what is necessary to do to configure and build the kernel. People 91 who are new to the kernel should start here. 92 93 :ref:`Documentation/process/changes.rst <changes>` 94 This file gives a list of the minimum levels of various software 95 packages that are necessary to build and run the kernel 96 successfully. 97 98 :ref:`Documentation/process/coding-style.rst <codingstyle>` 99 This describes the Linux kernel coding style, and some of the 100 rationale behind it. All new code is expected to follow the 101 guidelines in this document. Most maintainers will only accept 102 patches if these rules are followed, and many people will only 103 review code if it is in the proper style. 104 105 :ref:`Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst <submittingpatches>` and :ref:`Documentation/process/submitting-drivers.rst <submittingdrivers>` 106 These files describe in explicit detail how to successfully create 107 and send a patch, including (but not limited to): 108 109 - Email contents 110 - Email format 111 - Who to send it to 112 113 Following these rules will not guarantee success (as all patches are 114 subject to scrutiny for content and style), but not following them 115 will almost always prevent it. 116 117 Other excellent descriptions of how to create patches properly are: 118 119 "The Perfect Patch" 120 https://www.ozlabs.org/~akpm/stuff/tpp.txt 121 122 "Linux kernel patch submission format" 123 http://linux.yyz.us/patch-format.html 124 125 :ref:`Documentation/process/stable-api-nonsense.rst <stable_api_nonsense>` 126 This file describes the rationale behind the conscious decision to 127 not have a stable API within the kernel, including things like: 128 129 - Subsystem shim-layers (for compatibility?) 130 - Driver portability between Operating Systems. 131 - Mitigating rapid change within the kernel source tree (or 132 preventing rapid change) 133 134 This document is crucial for understanding the Linux development 135 philosophy and is very important for people moving to Linux from 136 development on other Operating Systems. 137 138 :ref:`Documentation/admin-guide/security-bugs.rst <securitybugs>` 139 If you feel you have found a security problem in the Linux kernel, 140 please follow the steps in this document to help notify the kernel 141 developers, and help solve the issue. 142 143 :ref:`Documentation/process/management-style.rst <managementstyle>` 144 This document describes how Linux kernel maintainers operate and the 145 shared ethos behind their methodologies. This is important reading 146 for anyone new to kernel development (or anyone simply curious about 147 it), as it resolves a lot of common misconceptions and confusion 148 about the unique behavior of kernel maintainers. 149 150 :ref:`Documentation/process/stable-kernel-rules.rst <stable_kernel_rules>` 151 This file describes the rules on how the stable kernel releases 152 happen, and what to do if you want to get a change into one of these 153 releases. 154 155 :ref:`Documentation/process/kernel-docs.rst <kernel_docs>` 156 A list of external documentation that pertains to kernel 157 development. Please consult this list if you do not find what you 158 are looking for within the in-kernel documentation. 159 160 :ref:`Documentation/process/applying-patches.rst <applying_patches>` 161 A good introduction describing exactly what a patch is and how to 162 apply it to the different development branches of the kernel. 163 164The kernel also has a large number of documents that can be 165automatically generated from the source code itself or from 166ReStructuredText markups (ReST), like this one. This includes a 167full description of the in-kernel API, and rules on how to handle 168locking properly. 169 170All such documents can be generated as PDF or HTML by running:: 171 172 make pdfdocs 173 make htmldocs 174 175respectively from the main kernel source directory. 176 177The documents that uses ReST markup will be generated at Documentation/output. 178They can also be generated on LaTeX and ePub formats with:: 179 180 make latexdocs 181 make epubdocs 182 183Currently, there are some documents written on DocBook that are in 184the process of conversion to ReST. Such documents will be created in the 185Documentation/DocBook/ directory and can be generated also as 186Postscript or man pages by running:: 187 188 make psdocs 189 make mandocs 190 191Becoming A Kernel Developer 192--------------------------- 193 194If you do not know anything about Linux kernel development, you should 195look at the Linux KernelNewbies project: 196 197 https://kernelnewbies.org 198 199It consists of a helpful mailing list where you can ask almost any type 200of basic kernel development question (make sure to search the archives 201first, before asking something that has already been answered in the 202past.) It also has an IRC channel that you can use to ask questions in 203real-time, and a lot of helpful documentation that is useful for 204learning about Linux kernel development. 205 206The website has basic information about code organization, subsystems, 207and current projects (both in-tree and out-of-tree). It also describes 208some basic logistical information, like how to compile a kernel and 209apply a patch. 210 211If you do not know where you want to start, but you want to look for 212some task to start doing to join into the kernel development community, 213go to the Linux Kernel Janitor's project: 214 215 https://kernelnewbies.org/KernelJanitors 216 217It is a great place to start. It describes a list of relatively simple 218problems that need to be cleaned up and fixed within the Linux kernel 219source tree. Working with the developers in charge of this project, you 220will learn the basics of getting your patch into the Linux kernel tree, 221and possibly be pointed in the direction of what to go work on next, if 222you do not already have an idea. 223 224If you already have a chunk of code that you want to put into the kernel 225tree, but need some help getting it in the proper form, the 226kernel-mentors project was created to help you out with this. It is a 227mailing list, and can be found at: 228 229 https://selenic.com/mailman/listinfo/kernel-mentors 230 231Before making any actual modifications to the Linux kernel code, it is 232imperative to understand how the code in question works. For this 233purpose, nothing is better than reading through it directly (most tricky 234bits are commented well), perhaps even with the help of specialized 235tools. One such tool that is particularly recommended is the Linux 236Cross-Reference project, which is able to present source code in a 237self-referential, indexed webpage format. An excellent up-to-date 238repository of the kernel code may be found at: 239 240 http://lxr.free-electrons.com/ 241 242 243The development process 244----------------------- 245 246Linux kernel development process currently consists of a few different 247main kernel "branches" and lots of different subsystem-specific kernel 248branches. These different branches are: 249 250 - main 4.x kernel tree 251 - 4.x.y -stable kernel tree 252 - 4.x -git kernel patches 253 - subsystem specific kernel trees and patches 254 - the 4.x -next kernel tree for integration tests 255 2564.x kernel tree 257~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 258 2594.x kernels are maintained by Linus Torvalds, and can be found on 260https://kernel.org in the pub/linux/kernel/v4.x/ directory. Its development 261process is as follows: 262 263 - As soon as a new kernel is released a two weeks window is open, 264 during this period of time maintainers can submit big diffs to 265 Linus, usually the patches that have already been included in the 266 -next kernel for a few weeks. The preferred way to submit big changes 267 is using git (the kernel's source management tool, more information 268 can be found at https://git-scm.com/) but plain patches are also just 269 fine. 270 - After two weeks a -rc1 kernel is released and the focus is on making the 271 new kernel as rock solid as possible. Most of the patches at this point 272 should fix a regression. Bugs that have always existed are not 273 regressions, so only push these kinds of fixes if they are important. 274 Please note that a whole new driver (or filesystem) might be accepted 275 after -rc1 because there is no risk of causing regressions with such a 276 change as long as the change is self-contained and does not affect areas 277 outside of the code that is being added. git can be used to send 278 patches to Linus after -rc1 is released, but the patches need to also be 279 sent to a public mailing list for review. 280 - A new -rc is released whenever Linus deems the current git tree to 281 be in a reasonably sane state adequate for testing. The goal is to 282 release a new -rc kernel every week. 283 - Process continues until the kernel is considered "ready", the 284 process should last around 6 weeks. 285 286It is worth mentioning what Andrew Morton wrote on the linux-kernel 287mailing list about kernel releases: 288 289 *"Nobody knows when a kernel will be released, because it's 290 released according to perceived bug status, not according to a 291 preconceived timeline."* 292 2934.x.y -stable kernel tree 294~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 295 296Kernels with 3-part versions are -stable kernels. They contain 297relatively small and critical fixes for security problems or significant 298regressions discovered in a given 4.x kernel. 299 300This is the recommended branch for users who want the most recent stable 301kernel and are not interested in helping test development/experimental 302versions. 303 304If no 4.x.y kernel is available, then the highest numbered 4.x 305kernel is the current stable kernel. 306 3074.x.y are maintained by the "stable" team <stable@vger.kernel.org>, and 308are released as needs dictate. The normal release period is approximately 309two weeks, but it can be longer if there are no pressing problems. A 310security-related problem, instead, can cause a release to happen almost 311instantly. 312 313The file Documentation/process/stable-kernel-rules.rst in the kernel tree 314documents what kinds of changes are acceptable for the -stable tree, and 315how the release process works. 316 3174.x -git patches 318~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 319 320These are daily snapshots of Linus' kernel tree which are managed in a 321git repository (hence the name.) These patches are usually released 322daily and represent the current state of Linus' tree. They are more 323experimental than -rc kernels since they are generated automatically 324without even a cursory glance to see if they are sane. 325 326Subsystem Specific kernel trees and patches 327~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 328 329The maintainers of the various kernel subsystems --- and also many 330kernel subsystem developers --- expose their current state of 331development in source repositories. That way, others can see what is 332happening in the different areas of the kernel. In areas where 333development is rapid, a developer may be asked to base his submissions 334onto such a subsystem kernel tree so that conflicts between the 335submission and other already ongoing work are avoided. 336 337Most of these repositories are git trees, but there are also other SCMs 338in use, or patch queues being published as quilt series. Addresses of 339these subsystem repositories are listed in the MAINTAINERS file. Many 340of them can be browsed at https://git.kernel.org/. 341 342Before a proposed patch is committed to such a subsystem tree, it is 343subject to review which primarily happens on mailing lists (see the 344respective section below). For several kernel subsystems, this review 345process is tracked with the tool patchwork. Patchwork offers a web 346interface which shows patch postings, any comments on a patch or 347revisions to it, and maintainers can mark patches as under review, 348accepted, or rejected. Most of these patchwork sites are listed at 349https://patchwork.kernel.org/. 350 3514.x -next kernel tree for integration tests 352~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 353 354Before updates from subsystem trees are merged into the mainline 4.x 355tree, they need to be integration-tested. For this purpose, a special 356testing repository exists into which virtually all subsystem trees are 357pulled on an almost daily basis: 358 359 https://git.kernel.org/?p=linux/kernel/git/next/linux-next.git 360 361This way, the -next kernel gives a summary outlook onto what will be 362expected to go into the mainline kernel at the next merge period. 363Adventurous testers are very welcome to runtime-test the -next kernel. 364 365 366Bug Reporting 367------------- 368 369https://bugzilla.kernel.org is where the Linux kernel developers track kernel 370bugs. Users are encouraged to report all bugs that they find in this 371tool. For details on how to use the kernel bugzilla, please see: 372 373 https://bugzilla.kernel.org/page.cgi?id=faq.html 374 375The file admin-guide/reporting-bugs.rst in the main kernel source directory has a good 376template for how to report a possible kernel bug, and details what kind 377of information is needed by the kernel developers to help track down the 378problem. 379 380 381Managing bug reports 382-------------------- 383 384One of the best ways to put into practice your hacking skills is by fixing 385bugs reported by other people. Not only you will help to make the kernel 386more stable, you'll learn to fix real world problems and you will improve 387your skills, and other developers will be aware of your presence. Fixing 388bugs is one of the best ways to get merits among other developers, because 389not many people like wasting time fixing other people's bugs. 390 391To work in the already reported bug reports, go to https://bugzilla.kernel.org. 392If you want to be advised of the future bug reports, you can subscribe to the 393bugme-new mailing list (only new bug reports are mailed here) or to the 394bugme-janitor mailing list (every change in the bugzilla is mailed here) 395 396 https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bugme-new 397 398 https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bugme-janitors 399 400 401 402Mailing lists 403------------- 404 405As some of the above documents describe, the majority of the core kernel 406developers participate on the Linux Kernel Mailing list. Details on how 407to subscribe and unsubscribe from the list can be found at: 408 409 http://vger.kernel.org/vger-lists.html#linux-kernel 410 411There are archives of the mailing list on the web in many different 412places. Use a search engine to find these archives. For example: 413 414 http://dir.gmane.org/gmane.linux.kernel 415 416It is highly recommended that you search the archives about the topic 417you want to bring up, before you post it to the list. A lot of things 418already discussed in detail are only recorded at the mailing list 419archives. 420 421Most of the individual kernel subsystems also have their own separate 422mailing list where they do their development efforts. See the 423MAINTAINERS file for a list of what these lists are for the different 424groups. 425 426Many of the lists are hosted on kernel.org. Information on them can be 427found at: 428 429 http://vger.kernel.org/vger-lists.html 430 431Please remember to follow good behavioral habits when using the lists. 432Though a bit cheesy, the following URL has some simple guidelines for 433interacting with the list (or any list): 434 435 http://www.albion.com/netiquette/ 436 437If multiple people respond to your mail, the CC: list of recipients may 438get pretty large. Don't remove anybody from the CC: list without a good 439reason, or don't reply only to the list address. Get used to receiving the 440mail twice, one from the sender and the one from the list, and don't try 441to tune that by adding fancy mail-headers, people will not like it. 442 443Remember to keep the context and the attribution of your replies intact, 444keep the "John Kernelhacker wrote ...:" lines at the top of your reply, and 445add your statements between the individual quoted sections instead of 446writing at the top of the mail. 447 448If you add patches to your mail, make sure they are plain readable text 449as stated in Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst. 450Kernel developers don't want to deal with 451attachments or compressed patches; they may want to comment on 452individual lines of your patch, which works only that way. Make sure you 453use a mail program that does not mangle spaces and tab characters. A 454good first test is to send the mail to yourself and try to apply your 455own patch by yourself. If that doesn't work, get your mail program fixed 456or change it until it works. 457 458Above all, please remember to show respect to other subscribers. 459 460 461Working with the community 462-------------------------- 463 464The goal of the kernel community is to provide the best possible kernel 465there is. When you submit a patch for acceptance, it will be reviewed 466on its technical merits and those alone. So, what should you be 467expecting? 468 469 - criticism 470 - comments 471 - requests for change 472 - requests for justification 473 - silence 474 475Remember, this is part of getting your patch into the kernel. You have 476to be able to take criticism and comments about your patches, evaluate 477them at a technical level and either rework your patches or provide 478clear and concise reasoning as to why those changes should not be made. 479If there are no responses to your posting, wait a few days and try 480again, sometimes things get lost in the huge volume. 481 482What should you not do? 483 484 - expect your patch to be accepted without question 485 - become defensive 486 - ignore comments 487 - resubmit the patch without making any of the requested changes 488 489In a community that is looking for the best technical solution possible, 490there will always be differing opinions on how beneficial a patch is. 491You have to be cooperative, and willing to adapt your idea to fit within 492the kernel. Or at least be willing to prove your idea is worth it. 493Remember, being wrong is acceptable as long as you are willing to work 494toward a solution that is right. 495 496It is normal that the answers to your first patch might simply be a list 497of a dozen things you should correct. This does **not** imply that your 498patch will not be accepted, and it is **not** meant against you 499personally. Simply correct all issues raised against your patch and 500resend it. 501 502 503Differences between the kernel community and corporate structures 504----------------------------------------------------------------- 505 506The kernel community works differently than most traditional corporate 507development environments. Here are a list of things that you can try to 508do to avoid problems: 509 510 Good things to say regarding your proposed changes: 511 512 - "This solves multiple problems." 513 - "This deletes 2000 lines of code." 514 - "Here is a patch that explains what I am trying to describe." 515 - "I tested it on 5 different architectures..." 516 - "Here is a series of small patches that..." 517 - "This increases performance on typical machines..." 518 519 Bad things you should avoid saying: 520 521 - "We did it this way in AIX/ptx/Solaris, so therefore it must be 522 good..." 523 - "I've being doing this for 20 years, so..." 524 - "This is required for my company to make money" 525 - "This is for our Enterprise product line." 526 - "Here is my 1000 page design document that describes my idea" 527 - "I've been working on this for 6 months..." 528 - "Here's a 5000 line patch that..." 529 - "I rewrote all of the current mess, and here it is..." 530 - "I have a deadline, and this patch needs to be applied now." 531 532Another way the kernel community is different than most traditional 533software engineering work environments is the faceless nature of 534interaction. One benefit of using email and irc as the primary forms of 535communication is the lack of discrimination based on gender or race. 536The Linux kernel work environment is accepting of women and minorities 537because all you are is an email address. The international aspect also 538helps to level the playing field because you can't guess gender based on 539a person's name. A man may be named Andrea and a woman may be named Pat. 540Most women who have worked in the Linux kernel and have expressed an 541opinion have had positive experiences. 542 543The language barrier can cause problems for some people who are not 544comfortable with English. A good grasp of the language can be needed in 545order to get ideas across properly on mailing lists, so it is 546recommended that you check your emails to make sure they make sense in 547English before sending them. 548 549 550Break up your changes 551--------------------- 552 553The Linux kernel community does not gladly accept large chunks of code 554dropped on it all at once. The changes need to be properly introduced, 555discussed, and broken up into tiny, individual portions. This is almost 556the exact opposite of what companies are used to doing. Your proposal 557should also be introduced very early in the development process, so that 558you can receive feedback on what you are doing. It also lets the 559community feel that you are working with them, and not simply using them 560as a dumping ground for your feature. However, don't send 50 emails at 561one time to a mailing list, your patch series should be smaller than 562that almost all of the time. 563 564The reasons for breaking things up are the following: 565 5661) Small patches increase the likelihood that your patches will be 567 applied, since they don't take much time or effort to verify for 568 correctness. A 5 line patch can be applied by a maintainer with 569 barely a second glance. However, a 500 line patch may take hours to 570 review for correctness (the time it takes is exponentially 571 proportional to the size of the patch, or something). 572 573 Small patches also make it very easy to debug when something goes 574 wrong. It's much easier to back out patches one by one than it is 575 to dissect a very large patch after it's been applied (and broken 576 something). 577 5782) It's important not only to send small patches, but also to rewrite 579 and simplify (or simply re-order) patches before submitting them. 580 581Here is an analogy from kernel developer Al Viro: 582 583 *"Think of a teacher grading homework from a math student. The 584 teacher does not want to see the student's trials and errors 585 before they came up with the solution. They want to see the 586 cleanest, most elegant answer. A good student knows this, and 587 would never submit her intermediate work before the final 588 solution.* 589 590 *The same is true of kernel development. The maintainers and 591 reviewers do not want to see the thought process behind the 592 solution to the problem one is solving. They want to see a 593 simple and elegant solution."* 594 595It may be challenging to keep the balance between presenting an elegant 596solution and working together with the community and discussing your 597unfinished work. Therefore it is good to get early in the process to 598get feedback to improve your work, but also keep your changes in small 599chunks that they may get already accepted, even when your whole task is 600not ready for inclusion now. 601 602Also realize that it is not acceptable to send patches for inclusion 603that are unfinished and will be "fixed up later." 604 605 606Justify your change 607------------------- 608 609Along with breaking up your patches, it is very important for you to let 610the Linux community know why they should add this change. New features 611must be justified as being needed and useful. 612 613 614Document your change 615-------------------- 616 617When sending in your patches, pay special attention to what you say in 618the text in your email. This information will become the ChangeLog 619information for the patch, and will be preserved for everyone to see for 620all time. It should describe the patch completely, containing: 621 622 - why the change is necessary 623 - the overall design approach in the patch 624 - implementation details 625 - testing results 626 627For more details on what this should all look like, please see the 628ChangeLog section of the document: 629 630 "The Perfect Patch" 631 http://www.ozlabs.org/~akpm/stuff/tpp.txt 632 633 634All of these things are sometimes very hard to do. It can take years to 635perfect these practices (if at all). It's a continuous process of 636improvement that requires a lot of patience and determination. But 637don't give up, it's possible. Many have done it before, and each had to 638start exactly where you are now. 639 640 641 642 643---------- 644 645Thanks to Paolo Ciarrocchi who allowed the "Development Process" 646(https://lwn.net/Articles/94386/) section 647to be based on text he had written, and to Randy Dunlap and Gerrit 648Huizenga for some of the list of things you should and should not say. 649Also thanks to Pat Mochel, Hanna Linder, Randy Dunlap, Kay Sievers, 650Vojtech Pavlik, Jan Kara, Josh Boyer, Kees Cook, Andrew Morton, Andi 651Kleen, Vadim Lobanov, Jesper Juhl, Adrian Bunk, Keri Harris, Frans Pop, 652David A. Wheeler, Junio Hamano, Michael Kerrisk, and Alex Shepard for 653their review, comments, and contributions. Without their help, this 654document would not have been possible. 655 656 657 658Maintainer: Greg Kroah-Hartman <greg@kroah.com> 659