diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index 3760f9a..701a6d1 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -38,7 +38,7 @@ Why this is very bad and you should be ashamed: - segfaults can trivially lead to a kernel crash, and require a reboot - your disk could get erased. Yes, this can also happen with `sudo` from userland. But you should not use `sudo` when developing newbie programs. And for the kernel you don't have the choice not to use `sudo` - even more subtle problems like [not being able to rmmod](https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/78858/cannot-remove-or-reinsert-kernel-module-after-error-while-inserting-it-without-r) -- can't control which kernel version to use. So some of the modules may simply not compile because of kernel API changes, since [the Linux kernel does not have a stable kernel module API](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/37098482/how-to-build-a-linux-kernel-module-so-that-it-is-compatible-with-all-kernel-rele/45429681#45429681). +- can't control which kernel version and build options to use. So some of the modules may simply not compile because of kernel API changes, since [the Linux kernel does not have a stable kernel module API](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/37098482/how-to-build-a-linux-kernel-module-so-that-it-is-compatible-with-all-kernel-rele/45429681#45429681). - can't control which hardware is are using, notably the CPU architecture - can't step debug it with GDB easily diff --git a/run b/run index c7f1016..c2876e9 100755 --- a/run +++ b/run @@ -29,7 +29,11 @@ case "$arch" in ;; esac -cd buildroot +# Otherwise compiled +cd kernel_module +./make-host.sh clean + +cd ../buildroot for p in $(find '../buildroot_patches/' -maxdepth 1 -name '*.patch' -print); do patch -N -r - -p 1 <"$p" || : done