Re: How can I build a 2.4 kernel on a 2.6 System

From: Jörg Dohle
Date: Sun Oct 26 2008 - 06:32:30 EST


Hello Willy

Thanks for answering, but I have a problem with the compiling.
When I try to compile the 2.4 kernel with the following commands:

# make clean && make mrproper
then I restore the .config file
# make oldconfig
# make dep && make bzImage respectively make modules


I get the following error message:

make[1]: Leaving directory `/fileserver/99_Frei/kernel-build-tree/linux-2.4.21-57.EL'
gcc -D__KERNEL__ -I/fileserver/99_Frei/kernel-build-tree/linux-2.4.21-57.EL/include -Wall -Wstrict-prototypes -Wno-trigraphs -O2 -fno-strict-aliasing -fno-common -Wno-unused -fomit-frame-pointer -pipe -freorder-blocks -march=i386 -DKBUILD_BASENAME=main -c -o init/main.o init/main.c
init/main.c:1: Fehler: Die ausgewählte CPU unterstützt nicht den x86-64 Befehlssatz

English translation (by google)
init / main.c: 1: Error: The selected CPU does not support x86-64 instruction


I use a x86_64 system with a 2.6.16.60-0.31-smp kernel for compiling 2.4 kernel modules.

I think some compiler information are missing for make.

Could you help me?


----- Original Message ----- From: "Willy Tarreau" <w@xxxxxx>
To: <j.d.-linux-kernel@xxxxxxxx>
Cc: <linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Friday, October 24, 2008 9:29 PM
Subject: Re: How can I build a 2.4 kernel on a 2.6 System


Hi,

On Fri, Oct 24, 2008 at 02:16:40PM +0200, j.d.-linux-kernel@xxxxxxxx wrote:
Hello list

I will build some 2.4 kernel modules on a system with a running 2.6 kernel.

Is it possible and how can I do this?

Not sure what you really mean. If you mean build 2.4 modules for 2.4 on
a machine running 2.6, that's OK as there's no dependency between the
running kernel and the one you're building. However, you should be
careful about two things :
- gcc: it tends to be too recent for 2.4. gcc 4.1 is the highest version
supported.
- modutils: most recent distros only ship module-init-tools without the
old depmod. If you intend to "make modules_install INSTALL_MOD_PATH=..."
then get prepared to see some errors from depmod at the end. The easiest
solution consists in getting a depmod from an old machine an installing
it in /tmp for instance.

Hoping this helps,
Willy

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