Version: 1.1.3

Creating Kernel Patches

Creating Kernel Patches for Netkit-JH#

Netkit uses a few kernel patches to apply changes to the kernel before being built. These kernel patches add additional functionality to the UML kernel to assist the running of Netkit. One example of a kernel patch is the addition of random MAC addresses assigned to network interfaces, created from the machine's name and name of the network interface, making MAC address collisions very rare.

To create kernel patches, firstly create two copies of the Linux kernel source code. To retrieve this source code, navigate to netkit-jh-build/kernel/Makefile and use the URL available KERNEL_URL.

$ wget https://cdn.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v5.x/linux-5.10.4.tar.xz
$ tar xf linux-5.10.4.tar.xz
$ mv linux-source-5.10.4 a
$ cp a b

Now there is two folders with identical source code. Modify the source code within a with whatever changes are required. Once you have modified the code, run this command to produce a patch file:

$ diff -urpN a b > 93-tutorial-patch.patch

Once you have a .patch file, move it to netkit-jh-build/kernel/patches/ and name it appropiately. Also add this file name to the series file.

Now you can build as normal. If all goes well, you should see something like this:

Applying patch /home/debian/netkit-jh-build/kernel/build/user-mode-linux-5.9um1/debian/patches/93-tutorial-patch.patch
patching file arch/um/os-Linux/umid.c