NAME¶
config
—
build system configuration files
SYNOPSIS¶
config |
[ -CVgp ]
[-d
destdir ]
SYSTEM_NAME |
DESCRIPTION¶
The
config
utility builds a set of system
configuration files from the file
SYSTEM_NAME
which describes the system to configure. A second file tells
config
what files are needed to generate a
system and can be augmented by configuration specific set of files that give
alternate files for a specific machine (see the
FILES section below).
Available options and operands:
-V
- Print the
config
version number.
-C
- If the INCLUDE_CONFIG_FILE is present in a configuration file, kernel
image will contain full configuration files included literally (preserving
comments). This flag is kept for backward compatibility.
-d
destdir
- Use destdir as the output directory,
instead of the default one. Note that
config
does not append
SYSTEM_NAME to the directory given.
-m
- Print the MACHINE and MACHINE_ARCH values for this kernel and exit.
-g
- Configure a system for debugging.
-x
kernel
- Print kernel configuration file embedded into a kernel file. This option
makes sense only if
options
INCLUDE_CONFIG_FILE
entry was present in your configuration
file.
-p
- Configure a system for profiling; for example,
kgmon(8) and
gprof(1). If two or more
-p
options are supplied,
config
configures a system for high
resolution profiling.
- SYSTEM_NAME
- Specify the name of the system configuration file containing device
specifications, configuration options and other system parameters for one
system configuration.
The
config
utility should be run from the
conf subdirectory of the system source
(usually
/sys/ARCH/conf),
where
ARCH represents one of the
architectures supported by
FreeBSD. The
config
utility creates the directory
../compile/SYSTEM_NAME
or the one given with the
-d
option as
necessary and places all output files there. The output of
config
consists of a number of files; for
the i386, they are:
Makefile, used by
make(1) in building the system; header files,
definitions of the number of various devices that will be compiled into the
system.
After running
config
, it is necessary to run
“
make depend
” in the directory where the
new makefile was created. The
config
utility prints a reminder of this when it completes.
If any other error messages are produced by
config
, the problems in the configuration
file should be corrected and
config
should
be run again. Attempts to compile a system that had configuration errors are
likely to fail.
DEBUG KERNELS¶
Traditional
BSD kernels are compiled without symbols due
to the heavy load on the system when compiling a “debug” kernel.
A debug kernel contains complete symbols for all the source files, and enables
an experienced kernel programmer to analyse the cause of a problem. The
debuggers available prior to
4.4BSD-Lite were able to
find some information from a normal kernel;
gdb(1) provides very little support for normal
kernels, and a debug kernel is needed for any meaningful analysis.
For reasons of history, time and space, building a debug kernel is not the
default with
FreeBSD: a debug kernel takes up to 30%
longer to build and requires about 30 MB of disk storage in the build
directory, compared to about 6 MB for a non-debug kernel. A debug kernel is
about 11 MB in size, compared to about 2 MB for a non-debug kernel. This space
is used both in the root file system and at run time in memory. Use the
-g
option to build a debug kernel. With
this option,
config
causes two kernel files
to be built in the kernel build directory:
- kernel.debug is the complete debug
kernel.
- kernel is a copy of the kernel with the
debug symbols stripped off. This is equivalent to the normal non-debug
kernel.
There is currently little sense in installing and booting from a debug kernel,
since the only tools available which use the symbols do not run on-line. There
are therefore two options for installing a debug kernel:
- “
make install
” installs
kernel in the root file system.
- “
make install.debug
” installs
kernel.debug in the root file
system.
FILES¶
- /sys/conf/files
- list of common files system is built from
- /sys/conf/Makefile.ARCH
- generic makefile for the ARCH
- /sys/conf/files.ARCH
- list of ARCH specific files
- /sys/ARCH/compile/SYSTEM_NAME
- default kernel build directory for system
SYSTEM_NAME on
ARCH.
SEE ALSO¶
config(5)
The
SYNOPSIS portion of each
device in section 4.
Building 4.3 BSD UNIX System with
Config.
HISTORY¶
The
config
utility appeared in
4.1BSD.
Before support for
-x
was introduced,
options INCLUDE_CONFIG_FILE
included entire
configuration file that used to be embedded in the new kernel. This meant that
strings(1) could be used to extract it from a
kernel: to extract the configuration information, you had to use the command:
strings -n 3 kernel | sed -n
's/^___//p'
BUGS¶
The line numbers reported in error messages are usually off by one.