[Q] The proprietary exfat modules and custom kernels? - Galaxy S III Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

With the inclusion of proprietary kernel modules will the S III's development be limited after source release to people choosing between exfat support or custom kernels that the modules won't work with since they were not compiled against?

have to wait for the sourcecode release , samsung might include it in their package.

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[Q] How to compile kernel?

Can anyone perhaps provide a tutorial of how to compile an HTC kernel? I have experience in compiling kernels for Android but it was for the Samsung Moment, a very different beast both in hardware and software setups.
read this http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1039854
kernel compiling in less than 10 sentences:
great place to start is forking toastcfh's evo 3d kernel source - https://github.com/toastcfh/htc-8660-kernel
using the aosp toolchain (repo sync aosp in the prebuilt dir) and compiling.
once you have the zImage, merge it up with a ramdisk. i'd probably start with the stock kernel's ramdisk. that will give the boot.img to flash.

Building ME301t stock kernel

Hi,
I'm trying to build the stock Memo Pad smart(ME301t) stock kernel 10.6.1.29 downloaded directly from asus.
I used 4.3.3 to 4.7 toolchains with similar results(give or take some deprecated compiler arguments).
What I really want to know is why I'm getting a lot of warnings(NOT ERRORS), some of them are minor errors like "unused function" and some of them are major warnings breaking function functionality. Some of the builds don't even boot.
What toolchain should I use with this kernel?
Why a stock kernel(from asus) should produce warnings at the first place?
I'm on linux BTW.

[Q] Where to start for Android Kernel Development?

Hello Guys,
I see a lot of threads for starting with android rom development, but can anyone give me pointers for kernel development? I would like to start kernel development and do not know where to start. I am not interested in rom development at the moment, but that is because I assume that the android rom is like a user space app over the kernel. Please correct me if I am wrong. It would be great if you guys could point me to some beginner friendly kernel development tutorials. I am looking through Linux Device Drivers (LDD) book but am having a hard time comparing that with android. I have cloned mediatek 6589 source from android repository. I am submitting partial url cos I am not allowed to submit full url yet. URL(android.googlesource.com/kernel/mediatek/+/android-5.1.0_r0.2) since I am running a mtk6589 device (Walton X1/ Gionee Dream D1) and would like to understand where to start coding kernels for android. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Oh and I would like mediatek specific help if possible. I have gone through some of the general kernel building and overclocking tutorials. I want to do some more enhancements if possible. Since mediatek seems to be the mysterious one with bare minimum source availability, I would like to take up that challenge
Thanks.
I don't have a tutorial for you but a small checklist. You need:
* Kernel source tree
* A config for your device (e.g. arch/arm/configs/*defconfig*)
* A cross compiler toolchain to generate ARM code (you can use the precompiled one from the Android source tree)
* A way to package your kernel into a boot image for your device - usually an Android boot image contains a compiled kernel (zImage), a compressed ramdisk for the root filesystem, and probably a device tree binary (dtb). Mediatek may do things differently.
* A way to install that boot image on your device - this requires an unlocked bootloader that allows custom boot images to be installed and started. Most devices use the fastboot tool for this.
Your first step should be to build a working kernel from unmodified sources. When you got that working, you can think about starting actual coding.
Thanks for the Pointer Mate
_that said:
I don't have a tutorial for you but a small checklist. You need:
* Kernel source tree
* A config for your device (e.g. arch/arm/configs/*defconfig*)
* A cross compiler toolchain to generate ARM code (you can use the precompiled one from the Android source tree)
* A way to package your kernel into a boot image for your device - usually an Android boot image contains a compiled kernel (zImage), a compressed ramdisk for the root filesystem, and probably a device tree binary (dtb). Mediatek may do things differently.
* A way to install that boot image on your device - this requires an unlocked bootloader that allows custom boot images to be installed and started. Most devices use the fastboot tool for this.
Your first step should be to build a working kernel from unmodified sources. When you got that working, you can think about starting actual coding.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks man. Really appreciate the pointers. I do have some of the checklists done. Like
* Kernel source tree
** A cross compiler toolchain to generate ARM code (using the precompiled one)
* A way to install that boot image on your device
Now the problem is, my device still does not have its source code available. I got the general source tree from google which is not my device's so I dont have the defconfig. Is there a way to rip it out from a compiled kernel? Like using some sort of a decompiler? Also I will look around for zimage packaging tools. Thanks mate. Mediatek is apparently one hell of a problem child XD
syko_kickass said:
Now the problem is, my device still does not have its source code available. I got the general source tree from google which is not my device's so I dont have the defconfig. Is there a way to rip it out from a compiled kernel? Like using some sort of a decompiler? Also I will look around for zimage packaging tools.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you're lucky, your existing kernel exposes its config in the file /proc/config.gz. If not, I don't know how to get a matching config - best is to avoid buying anything from GPL violators.

ROMs based on non-prebuilt kernel

Are there any ROMs, based on the leaked kernel sources below?
https://github.com/rmtew/MediaTek-HelioX10-Kernel
All the ROMs, I've seen are based on prebuilt kernel.
Until we havent full kernel source we had to use prebuilt kernel. Nofearnohappy is trying to complete the source. Now its booting but still some things is broken
I would like to port SailfishOS, but for that I need the build the kernel from source.
On Nofearnohappy's github you can find source but i think it's not worth to spend so much time on building not fully functional rom

Android kernel how to make compatible with higher os? (+Where can I find the patch?)

Hello, I'm newbie dev trying to build CM13 for Lenovo Phab plus.
I think I'm almost finished with device and vendor, but I cannot figure it out what to do with kernel.
The circumstance is,
I have a stock kernel source which runs in 5.1.1 LP, with version of 3.10.49.
What I want is to make kernel compatible with 6.0.1.
I already know that linux kernel version doesn't have to be exactly same with new Android OS versions and I can just make a few patches in order to run kernel in higher OS.
So I googled and studied(?) for 2-3weeks, but got not many useful informations and I still cannot figure out where to find required patches for 6.0.1 .
So here's what I am not sure about.
1. I found that I can either upstream, merge, cherry-pick kernel sources from higher OS. For instance, if I merge kernel patches (starting from 3.10.50 to 3.18 step by step) and check if the kernel compiles successfully, is this a right thing to do? I am confused whether merging or cherry-picking is required for my situation.
2. I see lots of commits when comparing with other kernel sources in github. How do you find those kinds of patches? -> just keep compiling kernel and if error comes out->search->commit
Always this pattern goes again and again till boot properly?
3. i'm quite curious with backports. What i know is that "backports" are the files which is compatible for lower version kernels. For example, backported audio driver originally based on 4.9 can be used in kernels with version below 4.9. Is it right?
4. If there is an useful links, anything could be helped a lot.
THANKS IN ADVANCE.

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