linux:kernel:kernel_drivers:hello_world
Table of Contents
Linux - Kernel - Kernel Drivers - Hello World
A basic Linux Kernel Driver.
Create a C program
vi hello.c
and populate as
- hello.c
#include <linux/init.h> #include <linux/module.h> MODULE_LICENSE("Dual BSD/GPL"); static int hello_init(void) { printk(KERN_ALERT "Hello, world\n"); return 0; } static void hello_exit(void) { printk(KERN_ALERT "Goodbye, cruel world\n"); } module_init(hello_init); module_exit(hello_exit);
Save the file.
Create a Makefile
vi Makefile
and populate as:
- Makefile
# To build modules outside of the kernel tree, we run "make" # in the kernel source tree; the Makefile these then includes this # Makefile once again. # This conditional selects whether we are being included from the # kernel Makefile or not. ifeq ($(KERNELRELEASE),) # Assume the source tree is where the running kernel was built # You should set KERNELDIR in the environment if it's elsewhere KERNELDIR ?= /lib/modules/$(shell uname -r)/build # The current directory is passed to sub-makes as argument PWD := $(shell pwd) modules: $(MAKE) -C $(KERNELDIR) M=$(PWD) modules modules_install: $(MAKE) -C $(KERNELDIR) M=$(PWD) modules_install clean: rm -rf *.o *~ core .depend .*.cmd *.ko *.mod.c .tmp_versions .PHONY: modules modules_install clean else # called from kernel build system: just declare what our modules are obj-m := hello.o hellop.o endif
Compile the module
make
displays:
make -C /lib/modules/4.15.0-72-generic/build M=/home/peter/prog/kernel/helloworld modules make[1]: Entering directory '/usr/src/linux-headers-4.15.0-72-generic' Building modules, stage 2. MODPOST 1 modules make[1]: Leaving directory '/usr/src/linux-headers-4.15.0-72-generic'
Check the module
ls hello,ko
displays:
hello.ko
Load the module
sudo insmod hello.ko
NOTE: This will not display anything.
Check if the module is loaded
lsmod
returns:
Module Size Used by hello 16384 0 ....
Check message from module
As mentioned above when the module was loaded it did not display that “Hello World” message.
This message is actually written to the system log.
tail /var/log/syslog
returns:
Dec 14 17:05:19 peter-bigmamba kernel: [74429.517770] Hello, world
Remove the module
sudo rmmod hello.ko
linux/kernel/kernel_drivers/hello_world.txt · Last modified: 2022/10/08 11:41 by peter