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-rw-r--r--doc/guix-cookbook.texi54
1 files changed, 26 insertions, 28 deletions
diff --git a/doc/guix-cookbook.texi b/doc/guix-cookbook.texi
index e19ab9c51b..d2ce525998 100644
--- a/doc/guix-cookbook.texi
+++ b/doc/guix-cookbook.texi
@@ -1430,37 +1430,34 @@ The @code{linux-libre} kernel package definition is actually a procedure which
creates a package.
@lisp
-(define* (make-linux-libre version hash supported-systems
- #:key
- ;; A function that takes an arch and a variant.
- ;; See kernel-config for an example.
- (extra-version #false)
- (configuration-file #false)
- (defconfig "defconfig")
- (extra-options %default-extra-linux-options)
- (patches (list %boot-logo-patch)))
+(define* (make-linux-libre* version gnu-revision source supported-systems
+ #:key
+ (extra-version #f)
+ ;; A function that takes an arch and a variant.
+ ;; See kernel-config for an example.
+ (configuration-file #f)
+ (defconfig "defconfig")
+ (extra-options %default-extra-linux-options))
...)
@end lisp
-The current @code{linux-libre} package is for the 5.1.x series, and is
+The current @code{linux-libre} package is for the 5.15.x series, and is
declared like this:
@lisp
-(define-public linux-libre
- (make-linux-libre %linux-libre-version
- %linux-libre-hash
- '("x86_64-linux" "i686-linux" "armhf-linux" "aarch64-linux")
- #:patches %linux-libre-5.1-patches
- #:configuration-file kernel-config))
+(define-public linux-libre-5.15
+ (make-linux-libre* linux-libre-5.15-version
+ linux-libre-5.15-gnu-revision
+ linux-libre-5.15-source
+ '("x86_64-linux" "i686-linux" "armhf-linux" "aarch64-linux" "riscv64-linux")
+ #:configuration-file kernel-config))
@end lisp
Any keys which are not assigned values inherit their default value from the
@code{make-linux-libre} definition. When comparing the two snippets above,
-you may notice that the code comment in the first doesn't actually refer to
-the @code{#:extra-version} keyword; it is actually for
-@code{#:configuration-file}. Because of this, it is not actually easy to
-include a custom kernel configuration from the definition, but don't worry,
-there are other ways to work with what we do have.
+notice the code comment that refers to @code{#:configuration-file}. Because of
+this, it is not actually easy to include a custom kernel configuration from the
+definition, but don't worry, there are other ways to work with what we do have.
There are two ways to create a kernel with a custom kernel configuration. The
first is to provide a standard @file{.config} file during the build process by
@@ -1560,14 +1557,15 @@ custom kernel:
(@@@@ (gnu packages linux) %default-extra-linux-options)))
(define-public linux-libre-macbook41
- ;; XXX: Access the internal 'make-linux-libre' procedure, which is
+ ;; XXX: Access the internal 'make-linux-libre*' procedure, which is
;; private and unexported, and is liable to change in the future.
- ((@@@@ (gnu packages linux) make-linux-libre) (@@@@ (gnu packages linux) %linux-libre-version)
- (@@@@ (gnu packages linux) %linux-libre-hash)
- '("x86_64-linux")
- #:extra-version "macbook41"
- #:patches (@@@@ (gnu packages linux) %linux-libre-5.1-patches)
- #:extra-options %macbook41-config-options))
+ ((@@@@ (gnu packages linux) make-linux-libre*)
+ (@@@@ (gnu packages linux) linux-libre-version)
+ (@@@@ (gnu packages linux) linux-libre-gnu-revision)
+ (@@@@ (gnu packages linux) linux-libre-source)
+ '("x86_64-linux")
+ #:extra-version "macbook41"
+ #:extra-options %macbook41-config-options))
@end lisp
In the above example @code{%file-systems} is a collection of flags enabling