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- Adding support for new hardware
- ===============================
- This page will give a short overview on how to add support
- for new hardware to Gluon.
- Hardware requirements
- ---------------------
- Having an ath9k (or ath10k) based WLAN adapter is highly recommended,
- although other chipsets may also work. VAP (multiple SSID) support
- is a requirement. At the moment, Gluon's scripts can't handle devices
- without WLAN adapters (although such environments may also be interesting,
- e.g. for automated testing in virtual machines).
- .. _hardware-adding-profiles:
- Adding profiles
- ---------------
- The vast majority of devices with ath9k WLAN uses the ar71xx target of LEDE.
- If the hardware you want to add support for is also ar71xx, adding a new profile
- is enough.
- Profiles are defined in ``targets/*`` in a shell-based DSL (so common shell
- commands syntax like ``if`` can be used.
- The ``device`` command is used to define an image build for a device. It takes
- two or three parameters.
- The first parameter defines the Gluon profile name, which is used to refer to the
- device and is part of the generated image name. The profile name must be same as
- the output of the following command (on the target device), so the autoupdater
- can work::
- lua -e 'print(require("platform_info").get_image_name())'
- The second parameter defines the name of the image files generated by LEDE. Usually,
- it is also the LEDE profile name; for devices that still use the old image build
- code, a third parameter with the LEDE profile name can be passed. The profile names
- can be found in the image Makefiles in ``lede/target/linux/<target>/image/Makefile``.
- Examples::
- device tp-link-tl-wr1043n-nd-v1 tl-wr1043nd-v1
- device alfa-network-hornet-ub hornet-ub HORNETUB
- Suffixes and extensions
- '''''''''''''''''''''''
- By default, image files are expected to have the extension ``.bin``. In addition,
- the images generated by LEDE have a suffix before the extension that defaults to
- ``-squashfs-factory`` and ``-squashfs-sysupgrade``.
- This can be changed using the ``factory`` and ``sysupgrade`` commands, either at
- the top of the file to set the defaults for all images, or for a single image. There
- are three forms with 0 to 2 arguments (all work with ``sysupgrade`` as well)::
- factory SUFFIX .EXT
- factory .EXT
- factory
- When only an extension is given, the default suffix is retained. When no arguments
- are given, this signals that no factory (or sysupgrade) image exists.
- Aliases
- '''''''
- Sometimes multiple models use the same LEDE images. In this case, the ``alias``
- command can be used to create symlinks and additional entries in the autoupdater
- manifest for the alternative models.
- Standalone images
- '''''''''''''''''
- On targets without *per-device rootfs* support in LEDE, the commands described above
- can't be used. Instead, ``factory_image`` and ``sysupgrade_image`` are used::
- factory_image PROFILE IMAGE .EXT
- sysupgrade_image PROFILE IMAGE .EXT
- Again, the profile name must match the value printed by the aforementioned Lua
- command. The image name must match the part between the target name and the extension
- as generated by LEDE and is to be omitted when no such part exists.
- Packages
- ''''''''
- The ``packages`` command takes an arbitrary number of arguments. Each argument
- defines an additional package to include in the images in addition to the default
- package sets defined by LEDE. When a package name is prefixed by a minus sign, the
- packages are excluded instead.
- The ``packages`` command may be used at the top of a target definition to modify
- the default package list for all images, or just for a single device (when the
- target supports *per-default rootfs*).
- Configuration
- '''''''''''''
- The ``config`` command allows to add arbitary target-specific LEDE configuration
- to be emitted to ``.config``.
- Notes
- '''''
- On devices with multiple WLAN adapters, care must also be taken that the primary MAC address is
- configured correctly. ``/lib/gluon/core/sysconfig/primary_mac`` should contain the MAC address which
- can be found on a label on most hardware; if it does not, ``/lib/gluon/upgrade/010-primary-mac``
- in ``gluon-core`` might need a fix. (There have also been cases in which the address was incorrect
- even on devices with only one WLAN adapter, in these cases a LEDE bug was the cause).
- Adding support for new hardware targets
- ---------------------------------------
- Adding a new target is much more complex than adding a new profile. There are two basic steps
- required for adding a new target:
- Package adjustments
- '''''''''''''''''''
- One package that may need adjustments for new targets is ``libplatforminfo`` (to be found in
- `packages/gluon/libs/libplatforminfo <https://github.com/freifunk-gluon/packages/tree/master/libs/libplatforminfo>`_).
- If the new platform works fine with the definitions found in ``default.c``, nothing needs to be done. Otherwise,
- create a definition for the added target or subtarget, either by symlinking one of the files in the ``templates``
- directory, or adding a new source file.
- On many targets, Gluon's network setup scripts (mainly in the packages ``gluon-core`` and ``gluon-mesh-batman-adv-core``)
- won't run correctly without some adjustments, so better double check that everything is fine there (and the files
- ``primary_mac``, ``lan_ifname`` and ``wan_ifname`` in ``/lib/gluon/core/sysconfig/`` contain sensible values).
- Build system support
- ''''''''''''''''''''
- A definition for the new target must be created under ``targets``, and it must be added
- to ``targets/targets.mk``. The ``GluonTarget`` macro takes one to three arguments:
- the target name, the Gluon subtarget name (if the target has subtargets), and the
- LEDE subtarget name (if it differs from the Gluon subtarget). The third argument
- can be used to define multiple Gluon targets with different configuration for the
- same LEDE target, like it is done for the ``ar71xx-tiny`` target.
- After this, is should be sufficient to call ``make GLUON_TARGET=<target>`` to build the images for the new target.
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