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 OpenWrt. If the hardware you want to add support for is also ar71xx, adding a new profile is enough. Profiles are defined in ``targets/-/profiles.mk``. There are two macros used to define which images are generated: ``GluonProfile`` and ``GluonModel``. The following examples are taken from ``profiles.mk`` of the ``ar71xx-generic`` target:: $(eval $(call GluonProfile,TLWR1043)) $(eval $(call GluonModel,TLWR1043,tl-wr1043nd-v1-squashfs,tp-link-tl-wr1043n-nd-v1)) $(eval $(call GluonModel,TLWR1043,tl-wr1043nd-v2-squashfs,tp-link-tl-wr1043n-nd-v2)) The ``GluonProfile`` macro takes at least one parameter, the profile name as it is defined in the Makefiles of OpenWrt (``openwrt/target/linux///profiles/*`` and ``openwrt/target/linux//image/Makefile``). If the target you are on doesn't define profiles (e.g. on x86), just add a single profile called ``Generic`` or similar. It may optionally take a second parameter which defines additional packages to include for the profile (e.g. ath10k). The additional packages defined in ``openwrt/target/linux///profiles/*`` aren't used. The ``GluonModel`` macro takes three parameters: The profile name, the suffix of the image file generated by OpenWrt (without the file extension), and the final image name of the Gluon image. The final image name must be the same that is returned by the following command. :: lua -e 'print(require("platform_info").get_image_name())' This is so the autoupdater can work. On targets with aren't supported by the autoupdater, ``require("platform_info").get_image_name()`` will just return ``nil`` and the final image name may be defined arbitrarily. 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/core/initial/001-sysconfig`` 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 an OpenWrt 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: Adjust packages ''''''''''''''' One package that definitely needs adjustments for every new target added is ``lua-platform-info``. Just start with a copy of an existing platform info script, adjust it for the new target, and add the new target to the list of supported targets in the package Makefile. 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). Add support to the build system ''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' A directory for the new target must be created under ``targets``, and it must be added to ``targets/targets.mk``. In the new target directory, four files must be created: * config * kernel-config * kernel-vermagic * profiles.mk The file ``config`` can be used to add additional, target-specific options to the OpenWrt config. If such options aren't necessary, it can be left empty. For ``profiles.mk``, see :ref:`hardware-adding-profiles`. The files ``kernel-config`` and ``kernel-vermagic`` must have the correct content so kernel modules from the upstream repositories can be easily installed. The OpenWrt version a Gluon release is based on is defined by the upstream package repo URL in ``include/gluon.mk`` (in the variable ``CONFIG_VERSION_REPO``); at the time this documentation was written, this was ``barrier_breaker/14.07-rc3``; whenever the package repo is updated, all ``kernel-config`` and ``kernel-vermagic`` files must be updated as well. The file ``kernel-vermagic`` just contains a hash which is part of the version number of the kernel package. So in the case of ``ar71xx-generic`` on ``barrier_breaker/14.07-rc3``, we look in the directory ``https://downloads.openwrt.org/barrier_breaker/14.07-rc3/ar71xx/generic/packages/`` and find that the kernel package is called ``kernel_3.10.49-1-94831e5bcf361d1c03e87a15e152b0e8_ar71xx.ipk``. This makes the ``kernel-vermagic`` the string ``94831e5bcf361d1c03e87a15e152b0e8``. For ``kernel-config``, the OpenWrt image builder must be downloaded. Again, for ``ar71xx-generic`` on ``barrier_breaker/14.07-rc3``, we download ``OpenWrt-SDK-ar71xx-for-linux-x86_64-gcc-4.8-linaro_uClibc-0.9.33.2.tar.bz2`` from ``https://downloads.openwrt.org/barrier_breaker/14.07-rc3/ar71xx/generic/``. After unpacking it, we use the file ``OpenWrt-ImageBuilder-ar71xx_generic-for-linux-x86_64/build_dir/target-mips_34kc_uClibc-0.9.33.2/linux-ar71xx_generic/linux-3.10.49/.config`` as our ``kernel-config``. After this, is should be sufficient to call ``make GLUON_TARGET=-`` to build the images for the new target.