RHEL. On RHEL 5, the default RPM source directory is
/usr/src/redhat/SOURCES. On RHEL 6, it is $HOME/rpmbuild/SOURCES.
-1. If you are building from an Open vSwitch Git tree, then you will
+1. If you are building from a distribution tarball, proceed to step 2.
+ Otherwise, if you are building from an Open vSwitch Git tree,
+ determine the version of Autoconf available in the RHEL version you
+ are using. If it is not at least version 2.64, then you have two
+ choices:
+
+ a. Install Autoconf 2.64 or later, one way or another.
+
+ b. Create a distribution tarball on some other machine, by
+ running "./boot.sh; ./configure; make dist" in the Git tree.
+ You must run this on a machine that has the tools listed in
+ INSTALL as prerequisites for building from a Git tree.
+ Afterward, proceed with the rest of the instructions using the
+ distribution tarball.
+
+2. Install build prerequisites:
+
+ yum install gcc make python-devel openssl-devel kernel-devel graphviz \
+ kernel-debug-devel autoconf automake rpm-build redhat-rpm-config \
+ libtool
+
+3. Some versions of the RHEL 6 kernel-devel package contain a broken
+ "build" symlink. If you are using such a version, you must fix
+ the problem before continuing.
+
+ To find out whether you are affected, run:
+
+ cd /lib/modules/<version>
+ ls -l build/
+
+ where <version> is the version number of the RHEL 6 kernel. (The
+ trailing slash in the final command is important. Be sure to include
+ it.) If the "ls" command produces a directory listing, your
+ kernel-devel package is OK. If it produces a "No such file or
+ directory" error, your kernel-devel package is buggy.
+
+ If your kernel-devel package is buggy, then you can fix it with:
+
+ cd /lib/modules/<version>
+ rm build
+ ln -s /usr/src/kernels/<target> build
+
+ where <target> is the name of an existing directory under
+ /usr/src/kernels, whose name should be similar to <version> but may
+ contain some extra parts. Once you have done this, verify the fix with
+ the same procedure you used above to check for the problem.
+
+4. If you are building from an Open vSwitch Git tree, then you will
need to first create a distribution tarball by running "./boot.sh;
./configure; make dist" in the Git tree.
-2. Copy the distribution tarball into the RPM source directory.
+5. Copy the distribution tarball into the RPM source directory.
-3. Unpack the distribution tarball into a temporary directory and "cd"
+6. Unpack the distribution tarball into a temporary directory and "cd"
into the root of the distribution tarball.
-4. To build Open vSwitch userspace, run:
+7. To build Open vSwitch userspace, run:
rpmbuild -bb rhel/openvswitch.spec
This produces two RPMs: "openvswitch" and "openvswitch-debuginfo".
-5a. On RHEL 5, to build the Open vSwitch kernel module, copy
- rhel/kmodtool-openvswitch-el5.sh into the RPM source directory and
- run:
-
- rpmbuild -bb --target=i686-unknown-linux \
- rhel/openvswitch-kmod-rhel5.spec
+ If the build fails with "configure: error: source dir
+ /lib/modules/2.6.32-279.el6.x86_64/build doesn't exist" or similar,
+ then the kernel-devel package is missing or buggy. Go back to step
+ 1 or 2 and fix the problem.
- You might have to specify a kernel version, e.g.:
-
- rpmbuild -bb -D "kversion 2.6.18-238.12.1.el5" \
- --target=i686-unknown-linux \
- rhel/openvswitch-kmod-rhel5.spec
-
- This produces a "kmod-openvswitch" RPM for each kernel variant,
- which is usually: "kmod-openvswitch", "kmod-openvswitch-xen", and
- "kmod-openvswitch-PAE".
-
-5b. On RHEL 6, to build the Open vSwitch kernel module, run:
+8. On RHEL 6, to build the Open vSwitch kernel module, copy
+ rhel/openvswitch-kmod.files into the RPM source directory and run:
rpmbuild -bb rhel/openvswitch-kmod-rhel6.spec
in this example: "kmod-openvswitch", "kmod-openvswitch-debug", and
"kmod-openvswitch-kdump".
+A RHEL host has default firewall rules that prevent any Open vSwitch tunnel
+traffic from passing through. If a user configures Open vSwitch tunnels like
+GRE, VXLAN, LISP etc., they will either have to manually add iptables firewall
+rules to allow the tunnel traffic or add it through a startup script (Please
+refer to the "enable-protocol" command in the ovs-ctl(8) manpage).
+
Red Hat Network Scripts Integration
-----------------------------------