From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: philipp.muhoray@gmail.com (Philipp Muhoray) Date: Sat, 01 Nov 2014 15:41:36 +0100 Subject: Choosing the right environment In-Reply-To: <1414674761.76963.YahooMailNeo@web192804.mail.sg3.yahoo.com> References: <1414674761.76963.YahooMailNeo@web192804.mail.sg3.yahoo.com> Message-ID: <5454F120.2050002@gmail.com> To: kernelnewbies@lists.kernelnewbies.org List-Id: kernelnewbies.lists.kernelnewbies.org Hello there, After reading LDD and LKD, I feel ready to start some actual kernel hacking. Therefore I wanted to ask you what environment I should use in the beginning. I have several options, but I'm not sure on which one to set up my workspace: - I could develop directly on and against my main machines (desktop/laptop) ? This is probably not a good idea, since they are used in ?production? and I don't want to mess things up there - I could go with a virtual machine on one of my main machines ? But I'm not quite sure whether the hardware-abstraction will give me troubles when hacking on hardware drivers (which I want to start with) - I could also use my Raspberry Pi ? I'm only afraid that the slightly different environment (SD card instead of hard disk, ARM instead of x86, limited I/O) could turn out to be a larger obstacle than I thought - I have some pretty old stand alone desktops which I could use ? But the hardware is so old (2004ish) I think my preference is the Raspberry Pi, because I would work on actual modern hardware without worrying about messing things up. Are there some drawbacks I'm not considering? Or am I just overthinking this? What did you use in the beginning? Best regards, Philipp -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.kernelnewbies.org/pipermail/kernelnewbies/attachments/20141101/e0a402b9/attachment.html