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date = 2022-02-05T19:29:44+01:00
title = "Building the Linux kernel with clang and full LTO"
[taxonomies]
tags = ["experiments"]
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My main desktop PC tracks the latest LTS [release](https://kernel.org/) of the
Linux kernel which very recently switched to the 5.15 line. Along with neat new
features like the
[NTFS3 driver](https://lore.kernel.org/all/aa4aa155-b9b2-9099-b7a2-349d8d9d8fbd@paragon-software.com/)
it also includes experimental support for
[Link Time Optimization](https://llvm.org/docs/LinkTimeOptimization.html)
through LLVM's
[`clang` compiler](https://clang.llvm.org/).
I'm not really one to shy away from weird experiments, so I decided to run a
full LTO kernel for a while. If you have a recent version of `clang` and the
[`lld` linker](https://lld.llvm.org/), building one is as easy as toggling
`CONFIG_LTO_CLANG_FULL` and exporting the right flags to `make`:
make CC=clang LLVM=1 menuconfig
# CONFIG_LTO_CLANG_FULL=y
make CC=clang LLVM=1
Subsequent steps are the same as with a normal build:
sudo make install
sudo make modules_install
Keep in mind, however, that any out-of-tree modules such as ZFS must also be
built with `clang`. Here I ran into
[this bug](https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=814194) which should soon be
[fixed upstream](https://github.com/openzfs/zfs/pull/13046). For now I
backported that fix locally to ZFS 2.1.2 and am building it like so:
sudo CC=clang LLVM=1 emerge zfs-kmod
Build times and memory usage when building are increased dramatically with full
LTO. Optimizing `vmlinux.o` alone allocates about 3 to 4 GiB of memory. If you
rely a lot on incremental builds, thin LTO might be the better option here.
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