I'm trying to get Wireguard going on my RPi, just to mess around with it. I think I correctly followed the various directions I've seen about how to get up-and-running, but I can't find the raspberrypi-kernel-headers package mentioned in a couple places, so when I install the wireguard package the module can't be built (I think) and is thus unavailable to the kernel when I try to bring up that interface. I've tried various apt search commands to see if the package name has changed, and see no indication in my reading that it would be in some optional repository. Here's my version info:

Why "I think" the module isn't built: One, one of the things I read indicated the wireguard module automatically on install. Two, I don't have the necessary headers (see apt search result above). Taken together, it seems highly unlikely that I have a workable wireguard module.


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Sure enough, there is no /dev/wg0. I don't recall seeing an explicit command to "makedev /dev/wg0" (or whatever modern Linux device creation incantation is). Is that maybe all that's wrong? I don't see a makedev command on my system. apt search shows me there is a makedev package, but that it's not installed. Install and start from scratch? (It never occurred to me that something as basic as makedev wouldn't simply be part of the standard suite of admin tools.)

(debian unstable repository, it will break your system if an apt-preferences file isn't set correctly.) There is no raspberrypi-kernel-headers package in this debian repository which explain why apt search return nothing.

On the DIY audio forum they suggested to try the installation with a Raspberry Pi OS, or DietPi since some kernel headers seem to mis:

"Your error message suggests that your kernel headers may not be present:

apt-get install raspberrypi-kernel-headers gcc make device-tree-compiler git"

Kernel headers are not included in the standard image, since it will take lot of space and only a small percentage of users will ever need them.

However, as previously suggested, they can be easily dowloaded by launching the command

Can you say what version asl-Pi you are installing manual?

Version of raspbian native to your Pi4 ?

What instructions were you following for the install ?

What was the first error message of the install ?

The correct way to install kernel headers on raspberry pi is to issue the command

apt install raspberrypi-kernel-headers.

All of the generic commands for other distributions will not work, as you saw.

The cmd sudo apt install raspberrypi-kernel-headers will simply install the latest kernel headers available on the mirror. Which indeed matches the latest available kernel on the mirror. But not necessarily the installed kernel on the system.

Specifically, for the Raspberry Pi 4 series, 32-bit PiOS will automatically switch to 64-bit mode after upgrading to the latest version. However, the raspberrypi-kernel-headers package is missing the build directory for the v8+ mode. 152ee80cbc

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