Difference between revisions of "Didj Build Environment"

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(Usage: added Linux kernel build usage)
(Prebuilt: Added 64 bit Debian Lenny build)
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* [http://losinggeneration.homelinux.org/ubuntu-9.10-32bit-didj-arm-linux.tar.bz2 32 bit Ubuntu 9.10]
 
* [http://losinggeneration.homelinux.org/ubuntu-9.10-32bit-didj-arm-linux.tar.bz2 32 bit Ubuntu 9.10]
 
** [http://etharooni.polorix.net/ubuntu-9.10-32bit-didj-arm-linux.tar.bz2 Faster 32 bit Ubuntu 9.10 mirror]
 
** [http://etharooni.polorix.net/ubuntu-9.10-32bit-didj-arm-linux.tar.bz2 Faster 32 bit Ubuntu 9.10 mirror]
 +
** Extract to /usr/local
 +
* [http://losinggeneration.homelinux.org/didj-debian-lenny64.tar.bz2 64 bit Debian Lenny]
 
** Extract to /usr/local
 
** Extract to /usr/local
  

Revision as of 20:58, 14 April 2010

Buildcross is able to build a working toolchain that supports C and C++.

Prebuilt

Since it can be a pain to build the cross compiler on Windows, I'm providing a prebuilt toolchain. 32 bit Ubuntu 9.10 does some incorrect things during GCC's build that causes the built to fail. So I've provide that one too.

Additional mirrors would be welcomed.

Building

Prerequisites

  • gmp (In deb based distros it's often called libgmp-dev or libgmp3-dev)
  • mpfr (In deb based distros it's often called libmpfr-dev)
  • GCC & Binutils
  • Flex
  • Bison
  • Make
  • Makeinfo
  • patch
  • diff
  • And a Unix environment (Only really tested on Linux)

Steps

  • git clone git://github.com/losinggeneration/buildcross.git
  • cd buildcross
  • sudo mkdir /usr/local/didj
  • sudo chown [your username]:[any group] /usr/local/didj
  • MAKE="make -j3" ./buildcross.sh didj -bl
  • Replace -j3 with however many processors/cores you have +1

After that, the cross compiler should be built. You should now be able to build binaries for the Didj. I'd suggest adding /usr/local/didj/bin to your PATH. This is often in $HOME/.profile. Depending on your shell, Bash compatible shells can use:

export PATH=/usr/local/didj/bin:$PATH

Usage

The following all assumes the PATH has been correctly setup.

Simple usage

Typical usage for compiling and linking a single file:

arm-linux-uclibcgnueabi-gcc -o hello hello.c

Autotools

Typical usage for cross compiling a project that uses autotools

./configure --host=arm-linux-uclibcgnueabi
make

CMake

CMake cross compiler rules

Save this file as ~/didj/didj.cmake

# this one is important
SET(CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME Linux)
#this one not so much
SET(CMAKE_SYSTEM_VERSION 1)

# specify the cross compiler
SET(CMAKE_C_COMPILER   /usr/local/didj/bin/arm-linux-uclibcgnueabi-gcc)
SET(CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER /usr/local/didj/bin/arm-linux-uclibcgnueabi-g++)

# where is the target environment 
SET(CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH  /usr/local/didj /home/harley/didj/rootfs /home/harley/didj/custom/rootfs)

# search for programs in the build host directories
SET(CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_MODE_PROGRAM NEVER)
# for libraries and headers in the target directories
SET(CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_MODE_LIBRARY ONLY)
SET(CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_MODE_INCLUDE ONLY)

Then use this command to build it. It's better to build in a clean subdirectory in CMake projects.

mkdir build && cd build
cmake -DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=~/didj/didj ..
make

Linux Kernel

make ARCH=arm CROSS_COMPILE=arm-linux-uclibceabi-

Scons

To be written.

Others

Any others you run into please document here.