docs/overview.txt
author "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@anciens.enib.fr>
Wed Jan 13 20:46:01 2010 +0100 (2010-01-13)
changeset 1732 6b2ae7804c6f
parent 1643 19205498184e
child 1745 41c2a6716511
permissions -rw-r--r--
debug/gdb: staticaly link to ncurses for the native gdb

Staticaly link the native gdb (the one that runs on the target,
not the cross one that runs on the host) to ncurses.
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File.........: overview.txt
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Content......: Overview of how crosstool-NG works.
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Copyrigth....: (C) 2007 Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@anciens.enib.fr>
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License......: Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike (CC-by-sa), v2.5
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____________________
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                   /
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Table Of Content  /
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_________________/
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Introduction
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History
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Referring to crosstool-NG
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Installing crosstool-NG
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  Install method
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  The hacker's way
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  Preparing for packaging
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  Shell completion
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  Contributed code
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Configuring crosstool-NG
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  Interesting config options
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  Re-building an existing toolchain
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Running crosstool-NG
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  Stopping and restarting a build
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  Testing all toolchains at once
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  Overriding the number of // jobs
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  Note on // jobs
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  Tools wrapper
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Using the toolchain
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  The 'populate' script
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Toolchain types
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  Seemingly-native toolchains
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Contributing
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  Sending a bug report
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  Sending patches
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Internals
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  Makefile front-end
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  Kconfig parser
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  Architecture-specific
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  Adding a new version of a component
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  Build scripts
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________________
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               /
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Introduction  /
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_____________/
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crosstool-NG aims at building toolchains. Toolchains are an essential component
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in a software development project. It will compile, assemble and link the code
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that is being developed. Some pieces of the toolchain will eventually end up
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in the resulting binary/ies: static libraries are but an example.
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So, a toolchain is a very sensitive piece of software, as any bug in one of the
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components, or a poorly configured component, can lead to execution problems,
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ranging from poor performance, to applications ending unexpectedly, to
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mis-behaving software (which more than often is hard to detect), to hardware
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damage, or even to human risks (which is more than regrettable).
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Toolchains are made of different piece of software, each being quite complex
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and requiring specially crafted options to build and work seamlessly. This
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is usually not that easy, even in the not-so-trivial case of native toolchains.
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The work reaches a higher degree of complexity when it comes to cross-
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compilation, where it can become quite a nightmare...
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Some cross-toolchains exist on the internet, and can be used for general
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development, but they have a number of limitations:
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  - they can be general purpose, in that they are configured for the majority:
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    no optimisation for your specific target,
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  - they can be prepared for a specific target and thus are not easy to use,
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    nor optimised for, or even supporting your target,
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  - they often are using aging components (compiler, C library, etc...) not
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    supporting special features of your shiny new processor;
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On the other side, these toolchain offer some advantages:
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  - they are ready to use and quite easy to install and setup,
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  - they are proven if used by a wide community.
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But once you want to get all the juice out of your specific hardware, you will
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want to build your own toolchain. This is where crosstool-NG comes into play.
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There are also a number of tools that build toolchains for specific needs,
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which are not really scalable. Examples are:
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  - buildroot (buildroot.uclibc.org) whose main purpose is to build root file
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    systems, hence the name. But once you have your toolchain with buildroot,
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    part of it is installed in the root-to-be, so if you want to build a whole
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    new root, you either have to save the existing one as a template and
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    restore it later, or restart again from scratch. This is not convenient,
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  - ptxdist (www.pengutronix.de/software/ptxdist), whose purpose is very
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    similar to buildroot,
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  - other projects (openembedded.org for example), which are again used to
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    build root file systems.
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crosstool-NG is really targeted at building toolchains, and only toolchains.
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It is then up to you to use it the way you want.
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___________
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          /
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History  /
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________/
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crosstool was first 'conceived' by Dan Kegel, who offered it to the community
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as a set of scripts, a repository of patches, and some pre-configured, general
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purpose setup files to be used to configure crosstool. This is available at
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http://www.kegel.com/crosstool, and the subversion repository is hosted on
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google at http://code.google.com/p/crosstool/.
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I once managed to add support for uClibc-based toolchains, but it did not make
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into mainline, mostly because I didn't have time to port the patch forward to
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the new versions, due in part to the big effort it was taking.
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So I decided to clean up crosstool in the state it was, re-order the things
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in place, add appropriate support for what I needed, that is uClibc support
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and a menu-driven configuration, named the new implementation crosstool-NG,
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(standing for crosstool Next Generation, as many other comunity projects do,
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and as a wink at the TV series "Star Trek: The Next Generation" ;-) ) and
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made it available to the community, in case it was of interest to any one.
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_____________________________
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                            /
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Referring to crosstool-NG  /
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__________________________/
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The long name of the project is crosstool-NG:
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  * no leading uppercase (except as first word in a sentence)
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  * crosstool and NG separated with a hyphen (dash)
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  * NG in uppercase
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Crosstool-NG can also be referred to by its short name CT-NG:
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  * all in uppercase
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  * CT and NG separated with a hyphen (dash)
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The long name is preferred over the short name, except in mail subjects, where
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the short name is a better fit.
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When referring to a specific version of crosstool-NG, append the version number
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either as:
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  * crosstool-NG X.Y.Z
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    - the long name, a space, and the version string
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  * crosstool-ng-X.Y.Z
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    - the long name in lowercase, a hyphen (dash), and the version string
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    - this is used to name the release tarballs
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  * crosstool-ng-X.Y.Z+hg_id
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    - the long name in lowercase, a hyphen, the version string, and the Hg id
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      (as returned by: ct-ng version)
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    - this is used to differentiate between releases and snapshots
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The frontend to crosstool-NG is the command ct-ng:
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  * all in lowercase
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  * ct and ng separated by a hyphen (dash)
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___________________________
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                          /
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Installing crosstool-NG  /
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________________________/
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There are two ways you can use crosstool-NG:
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 - build and install it, then get rid of the sources like you'd do for most
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   programs,
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 - or only build it and run from the source directory.
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The former should be used if you got crosstool-NG from a packaged tarball, see
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"Install method", below, while the latter is most useful for developpers that
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use a clone of the repository, and want to submit patches, see "The Hacker's
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way", below.
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Install method |
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---------------+
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If you go for the install, then you just follow the classical, but yet easy
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./configure way:
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  ./configure --prefix=/some/place
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  make
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  make install
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  export PATH="${PATH}:/some/place/bin"
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You can then get rid of crosstool-NG source. Next create a directory to serve
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as a working place, cd in there and run:
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  ct-ng help
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See below for complete usage.
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The Hacker's way |
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-----------------+
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If you go the hacker's way, then the usage is a bit different, although very
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simple:
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  ./configure --local
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  make
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Now, *do not* remove crosstool-NG sources. They are needed to run crosstool-NG!
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Stay in the directory holding the sources, and run:
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  ./ct-ng help
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See below for complete usage.
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Now, provided you used a clone of the repository, you can send me your changes.
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See the section titled CONTRIBUTING, below, for how to submit changees.
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Preparing for packaging |
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------------------------+
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If you plan on packaging crosstool-NG, you surely don't want to install it
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in your root file system. The install procedure of crosstool-NG honors the
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DESTDIR variable:
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  ./configure --prefix=/usr
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  make
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  make DESTDIR=/packaging/place install
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Shell completion |
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-----------------+
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crosstool-NG comes with a shell script fragment that defines bash-compatible
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completion. That shell fragment is currently not installed automatically, but
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this is planned.
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To install the shell script fragment, you have two options:
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 - install system-wide, most probably by copying ct-ng.comp into
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   /etc/bash_completion.d/
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 - install for a single user, by copying ct-ng.comp into ${HOME}/ and
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   sourcing this file from your ${HOME}/.bashrc
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Contributed code |
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-----------------+
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Some people contibuted code that couldn't get merged for various reasons. This
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code is available as lzma-compressed patches, in the contrib/ sub-directory.
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These patches are to be applied to the source of crosstool-NG, prior to
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installing, using something like the following:
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  lzcat contrib/foobar.patch.lzma |patch -p1
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There is no guarantee that a particuliar contribution applies to the current
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version of crosstool-ng, or that it will work at all. Use contributions at
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your own risk.
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____________________________
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                           /
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Configuring crosstool-NG  /
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_________________________/
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crosstool-NG is configured with a configurator presenting a menu-stuctured set
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of options. These options let you specify the way you want your toolchain
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built, where you want it installed, what architecture and specific processor it
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will support, the version of the components you want to use, etc... The
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value for those options are then stored in a configuration file.
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The configurator works the same way you configure your Linux kernel. It is
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assumed you now how to handle this.
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To enter the menu, type:
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  ct-ng menuconfig
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Almost every config item has a help entry. Read them carefully.
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String and number options can refer to environment variables. In such a case,
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you must use the shell syntax: ${VAR}. You shall neither single- nor double-
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quote the string/number options.
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There are three environment variables that are computed by crosstool-NG, and
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that you can use:
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CT_TARGET:
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  It represents the target tuple you are building for. You can use it for
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  example in the installation/prefix directory, such as:
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    /opt/x-tools/${CT_TARGET}
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CT_TOP_DIR:
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  The top directory where crosstool-NG is running. You shouldn't need it in
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  most cases. There is one case where you may need it: if you have local
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  patches and you store them in your running directory, you can refer to them
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  by using CT_TOP_DIR, such as:
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    ${CT_TOP_DIR}/patches.myproject
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CT_VERSION:
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  The version of crosstool-NG you are using. Not much use for you, but it's
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  there if you need it.
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Interesting config options |
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---------------------------+
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CT_LOCAL_TARBALLS_DIR:
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  If you already have some tarballs in a direcotry, enter it here. That will
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  speed up the retrieving phase, where crosstool-NG would otherwise download
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  those tarballs.
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CT_PREFIX_DIR:
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  This is where the toolchain will be installed in (and for now, where it
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  will run from). Common use is to add the target tuple in the directory
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  path, such as (see above):
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    /opt/x-tools/${CT_TARGET}
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CT_TARGET_VENDOR:
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  An identifier for your toolchain, will take place in the vendor part of the
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  target tuple. It shall *not* contain spaces or dashes. Usually, keep it
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  to a one-word string, or use underscores to separate words if you need.
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  Avoid dots, commas, and special characters.
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CT_TARGET_ALIAS:
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  An alias for the toolchian. It will be used as a prefix to the toolchain
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  tools. For example, you will have ${CT_TARGET_ALIAS}-gcc
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Also, if you think you don't see enough versions, you can try to enable one of
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those:
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CT_OBSOLETE:
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  Show obsolete versions or tools. Most of the time, you don't want to base
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  your toolchain on too old a version (of gcc, for example). But at times, it
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  can come handy to use such an old version for regression tests. Those old
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  versions are hidden behind CT_OBSOLETE. Those versions (or features) are so
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  marked because maintaining support for those in crosstool-NG would be too
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  costly, time-wise, and time is dear.
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CT_EXPERIMENTAL:
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  Show experimental versions or tools. Again, you might not want to base your
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  toolchain on too recent tools (eg. gcc) for production. But if you need a
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  feature present only in a recent version, or a new tool, you can find them
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  hidden behind CT_EXPERIMENTAL. Those versions (or features) did not (yet)
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  receive thorough testing in crosstool-NG, and/or are not mature enough to
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  be blindly trusted.
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Re-building an existing toolchain |
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----------------------------------+
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If you have an existing toolchain, you can re-use the options used to build it
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to create a new toolchain. That needs a very little bit of effort on your side
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but is quite easy. The options to build a toolchain are saved with the
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toolchain, and you can retrieve this configuration by running:
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  ${CT_TARGET}-config
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This will dump the configuration to stdout, so to rebuild a toolchain with this
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configuration, the following is all you need to do:
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  ${CT_TARGET}-config >.config
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  ct-ng oldconfig
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Then, you can review and change the configuration by running:
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  ct-ng menuconfig
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________________________
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                       /
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Running crosstool-NG  /
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_____________________/
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To build the toolchain, simply type:
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  ct-ng build
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This will use the above configuration to retrieve, extract and patch the
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components, build, install and eventually test your newly built toolchain.
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You are then free to add the toolchain /bin directory in your PATH to use
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it at will.
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In any case, you can get some terse help. Just type:
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  ct-ng help
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or:
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  man 1 ct-ng
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Stopping and restarting a build |
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--------------------------------+
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If you want to stop the build after a step you are debugging, you can pass the
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variable STOP to make:
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  ct-ng build STOP=some_step
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Conversely, if you want to restart a build at a specific step you are
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debugging, you can pass the RESTART variable to make:
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  ct-ng build RESTART=some_step
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Alternatively, you can call make with the name of a step to just do that step:
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  ct-ng libc_headers
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is equivalent to:
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  ct-ng build RESTART=libc_headers STOP=libc_headers
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The shortcuts +step_name and step_name+ allow to respectively stop or restart
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at that step. Thus:
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  ct-ng +libc_headers              and:    ct-ng libc_headers+
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are equivalent to:
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  ct-ng build STOP=libc_headers    and:    ct-ng build RESTART=libc_headers
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To obtain the list of acceptable steps, please call:
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  ct-ng list-steps
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Note that in order to restart a build, you'll have to say 'Y' to the config
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   390
option CT_DEBUG_CT_SAVE_STEPS, and that the previous build effectively went
yann@168
   391
that far.
yann@92
   392
yann@1025
   393
Building all toolchains at once |
yann@1025
   394
--------------------------------+
yann@92
   395
yann@1025
   396
You can build all samples; simply call:
yann@1025
   397
  ct-ng build-all
yann@40
   398
yann@335
   399
Overriding the number of // jobs |
yann@476
   400
---------------------------------+
yann@335
   401
yann@335
   402
If you want to override the number of jobs to run in // (the -j option to
yann@335
   403
make), you can either re-enter the menuconfig, or simply add it on the command
yann@335
   404
line, as such:
yann@335
   405
  ct-ng build.4
yann@335
   406
yann@335
   407
which tells crosstool-NG to override the number of // jobs to 4.
yann@335
   408
yann@335
   409
You can see the actions that support overriding the number of // jobs in
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   410
the help menu. Those are the ones with [.#] after them (eg. build[.#] or
yann@1025
   411
build-all[.#], and so on...).
yann@1025
   412
yann@1025
   413
Note on // jobs |
yann@1025
   414
----------------+
yann@1025
   415
yann@1025
   416
The crosstool-NG script 'ct-ng' is a Makefile-script. It does *not* execute
yann@1025
   417
in parallel (there is not much to gain). When speaking of // jobs, we are
yann@1025
   418
refering to the number of // jobs when making the *components*. That is, we
yann@1025
   419
speak of the number of // jobs used to build gcc, glibc, and so on...
yann@1025
   420
yann@1493
   421
Tools wrapper |
yann@1493
   422
--------------+
yann@1493
   423
yann@1493
   424
Starting with gcc-4.3 come two new dependencies: GMP and MPFR. With gcc-4.4,
yann@1493
   425
come three new ones: GMP, PPL and CLooG/ppl. These are libraries that enable
yann@1493
   426
advanced features to gcc. Additionally, some of the libraries can be used by
yann@1493
   427
binutils and gdb. Unfortunately, not all systems on which crosstool-NG runs
yann@1493
   428
have all of those libraries. And for those that do, the versions of those
yann@1493
   429
libraries may be older than the version required by gcc.
yann@1493
   430
yann@1493
   431
This is why crosstool-NG builds its own set of libraries as part of the
yann@1493
   432
toolchain.
yann@1493
   433
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   434
The libraries are built as shared libraries, because building them as static
yann@1493
   435
libraries has some short-comings. This poses no problem at build time, as
yann@1513
   436
crosstool-NG correctly points gcc (and binutils and gdb) to the correct
yann@1493
   437
place where our own version of the libraries are installed. But it poses
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   438
a problem when gcc et al. are run: the place where the libraries are is most
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   439
probably not known to the host dynamic linker. Still worse, if the host system
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   440
has its own versions, then ld.so would load the wrong library!
yann@1493
   441
yann@1493
   442
So we have to force the dynamic linker to load the correct version. We do this
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   443
by using the LD_LIBRARY_PATH variable, that informs the dynamic linker where
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   444
to look for shared libraries prior to searching its standard places. But we
yann@1493
   445
can't impose that burden on all the system (because it'd be a nightmare to
yann@1513
   446
configure, and because two toolchains on the same system may use different
yann@1493
   447
versions of the libraries); so we have to do it on a per-toolchain basis.
yann@1493
   448
yann@1493
   449
So we rename all binaries of the toolchain (by adding a dot '.' as their first
yann@1493
   450
character), and add a small program, the so-called "tools wrapper", that
yann@1493
   451
correctly sets LD_LIBRARY_PATH prior to running the real tool.
yann@1493
   452
yann@1493
   453
First, the wrapper was written as a POSIX-compliant shell script. That shell
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   454
script is very simple, if not trivial, and works great. The only drawback is
yann@1493
   455
that it does not work on host systems that lack a shell, for example the
yann@1493
   456
MingW32 environment. To solve the issue, the wrapper has been re-written in C,
yann@1493
   457
and compiled at build time. This C wrapper is much more complex than the shell
yann@1493
   458
script, and although it sems to be working, it's been only lightly tested.
yann@1493
   459
Some of the expected short-comings with this C wrapper are;
yann@1493
   460
 - multi-byte file names may not be handled correctly
yann@1493
   461
 - it's really big for what it does
yann@1493
   462
yann@1493
   463
So, the default wrapper installed with your toolchain is the shell script.
yann@1493
   464
If you know that your system is missing a shell, then you shall use the C
yann@1493
   465
wrapper (and report back whether it works, or does not work, for you).
yann@1493
   466
yann@335
   467
yann@227
   468
_______________________
yann@227
   469
                      /
yann@227
   470
Using the toolchain  /
yann@227
   471
____________________/
yann@227
   472
yann@227
   473
Using the toolchain is as simple as adding the toolchain's bin directory in
yann@227
   474
your PATH, such as:
yann@227
   475
  export PATH="${PATH}:/your/toolchain/path/bin"
yann@227
   476
yann@335
   477
and then using the target tuple to tell the build systems to use your
yann@227
   478
toolchain:
yann@335
   479
  ./configure --target=your-target-tuple
yann@294
   480
or
yann@335
   481
  make CC=your-target-tuple-gcc
yann@294
   482
or
yann@335
   483
  make CROSS_COMPILE=your-target-tuple-
yann@294
   484
and so on...
yann@227
   485
yann@476
   486
It is strongly advised not to use the toolchain sys-root directory as an
yann@620
   487
install directory for your programs/packages. If you do so, you will not be
yann@476
   488
able to use your toolchain for another project. It is even strongly advised
yann@476
   489
that your toolchain is chmod-ed to read-only once successfully build, so that
yann@620
   490
you don't go polluting your toolchain with your programs/packages' files.
yann@476
   491
yann@476
   492
Thus, when you build a program/package, install it in a separate directory,
yann@476
   493
eg. /your/root. This directory is the /image/ of what would be in the root file
yann@620
   494
system of your target, and will contain all that your programs/packages have
yann@476
   495
installed.
yann@476
   496
Yann@1405
   497
The 'populate' script |
Yann@1405
   498
----------------------+
Yann@1405
   499
yann@227
   500
When your root directory is ready, it is still missing some important bits: the
yann@227
   501
toolchain's libraries. To populate your root directory with those libs, just
yann@227
   502
run:
yann@335
   503
  your-target-tuple-populate -s /your/root -d /your/root-populated
yann@227
   504
yann@227
   505
This will copy /your/root into /your/root-populated, and put the needed and only
yann@227
   506
the needed libraries there. Thus you don't polute /your/root with any cruft that
yann@227
   507
would no longer be needed should you have to remove stuff. /your/root always
yann@227
   508
contains only those things you install in it.
yann@227
   509
yann@227
   510
You can then use /your/root-populated to build up your file system image, a
yann@227
   511
tarball, or to NFS-mount it from your target, or whatever you need.
yann@227
   512
Yann@1405
   513
The populate script accepts the following options:
yann@294
   514
Yann@1405
   515
 -s src_dir
Yann@1405
   516
    Use 'src_dir' as the un-populated root directory.
yann@294
   517
Yann@1405
   518
 -d dst_dir
Yann@1405
   519
    Put the populated root directory in 'dst_dir'.
Yann@1405
   520
Yann@1405
   521
 -l lib1 [...]
Yann@1405
   522
    Always add specified libraries.
Yann@1405
   523
Yann@1405
   524
 -L file
Yann@1405
   525
    Always add libraries listed in 'file'.
yann@294
   526
yann@294
   527
 -f
Yann@1405
   528
    Remove 'dst_dir' if it previously existed; continue even if any library
Yann@1405
   529
    specified with -l or -L is missing.
yann@294
   530
yann@294
   531
 -v
yann@294
   532
    Be verbose, and tell what's going on (you can see exactly where libs are
yann@294
   533
    coming from).
yann@294
   534
yann@294
   535
 -h
Yann@1405
   536
    Print the help.
Yann@1405
   537
Yann@1405
   538
See 'your-target-tuple-populate -h' for more information on the options.
yann@294
   539
Yann@1406
   540
Here is how populate works:
Yann@1406
   541
Yann@1406
   542
  1) performs some sanity checks:
Yann@1406
   543
     - src_dir and dst_dir are specified
Yann@1406
   544
     - src_dir exists
Yann@1406
   545
     - unless forced, dst_dir does not exist
Yann@1406
   546
     - src_dir != dst_dir
Yann@1406
   547
Yann@1406
   548
  2) copy src_dir to dst_dir
Yann@1406
   549
Yann@1406
   550
  3) add forced libraries to dst_dir
Yann@1406
   551
     - build the list from -l and -L options
Yann@1406
   552
     - get forced libraries from the sysroot (see below for heuristics)
Yann@1406
   553
       - abort on the first missing library, unless -f is specified
Yann@1406
   554
Yann@1406
   555
  4) add all missing libraries to dst_dir
Yann@1406
   556
     - scan dst_dir for every ELF files that are 'executable' or
Yann@1406
   557
       'shared object'
Yann@1406
   558
     - list the "NEEDED Shared library" fields
Yann@1406
   559
       - check if the library is already in dst_dir/lib or dst_dir/usr/lib
Yann@1406
   560
       - if not, get the library from the sysroot
Yann@1406
   561
         - if it's in sysroot/lib, copy it to dst_dir/lib
Yann@1406
   562
         - if it's in sysroot/usr/lib, copy it to dst_dir/usr/lib
Yann@1406
   563
         - in both cases, use the SONAME of the library to create the file
Yann@1406
   564
           in dst_dir
Yann@1406
   565
         - if it was not found in the sysroot, this is an error.
Yann@1406
   566
yann@1580
   567
yann@40
   568
___________________
yann@40
   569
                  /
yann@40
   570
Toolchain types  /
yann@40
   571
________________/
yann@40
   572
yann@40
   573
There are four kinds of toolchains you could encounter.
yann@40
   574
yann@40
   575
First off, you must understand the following: when it comes to compilers there
yann@40
   576
are up to four machines involved:
yann@40
   577
  1) the machine configuring the toolchain components: the config machine
yann@40
   578
  2) the machine building the toolchain components:    the build machine
yann@40
   579
  3) the machine running the toolchain:                the host machine
yann@203
   580
  4) the machine the toolchain is generating code for: the target machine
yann@40
   581
yann@40
   582
We can most of the time assume that the config machine and the build machine
yann@40
   583
are the same. Most of the time, this will be true. The only time it isn't
yann@40
   584
is if you're using distributed compilation (such as distcc). Let's forget
yann@40
   585
this for the sake of simplicity.
yann@40
   586
yann@40
   587
So we're left with three machines:
yann@40
   588
 - build
yann@40
   589
 - host
yann@40
   590
 - target
yann@40
   591
yann@40
   592
Any toolchain will involve those three machines. You can be as pretty sure of
yann@40
   593
this as "2 and 2 are 4". Here is how they come into play:
yann@40
   594
yann@40
   595
1) build == host == target
yann@40
   596
    This is a plain native toolchain, targetting the exact same machine as the
yann@40
   597
    one it is built on, and running again on this exact same machine. You have
yann@40
   598
    to build such a toolchain when you want to use an updated component, such
yann@40
   599
    as a newer gcc for example.
yann@197
   600
    crosstool-NG calls it "native".
yann@40
   601
yann@40
   602
2) build == host != target
yann@40
   603
    This is a classic cross-toolchain, which is expected to be run on the same
yann@40
   604
    machine it is compiled on, and generate code to run on a second machine,
yann@40
   605
    the target.
yann@197
   606
    crosstool-NG calls it "cross".
yann@40
   607
yann@40
   608
3) build != host == target
yann@40
   609
    Such a toolchain is also a native toolchain, as it targets the same machine
yann@40
   610
    as it runs on. But it is build on another machine. You want such a
yann@40
   611
    toolchain when porting to a new architecture, or if the build machine is
yann@40
   612
    much faster than the host machine.
yann@197
   613
    crosstool-NG calls it "cross-native".
yann@40
   614
yann@40
   615
4) build != host != target
yann@92
   616
    This one is called a canadian-toolchain (*), and is tricky. The three
yann@40
   617
    machines in play are different. You might want such a toolchain if you
yann@40
   618
    have a fast build machine, but the users will use it on another machine,
yann@40
   619
    and will produce code to run on a third machine.
yann@197
   620
    crosstool-NG calls it "canadian".
yann@40
   621
yann@197
   622
crosstool-NG can build all these kinds of toolchains (or is aiming at it,
yann@197
   623
anyway!)
yann@40
   624
yann@40
   625
(*) The term Canadian Cross came about because at the time that these issues
yann@40
   626
    were all being hashed out, Canada had three national political parties.
yann@40
   627
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross_compiler
yann@40
   628
yann@1551
   629
yann@1575
   630
________________
yann@1575
   631
               /
yann@1575
   632
Contributing  /
yann@1575
   633
_____________/
yann@1575
   634
yann@1575
   635
Sending a bug report |
yann@1575
   636
---------------------+
yann@1575
   637
yann@1575
   638
If you need to send a bug report, please send a mail with subject
yann@1575
   639
prefixed with "[CT_NG]" with to following destinations:
yann@1575
   640
    TO: yann.morin.1998 (at) anciens.enib.fr
yann@1575
   641
    CC: crossgcc (at) sourceware.org
yann@1575
   642
yann@1575
   643
Sending patches |
yann@1575
   644
----------------+
yann@1575
   645
yann@1575
   646
If you want to enhance crosstool-NG, there's a to-do list in the TODO file.
yann@1575
   647
yann@1575
   648
Patches should come with the appropriate SoB line. A SoB line is typically
yann@1575
   649
something like:
yann@1575
   650
   Signed-off-by: John DOE <john.doe@somewhere.net>
yann@1575
   651
yann@1575
   652
The SoB line is clearly described in Documentation/SubmittingPatches , section
yann@1575
   653
12, of your favourite Linux kernel source tree.
yann@1575
   654
yann@1575
   655
Then you'll need to correctly configure Mercurial. There are two extensions
yann@1575
   656
that you may find usefull:
yann@1575
   657
  - mq        : http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/MqExtension
yann@1575
   658
  - patchbomb : http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/PatchbombExtension
yann@1575
   659
yann@1575
   660
Commit messages should look like (without leading pipes):
yann@1575
   661
 |component: short, one-line description
yann@1575
   662
 |
yann@1575
   663
 |optional longer description
yann@1575
   664
 |on multiple lines if needed
yann@1575
   665
yann@1575
   666
Here is an example commit message (see revision a53a5e1d61db):
yann@1575
   667
 |comp-libs/cloog: fix building
yann@1575
   668
 |
yann@1575
   669
 |For CLooG/PPL 0.15.3, the directory name was simply cloog-ppl.
yann@1575
   670
 |For any later versions, the directory name does have the version, such as
yann@1575
   671
 |cloog-ppl-0.15.4.
yann@1575
   672
yann@1575
   673
Here's a typical hacking session:
yann@1575
   674
  hg clone http://ymorin.is-a-geek.org/hg/crosstool-ng crosstool-ng
yann@1575
   675
  cd crosstool-ng
yann@1575
   676
  hg qinit
yann@1575
   677
  hg qnew -D -U -e my_first_patch
yann@1575
   678
  *edit patch description*
yann@1575
   679
  *hack* *hack* *check* *fails* *hack* *hack* *check* *works*
yann@1575
   680
  hg qref -D -e
yann@1575
   681
  *edit patch description, serving as commit message*
yann@1575
   682
  hg qnew -D -U -e my_second_patch
yann@1575
   683
  *edit patch description*
yann@1575
   684
  *hack* *hack* *check* *fails* *hack* *hack* *check* *works*
yann@1575
   685
  hg qref -D -e
yann@1575
   686
  *edit patch description, serving as commit message*
yann@1575
   687
  hg email --outgoing --intro   \
yann@1575
   688
           --from '"Your Full NAME" <your.email (at) your.domain>'   \
yann@1575
   689
           --to '"Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998 (at) anciens.enib.fr>'    \
yann@1575
   690
           --cc 'crossgcc (at) sourceware.org'
yann@1575
   691
  *edit introductory message*
yann@1575
   692
  *wait for feedback*
yann@1575
   693
  *re-send if no answer for a few days*
yann@1575
   694
yann@1575
   695
Note: replace '(at)' above with a plain '@'.
yann@1575
   696
yann@1575
   697
yann@1
   698
_____________
yann@1
   699
            /
yann@1
   700
Internals  /
yann@1
   701
__________/
yann@1
   702
yann@92
   703
Internally, crosstool-NG is script-based. To ease usage, the frontend is
yann@92
   704
Makefile-based.
yann@92
   705
yann@92
   706
Makefile front-end |
yann@476
   707
-------------------+
yann@92
   708
yann@203
   709
The entry point to crosstool-NG is the Makefile script "ct-ng". Calling this
yann@203
   710
script with an action will act exactly as if the Makefile was in the current
yann@203
   711
working directory and make was called with the action as rule. Thus:
yann@203
   712
  ct-ng menuconfig
yann@294
   713
yann@203
   714
is equivalent to having the Makefile in CWD, and calling:
yann@203
   715
  make menuconfig
yann@203
   716
yann@203
   717
Having ct-ng as it is avoids copying the Makefile everywhere, and acts as a
yann@203
   718
traditional command.
yann@203
   719
yann@203
   720
ct-ng loads sub- Makefiles from the library directory $(CT_LIB_DIR), as set up
yann@203
   721
at configuration time with ./configure.
yann@203
   722
yann@437
   723
ct-ng also searches for config files, sub-tools, samples, scripts and patches in
yann@203
   724
that library directory.
yann@92
   725
yann@294
   726
Because of a stupid make behavior/bug I was unable to track down, implicit make
yann@294
   727
rules are disabled: installing with --local would triger those rules, and mconf
yann@294
   728
was unbuildable.
yann@294
   729
yann@182
   730
Kconfig parser |
yann@476
   731
---------------+
yann@92
   732
yann@965
   733
The kconfig language is a hacked version, vampirised from the Linux kernel
yann@965
   734
(http://www.kernel.org/), and (heavily) adapted to my needs.
yann@92
   735
yann@1040
   736
The list of the most notable changes (at least the ones I remember) follows:
yann@1040
   737
- the CONFIG_ prefix has been replaced with CT_
yann@1040
   738
- a leading | in prompts is skipped, and subsequent leading spaces are not
yann@1040
   739
  trimmed
yann@1040
   740
- otherwise leading spaces are silently trimmed
yann@1040
   741
yann@203
   742
The kconfig parsers (conf and mconf) are not installed pre-built, but as
yann@203
   743
source files. Thus you can have the directory where crosstool-NG is installed,
yann@203
   744
exported (via NFS or whatever) and have clients with different architectures
yann@203
   745
use the same crosstool-NG installation, and most notably, the same set of
yann@203
   746
patches.
yann@203
   747
yann@381
   748
Architecture-specific |
yann@476
   749
----------------------+
yann@381
   750
yann@628
   751
Note: this chapter is not really well written, and might thus be a little bit
yann@628
   752
complex to understand. To get a better grasp of what an architecture is, the
yann@628
   753
reader is kindly encouraged to look at the "arch/" sub-directory, and to the
yann@628
   754
existing architectures to see how things are laid out.
yann@628
   755
yann@381
   756
An architecture is defined by:
yann@381
   757
yann@381
   758
 - a human-readable name, in lower case letters, with numbers as appropriate.
yann@628
   759
   The underscore is allowed; space and special characters are not.
yann@628
   760
     Eg.: arm, x86_64
yann@903
   761
 - a file in "config/arch/", named after the architecture's name, and suffixed
yann@903
   762
   with ".in".
yann@903
   763
     Eg.: config/arch/arm.in
yann@903
   764
 - a file in "scripts/build/arch/", named after the architecture's name, and
yann@903
   765
   suffixed with ".sh".
yann@903
   766
     Eg.: scripts/build/arch/arm.sh
yann@628
   767
yann@903
   768
The architecture's ".in" file API:
yann@628
   769
 > the config option "ARCH_%arch%" (where %arch% is to be replaced with the
yann@628
   770
   actual architecture name).
yann@628
   771
   That config option must have *neither* a type, *nor* a prompt! Also, it can
yann@628
   772
   *not* depend on any other config option (EXPERIMENTAL is managed as above).
yann@628
   773
     Eg.:
yann@628
   774
       config ARCH_arm
yann@630
   775
   + mandatory:
yann@702
   776
       defines a (terse) help entry for this architecture:
yann@630
   777
       Eg.:
yann@630
   778
         config ARCH_arm
yann@630
   779
           help
yann@630
   780
             The ARM architecture.
yann@628
   781
   + optional:
yann@628
   782
       selects adequate associated config options.
yann@1038
   783
       Note: 64-bit architectures *shall* select ARCH_64
yann@628
   784
       Eg.:
yann@628
   785
         config ARCH_arm
yann@628
   786
           select ARCH_SUPPORTS_BOTH_ENDIAN
yann@628
   787
           select ARCH_DEFAULT_LE
yann@630
   788
           help
yann@630
   789
             The ARM architecture.
yann@1038
   790
       Eg.:
yann@1038
   791
         config ARCH_x86_64
yann@1038
   792
            select ARCH_64
yann@1038
   793
            help
yann@1038
   794
              The x86_64 architecture.
yann@628
   795
yann@628
   796
 > other target-specific options, at your discretion. Note however that to
yann@628
   797
   avoid name-clashing, such options shall be prefixed with "ARCH_%arch%",
yann@628
   798
   where %arch% is again replaced by the actual architecture name.
yann@628
   799
   (Note: due to historical reasons, and lack of time to clean up the code,
yann@628
   800
    I may have left some config options that do not completely conform to
yann@628
   801
    this, as the architecture name was written all upper case. However, the
yann@628
   802
    prefix is unique among architectures, and does not cause harm).
yann@381
   803
yann@903
   804
The architecture's ".sh" file API:
yann@965
   805
 > the function "CT_DoArchTupleValues"
yann@381
   806
   + parameters: none
yann@381
   807
   + environment:
yann@901
   808
     - all variables from the ".config" file,
yann@901
   809
     - the two variables "target_endian_eb" and "target_endian_el" which are
yann@901
   810
       the endianness suffixes
yann@381
   811
   + return value: 0 upon success, !0 upon failure
yann@381
   812
   + provides:
yann@391
   813
     - mandatory
yann@383
   814
     - the environment variable CT_TARGET_ARCH
yann@389
   815
     - contains:
yann@389
   816
       the architecture part of the target tuple.
yann@389
   817
       Eg.: "armeb" for big endian ARM
yann@389
   818
            "i386" for an i386
yann@389
   819
   + provides:
yann@391
   820
     - optional
yann@389
   821
     - the environment variable CT_TARGET_SYS
yann@456
   822
     - contains:
yann@383
   823
       the sytem part of the target tuple.
yann@383
   824
       Eg.: "gnu" for glibc on most architectures
yann@383
   825
            "gnueabi" for glibc on an ARM EABI
yann@383
   826
     - defaults to:
yann@383
   827
       - for glibc-based toolchain: "gnu"
yann@383
   828
       - for uClibc-based toolchain: "uclibc"
yann@383
   829
   + provides:
yann@383
   830
     - optional
yann@391
   831
     - the environment variable CT_KERNEL_ARCH
yann@383
   832
     - contains:
yann@391
   833
       the architecture name as understandable by the Linux kernel build
yann@391
   834
       system.
yann@391
   835
       Eg.: "arm" for an ARM
yann@391
   836
            "powerpc" for a PowerPC
yann@391
   837
            "i386" for an x86
yann@383
   838
     - defaults to:
yann@391
   839
       ${CT_ARCH}
yann@391
   840
   + provides:
yann@391
   841
     - optional
yann@767
   842
     - the environment variables to configure the cross-gcc (defaults)
yann@767
   843
       - CT_ARCH_WITH_ARCH    : the gcc ./configure switch to select architecture level         ( "--with-arch=${CT_ARCH_ARCH}"   )
yann@767
   844
       - CT_ARCH_WITH_ABI     : the gcc ./configure switch to select ABI level                  ( "--with-abi=${CT_ARCH_ABI}"     )
yann@767
   845
       - CT_ARCH_WITH_CPU     : the gcc ./configure switch to select CPU instruction set        ( "--with-cpu=${CT_ARCH_CPU}"     )
yann@767
   846
       - CT_ARCH_WITH_TUNE    : the gcc ./configure switch to select scheduling                 ( "--with-tune=${CT_ARCH_TUNE}"   )
yann@767
   847
       - CT_ARCH_WITH_FPU     : the gcc ./configure switch to select FPU type                   ( "--with-fpu=${CT_ARCH_FPU}"     )
yann@767
   848
       - CT_ARCH_WITH_FLOAT   : the gcc ./configure switch to select floating point arithmetics ( "--with-float=soft" or /empty/  )
yann@391
   849
   + provides:
yann@391
   850
     - optional
yann@767
   851
     - the environment variables to pass to the cross-gcc to build target binaries (defaults)
yann@391
   852
       - CT_ARCH_ARCH_CFLAG   : the gcc switch to select architecture level                     ( "-march=${CT_ARCH_ARCH}"            )
yann@456
   853
       - CT_ARCH_ABI_CFLAG    : the gcc switch to select ABI level                              ( "-mabi=${CT_ARCH_ABI}"              )
yann@391
   854
       - CT_ARCH_CPU_CFLAG    : the gcc switch to select CPU instruction set                    ( "-mcpu=${CT_ARCH_CPU}"              )
yann@391
   855
       - CT_ARCH_TUNE_CFLAG   : the gcc switch to select scheduling                             ( "-mtune=${CT_ARCH_TUNE}"            )
yann@391
   856
       - CT_ARCH_FPU_CFLAG    : the gcc switch to select FPU type                               ( "-mfpu=${CT_ARCH_FPU}"              )
yann@391
   857
       - CT_ARCH_FLOAT_CFLAG  : the gcc switch to choose floating point arithmetics             ( "-msoft-float" or /empty/           )
yann@391
   858
       - CT_ARCH_ENDIAN_CFLAG : the gcc switch to choose big or little endian                   ( "-mbig-endian" or "-mlittle-endian" )
yann@391
   859
     - default to:
yann@391
   860
       see above.
yann@767
   861
   + provides:
yann@767
   862
     - optional
yann@767
   863
     - the environement variables to configure the core and final compiler, specific to this architecture:
yann@767
   864
       - CT_ARCH_CC_CORE_EXTRA_CONFIG   : additional, architecture specific core gcc ./configure flags
yann@767
   865
       - CT_ARCH_CC_EXTRA_CONFIG        : additional, architecture specific final gcc ./configure flags
yann@767
   866
     - default to:
yann@767
   867
       - all empty
yann@767
   868
   + provides:
yann@767
   869
     - optional
yann@767
   870
     - the architecture-specific CFLAGS and LDFLAGS:
yann@767
   871
       - CT_ARCH_TARGET_CLFAGS
yann@767
   872
       - CT_ARCH_TARGET_LDFLAGS
yann@767
   873
     - default to:
yann@767
   874
       - all empty
yann@628
   875
yann@903
   876
You can have a look at "config/arch/arm.in" and "scripts/build/arch/arm.sh" for
yann@903
   877
a quite complete example of what an actual architecture description looks like.
yann@901
   878
yann@890
   879
Kernel specific |
yann@890
   880
----------------+
yann@890
   881
yann@890
   882
A kernel is defined by:
yann@890
   883
yann@890
   884
 - a human-readable name, in lower case letters, with numbers as appropriate.
yann@890
   885
   The underscore is allowed; space and special characters are not (although
yann@890
   886
   they are internally replaced with underscores.
yann@890
   887
     Eg.: linux, bare-metal
yann@890
   888
 - a file in "config/kernel/", named after the kernel name, and suffixed with
yann@890
   889
   ".in".
yann@890
   890
     Eg.: config/kernel/linux.in, config/kernel/bare-metal.in
yann@901
   891
 - a file in "scripts/build/kernel/", named after the kernel name, and suffixed
yann@901
   892
   with ".sh".
yann@901
   893
     Eg.: scripts/build/kernel/linux.sh, scripts/build/kernel/bare-metal.sh
yann@890
   894
yann@890
   895
The kernel's ".in" file must contain:
yann@890
   896
 > an optional lines containing exactly "# EXPERIMENTAL", starting on the
yann@890
   897
   first column, and without any following space or other character.
yann@890
   898
   If this line is present, then this kernel is considered EXPERIMENTAL,
yann@890
   899
   and correct dependency on EXPERIMENTAL will be set.
yann@901
   900
yann@890
   901
 > the config option "KERNEL_%kernel_name%" (where %kernel_name% is to be
yann@890
   902
   replaced with the actual kernel name, with all special characters and
yann@890
   903
   spaces replaced by underscores).
yann@890
   904
   That config option must have *neither* a type, *nor* a prompt! Also, it can
yann@890
   905
   *not* depends on EXPERIMENTAL.
yann@890
   906
     Eg.: KERNEL_linux, KERNEL_bare_metal
yann@890
   907
   + mandatory:
yann@890
   908
       defines a (terse) help entry for this kernel.
yann@890
   909
       Eg.:
yann@890
   910
         config KERNEL_bare_metal
yann@890
   911
           help
yann@890
   912
             Build a compiler for use without any kernel.
yann@890
   913
   + optional:
yann@890
   914
       selects adequate associated config options.
yann@890
   915
       Eg.:
yann@890
   916
         config KERNEL_bare_metal
yann@890
   917
           select BARE_METAL
yann@890
   918
           help
yann@890
   919
             Build a compiler for use without any kernel.
yann@890
   920
yann@890
   921
 > other kernel specific options, at your discretion. Note however that, to
yann@890
   922
   avoid name-clashing, such options should be prefixed with
yann@890
   923
   "KERNEL_%kernel_name%", where %kernel_name% is again tp be replaced with
yann@890
   924
   the actual kernel name.
yann@890
   925
   (Note: due to historical reasons, and lack of time to clean up the code,
yann@890
   926
    I may have left some config options that do not completely conform to
yann@890
   927
    this, as the kernel name was written all upper case. However, the prefix
yann@890
   928
    is unique among kernels, and does not cause harm).
yann@890
   929
yann@901
   930
The kernel's ".sh" file API:
yann@901
   931
 > is a bash script fragment
yann@901
   932
yann@965
   933
 > defines the function CT_DoKernelTupleValues
yann@965
   934
   + see the architecture's CT_DoArchTupleValues, except for:
yann@965
   935
   + set the environment variable CT_TARGET_KERNEL, the kernel part of the
yann@965
   936
     target tuple
yann@965
   937
   + return value: ignored
yann@965
   938
yann@901
   939
 > defines the function "do_kernel_get":
yann@901
   940
   + parameters: none
yann@901
   941
   + environment:
yann@901
   942
      - all variables from the ".config" file.
yann@901
   943
   + return value: 0 for success, !0 for failure.
yann@901
   944
   + behavior: download the kernel's sources, and store the tarball into
yann@901
   945
     "${CT_TARBALLS_DIR}". To this end, a functions is available, that
yann@901
   946
     abstracts downloading tarballs:
yann@901
   947
     - CT_DoGet <tarball_base_name> <URL1 [URL...]>
yann@901
   948
       Eg.: CT_DoGet linux-2.6.26.5 ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v2.6
yann@901
   949
     Note: retrieving sources from svn, cvs, git and the likes is not supported
yann@901
   950
     by CT_DoGet. You'll have to do this by hand, as it is done for eglibc in
yann@901
   951
     "scripts/build/libc/eglibc.sh"
yann@901
   952
yann@901
   953
 > defines the function "do_kernel_extract":
yann@901
   954
   + parameters: none
yann@901
   955
   + environment:
yann@901
   956
      - all variables from the ".config" file,
yann@901
   957
   + return value: 0 for success, !0 for failure.
yann@901
   958
   + behavior: extract the kernel's tarball into "${CT_SRC_DIR}", and apply
yann@901
   959
     required patches. To this end, a function is available, that abstracts
yann@901
   960
     extracting tarballs:
yann@901
   961
     - CT_ExtractAndPatch <tarball_base_name>
yann@901
   962
       Eg.: CT_ExtractAndPatch linux-2.6.26.5
yann@901
   963
yann@901
   964
 > defines the function "do_kernel_headers":
yann@901
   965
   + parameters: none
yann@901
   966
   + environment:
yann@901
   967
      - all variables from the ".config" file,
yann@901
   968
   + return value: 0 for success, !0 for failure.
yann@901
   969
   + behavior: install the kernel headers (if any) in "${CT_SYSROOT_DIR}/usr/include"
yann@901
   970
yann@901
   971
 > defines any kernel-specific helper functions
yann@901
   972
   These functions, if any, must be prefixed with "do_kernel_%CT_KERNEL%_",
yann@901
   973
   where '%CT_KERNEL%' is to be replaced with the actual kernel name, to avoid
yann@901
   974
   any name-clashing.
yann@901
   975
yann@901
   976
You can have a look at "config/kernel/linux.in" and "scripts/build/kernel/linux.sh"
yann@903
   977
as an example of what a complex kernel description looks like.
yann@901
   978
yann@620
   979
Adding a new version of a component |
yann@476
   980
------------------------------------+
yann@476
   981
yann@476
   982
When a new component, such as the Linux kernel, gcc or any other is released,
yann@476
   983
adding the new version to crosstool-NG is quite easy. There is a script that
yann@476
   984
will do all that for you:
yann@1095
   985
  scripts/addToolVersion.sh
yann@476
   986
yann@476
   987
Run it with no option to get some help.
yann@381
   988
yann@203
   989
Build scripts |
yann@476
   990
--------------+
yann@203
   991
yann@203
   992
To Be Written later...