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1599 lines
66 KiB
Plaintext
1599 lines
66 KiB
Plaintext
RTEMS Source Builder
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====================
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:doctype: book
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:toc2:
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:toclevels: 5
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:icons:
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:numbered:
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image:images/rtemswhitebg.jpg["RTEMS",width="30%"]
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Chris Johns <chrisj@rtems.org>
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1.0, February 2013
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RTEMS Tools From Source
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-----------------------
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The RTEMS Source Builder is a tool to aid building packages from source. It is
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not a package manager. It helps consolidate the details you need to build a
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package from source in a controlled and verifiable way. The tool is aimed at
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developers of software who use tool sets for embedded type
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development. Embedded development typically uses cross-compiling tool chains,
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debuggers, and debugging aids. Together we call these a 'tool set'. The RTEMS
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Source Builder is not limited to this role but designed to fit with-in this
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specific niche. It can be used outside of the RTEMS project and we welcome this
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happening in other open source or commercial projects.
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The RTEMS Source Builder is typically used to build a set of tools or a 'build
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set'. A 'build set' is a collection of packages and a package is a specific
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tool, for example gcc or gdb. The RTEMS Source Builder attempts to support any
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host environment that runs Python and you can build the package on. It is not
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some sort of magic that can take any piece of source code and make it
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build. Someone at some point in time has figured out how to build that package
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from source and taught this tool. The RTEMS Source Builder has been tested on:
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* FreeBSD
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* MacOS (Mountain Lion)
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* Ubuntu
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* Centos
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* Fedora
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* Raspbian
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Windows support is being added how-ever there are issues with the Python
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threading used in the RTEMS Source Builder and the MinGW project's MSYS process
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handling of `make`.
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The RTEMS Source Builder has two types configuration data. The first is the
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'build set'. A _build set_ describes a collection of packages that define a set
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of tools you would use when developing software for RTEMS. For example the
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basic GNU tool set is binutils, gcc, and gdb and is the typical base suite of
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tools you need for an embedded cross-development type project. The second type
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of configuration data is the configuration files and they define how a package
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is built. Configuration files are scripts loosely based on the RPM spec file
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format and detail the steps needed to build a package. The steps are
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'preparation', 'building', and 'installing'. Scripts support macros, shell
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expansion, logic, includes plus many more features useful when build packages.
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The RTEMS Source Builder does not interact with any host package management
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systems. There is no automatic dependence checking between various packages you
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build or packages and software your host system you may have installed. We
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assume the build sets and configuration files you are using have been created
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by developers who do. If you have a problem please ask on the RTEMS Users
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mailing list.
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Quick Start
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-----------
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The quick start will show you how to build a set of RTEMS tools for a supported
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architecture.
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There is no need to become root or the administrator and we recommend you avoid
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doing this. You can build and install the tools anywhere on the host's file
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system you, as a standard user, have read and write access too. I recommend you
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use your home directory and work under the directory `~/development/rtems`. The
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examples shown here will do this.
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You can use the build _prefix_ to install and maintain different versions of
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the tools. Doing this lets you try a new set of tools while not touching your
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proven working production set of tools. Once you have proven the new tools are
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working rebuild with the 'production' prefix switching your development to them.
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I also suggest you keep your environment to the bare minimum, particularly the
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path variable. Using environment variables has been proven over the years to be
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difficult to manage in production systems.
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Setup
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~~~~~
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Setup a development work space:
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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$ cd
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$ mkdir -p development/rtems/src
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$ cd development/rtems/src
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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The RTEMS Source Builder is distributed as source. It is Python code so all you
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need to do is head over to the RTEMS GIT repository and clone the code directly
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from git:
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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$ git clone git://git.rtems.org/chrisj/rtems-source-builder.git
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$ cd rtems-source-builder
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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Checking
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~~~~~~~~
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The next step is to check if your host is set up correctly. The RTEMS Source
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Builder provides a tool to help:
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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$ source-builder/sb-check
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warning: exe: absolute exe found in path: (__objcopy) /usr/local/bin/objcopy <1>
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warning: exe: absolute exe found in path: (__objdump) /usr/local/bin/objdump
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error: exe: not found: (_xz) /usr/local/bin/xz <2>
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RTEMS Source Builder environment is not correctly set up
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$ source-builder/sb-check
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RTEMS Source Builder environment is ok <3>
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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<1> A tool is in the environment path but does not match the expected path.
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<2> The executable 'xz' is not found.
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<3> The host's environment is set up correct.
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The checking tool will output a list of executable files not found if problems
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are detected. Locate those executable files and install them. You may also be
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given a list of warnings about executable files not in the expected location
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how-ever the executable was located somewhere in your environment's path. You
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will need to check each tool to determine if this is an issue. An executable
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not in the standard location may indicate it is not the host operating system's
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standard tool. It maybe ok or it could be buggy, only you can determine this.
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The <<_host_setups,Host Setups>> section lists packages you should install for
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common host operating systems. It maybe worth checking if you have those
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installed.
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Build Sets
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~~~~~~~~~~
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The RTEMS tools can be built within the RTEMS Source Builder's source tree. We
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recommend you do this so lets change into the RTEMS directory in the RTEMS
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Source Builder package:
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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$ cd rtems
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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If you are unsure how to specify the build set for the architecture you wish to
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build ask the tool:
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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$ ../source-builder/sb-set-builder --list-bsets <1>
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RTEMS Source Builder - Set Builder, v0.1
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Examining: config <2>
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Examining: ../source-builder/config <2>
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4.11/rtems-all.bset <3>
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4.11/rtems-arm.bset <4>
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4.11/rtems-avr.bset
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4.11/rtems-bfin.bset
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4.11/rtems-h8300.bset
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4.11/rtems-m32c.bset
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4.11/rtems-m32r.bset
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4.11/rtems-m68k.bset
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4.11/rtems-microblaze.bset
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4.11/rtems-mips.bset
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4.11/rtems-moxie.bset
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4.11/rtems-nios2.bset
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4.11/rtems-powerpc.bset
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4.11/rtems-sh.bset
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4.11/rtems-sparc.bset
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gnu-tools-4.6.bset
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rtems-4.11-base.bset
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unstable/4.11/rtems-all.bset <5>
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unstable/4.11/rtems-arm.bset
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unstable/4.11/rtems-avr.bset
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unstable/4.11/rtems-bfin.bset
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unstable/4.11/rtems-h8300.bset
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unstable/4.11/rtems-m32c.bset
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unstable/4.11/rtems-m32r.bset
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unstable/4.11/rtems-m68k.bset
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unstable/4.11/rtems-microblaze.bset
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unstable/4.11/rtems-mips.bset
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unstable/4.11/rtems-moxie.bset
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unstable/4.11/rtems-powerpc.bset
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unstable/4.11/rtems-sh.bset
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unstable/4.11/rtems-sparc.bset
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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<1> Only option needed is +--list-bsets+
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<2> The paths inspected. See <<X1,+_configdir+>> variable.
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<3> Build all the architectures.
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<4> The build set for the ARM architecture.
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<5> Unstable tool sets are used by RTEMS developers to test new tool sets. You
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are welcome to try them but you must remember they are unstable, can change
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at point in time and your application may not work. If you have an issue
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with a production tool it may pay to try the unstable tool to see if it has
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been resolved.
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Building
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~~~~~~~~
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In this quick start I will build a SPARC tool set.
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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$ ../source-builder/sb-set-builder --log=l-sparc.txt <1> \
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--prefix=$HOME/development/rtems/4.11 <2> 4.11/rtems-sparc <3>
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Source Builder - Set Builder, v0.1
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Build Set: 4.11/rtems-sparc
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config: expat-2.1.0-1.cfg <4>
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package: expat-2.1.0-x86_64-freebsd9.1-1
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building: expat-2.1.0-x86_64-freebsd9.1-1
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installing: rtems-4.11-sparc-rtems4.11-1 -> /home/chris/development/rtems/4.11 <5>
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config: tools/rtems-binutils-2.22-1.cfg <6>
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package: sparc-rtems4.11-binutils-2.22-1
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building: sparc-rtems4.11-binutils-2.22-1
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installing: rtems-4.11-sparc-rtems4.11-1 -> /home/chris/development/rtems/4.11
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config: tools/rtems-gcc-4.7.2-newlib-1.20.0-1.cfg <7>
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package: sparc-rtems4.11-gcc-4.7.2-newlib-1.20.0-1
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building: sparc-rtems4.11-gcc-4.7.2-newlib-1.20.0-1
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installing: rtems-4.11-sparc-rtems4.11-1 -> /home/chris/development/rtems/4.11
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config: tools/rtems-gdb-7.5.1-1.cfg <8>
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package: sparc-rtems4.11-gdb-7.5.1-1
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building: sparc-rtems4.11-gdb-7.5.1-1
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installing: rtems-4.11-sparc-rtems4.11-1 -> /home/chris/development/rtems/4.11
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cleaning: expat-2.1.0-x86_64-freebsd9.1-1 <9>
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cleaning: sparc-rtems4.11-binutils-2.22-1
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cleaning: sparc-rtems4.11-gcc-4.7.2-newlib-1.20.0-1
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cleaning: sparc-rtems4.11-gdb-7.5.1-1
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Build Set: Time 0:13:43.616383 <10>
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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<1> Providing a log file redirects the build output into a file. Logging the
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build output provides a simple way to report problems.
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<2> The prefix is the location on your file system the tools are installed
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into. Provide a prefix to a location you have read and write access. You
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can use the prefix to install different versions or builds of tools. Just
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use the path to the tools you want to use when building RTEMS.
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<3> The build set. This is the SPARC build set.
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<4> The SPARC build set first builds the expat library as is used in GDB. This
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is the expat configuration used.
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<5> Installing the expat package to the install prefix.
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<6> The binutils build configuration.
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<7> The GCC and Newlib build configuration.
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<8> The GDB build configuration.
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<9> All the packages built are cleaned at the end. If the build fails all the
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needed files are present. You may have to clean up by deleting the build
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directory if the build fails.
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<10> The time to build the package. This lets you see how different host
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hardware or configurations perform.
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Your SPARC RTEMS 4.11 tool set will be installed and ready to build RTEMS and
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RTEMS applications. When the build runs you will notice the tool fetch the
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source code from the internet. These files are cached in a directory called
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+source+. If you run the build again the cached files are used. This is what
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happened in the show example before.
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The installed tools:
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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$ ls $HOME/development/rtems/4.11
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bin include lib libexec share sparc-rtems4.11
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$ ls $HOME/development/rtems/4.11/bin
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sparc-rtems4.11-addr2line sparc-rtems4.11-cpp
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sparc-rtems4.11-gcc-ar sparc-rtems4.11-gprof
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sparc-rtems4.11-objdump sparc-rtems4.11-size
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sparc-rtems4.11-ar sparc-rtems4.11-elfedit
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sparc-rtems4.11-gcc-nm sparc-rtems4.11-ld
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sparc-rtems4.11-ranlib sparc-rtems4.11-strings
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sparc-rtems4.11-as sparc-rtems4.11-g++
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sparc-rtems4.11-gcc-ranlib sparc-rtems4.11-ld.bfd
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sparc-rtems4.11-readelf sparc-rtems4.11-strip
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sparc-rtems4.11-c++ sparc-rtems4.11-gcc
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sparc-rtems4.11-gcov sparc-rtems4.11-nm
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sparc-rtems4.11-run xmlwf
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sparc-rtems4.11-c++filt sparc-rtems4.11-gcc-4.7.2
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sparc-rtems4.11-gdb sparc-rtems4.11-objcopy
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sparc-rtems4.11-sis
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$ $HOME/development/rtems/4.11/bin/sparc-rtems4.11-gcc -v
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Using built-in specs.
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COLLECT_GCC=/home/chris/development/rtems/4.11/bin/sparc-rtems4.11-gcc
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COLLECT_LTO_WRAPPER=/usr/home/chris/development/rtems/4.11/bin/../ \
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libexec/gcc/sparc-rtems4.11/4.7.2/lto-wrapper
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Target: sparc-rtems4.11
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Configured with: ../gcc-4.7.2/configure
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--prefix=/home/chris/development/rtems/4.11
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--bindir=/home/chris/development/rtems/4.11/bin
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--exec_prefix=/home/chris/development/rtems/4.11
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--includedir=/home/chris/development/rtems/4.11/include
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--libdir=/home/chris/development/rtems/4.11/lib
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--libexecdir=/home/chris/development/rtems/4.11/libexec
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--mandir=/home/chris/development/rtems/4.11/share/man
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--infodir=/home/chris/development/rtems/4.11/share/info
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--datadir=/home/chris/development/rtems/4.11/share
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--build=x86_64-freebsd9.1 --host=x86_64-freebsd9.1 --target=sparc-rtems4.11
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--disable-libstdcxx-pch --with-gnu-as --with-gnu-ld --verbose --with-newlib
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--with-system-zlib --disable-nls --without-included-gettext
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--disable-win32-registry --enable-version-specific-runtime-libs --disable-lto
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--enable-threads --enable-plugin --enable-newlib-io-c99-formats
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--enable-newlib-iconv --enable-languages=c,c++
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Thread model: rtems
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gcc version 4.7.2 20120920 (RTEMS) (GCC)
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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Installing and Tar Files
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The RTEMS Source Builder can install the built packages directly and optionally it can
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create a build set tar file or a tar file per package built. The normal and
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default behaviour is to let the RTEMS Source Builder install the tools. The
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source will be downloaded, built, installed and cleaned up.
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The tar files are created with the full build prefix present. This can cause
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problems if you are installing on a host you do not have super user or
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administrator rights on if the prefix path references part you do not have
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write access t0o. You can use the +--strip-components+ option in tar if your
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tar file supports it to remove the parts you do not have write access too or
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you may need to unpack the tar file somewhere and copy the file tree from the
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level you have write access from. Embedding the full prefix path in the tar
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files lets you know what the prefix is.
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A build set tar file is created by adding `--bset-tar-file` option to the
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`sb-set-builder` command.
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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$ ../source-builder/sb-set-builder --log=l-sparc.txt \
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--prefix=$HOME/development/rtems/4.11 \
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--bset-tar-file <1> 4.11/rtems-sparc
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Source Builder - Set Builder, v0.1
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Build Set: 4.11/rtems-sparc
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config: expat-2.1.0-1.cfg
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package: expat-2.1.0-x86_64-freebsd9.1-1
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building: expat-2.1.0-x86_64-freebsd9.1-1
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installing: rtems-4.11-sparc-rtems4.11-1 -> /home/chris/development/rtems/4.11 <2>
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config: tools/rtems-binutils-2.22-1.cfg
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package: sparc-rtems4.11-binutils-2.22-1
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building: sparc-rtems4.11-binutils-2.22-1
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installing: rtems-4.11-sparc-rtems4.11-1 -> /home/chris/development/rtems/4.11
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config: tools/rtems-gcc-4.7.2-newlib-1.20.0-1.cfg
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package: sparc-rtems4.11-gcc-4.7.2-newlib-1.20.0-1
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building: sparc-rtems4.11-gcc-4.7.2-newlib-1.20.0-1
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installing: rtems-4.11-sparc-rtems4.11-1 -> /home/chris/development/rtems/4.11
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config: tools/rtems-gdb-7.5.1-1.cfg
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package: sparc-rtems4.11-gdb-7.5.1-1
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building: sparc-rtems4.11-gdb-7.5.1-1
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installing: rtems-4.11-sparc-rtems4.11-1 -> /home/chris/development/rtems/4.11
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tarball: tar/rtems-4.11-sparc-rtems4.11-1.tar.bz2 <3>
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cleaning: expat-2.1.0-x86_64-freebsd9.1-1
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cleaning: sparc-rtems4.11-binutils-2.22-1
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cleaning: sparc-rtems4.11-gcc-4.7.2-newlib-1.20.0-1
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cleaning: sparc-rtems4.11-gdb-7.5.1-1
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Build Set: Time 0:15:25.92873
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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<1> The option to create a build set tar file.
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<2> The installation still happens.
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<3> Creating the build set tar file.
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You can also suppress installing the files using the `--no-install` option to
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the `sb-set-builder` command.
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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$ ../source-builder/sb-set-builder --log=l-sparc.txt \
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--prefix=$HOME/development/rtems/4.11 \
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--bset-tar-file --no-install <1> 4.11/rtems-sparc
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Source Builder - Set Builder, v0.1
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Build Set: 4.11/rtems-sparc
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config: expat-2.1.0-1.cfg
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package: expat-2.1.0-x86_64-freebsd9.1-1
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building: expat-2.1.0-x86_64-freebsd9.1-1
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config: tools/rtems-binutils-2.22-1.cfg
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package: sparc-rtems4.11-binutils-2.22-1
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building: sparc-rtems4.11-binutils-2.22-1
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config: tools/rtems-gcc-4.7.2-newlib-1.20.0-1.cfg
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package: sparc-rtems4.11-gcc-4.7.2-newlib-1.20.0-1
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building: sparc-rtems4.11-gcc-4.7.2-newlib-1.20.0-1
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config: tools/rtems-gdb-7.5.1-1.cfg
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package: sparc-rtems4.11-gdb-7.5.1-1
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building: sparc-rtems4.11-gdb-7.5.1-1
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tarball: tar/rtems-4.11-sparc-rtems4.11-1.tar.bz2 <2>
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cleaning: expat-2.1.0-x86_64-freebsd9.1-1
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cleaning: sparc-rtems4.11-binutils-2.22-1
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cleaning: sparc-rtems4.11-gcc-4.7.2-newlib-1.20.0-1
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cleaning: sparc-rtems4.11-gdb-7.5.1-1
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Build Set: Time 0:14:11.721274
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$ ls tar
|
|
rtems-4.11-sparc-rtems4.11-1.tar.bz2
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
<1> The option to supressing installing the packages.
|
|
<2> Create the build set tar.
|
|
|
|
A package tar file can be created by adding the +--pkg-tar-files+ to the
|
|
+sb-set-builder+ command. This creates a tar file per package built in the
|
|
build set.
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
$ ../source-builder/sb-set-builder --log=l-sparc.txt \
|
|
--prefix=$HOME/development/rtems/4.11 \
|
|
--bset-tar-file --pkg-tar-files <1> --no-install 4.11/rtems-sparc
|
|
Source Builder - Set Builder, v0.1
|
|
Build Set: 4.11/rtems-sparc
|
|
config: expat-2.1.0-1.cfg
|
|
package: expat-2.1.0-x86_64-freebsd9.1-1
|
|
building: expat-2.1.0-x86_64-freebsd9.1-1
|
|
config: tools/rtems-binutils-2.22-1.cfg
|
|
package: sparc-rtems4.11-binutils-2.22-1
|
|
building: sparc-rtems4.11-binutils-2.22-1
|
|
config: tools/rtems-gcc-4.7.2-newlib-1.20.0-1.cfg
|
|
package: sparc-rtems4.11-gcc-4.7.2-newlib-1.20.0-1
|
|
building: sparc-rtems4.11-gcc-4.7.2-newlib-1.20.0-1
|
|
config: tools/rtems-gdb-7.5.1-1.cfg
|
|
package: sparc-rtems4.11-gdb-7.5.1-1
|
|
building: sparc-rtems4.11-gdb-7.5.1-1
|
|
tarball: tar/rtems-4.11-sparc-rtems4.11-1.tar.bz2
|
|
cleaning: expat-2.1.0-x86_64-freebsd9.1-1
|
|
cleaning: sparc-rtems4.11-binutils-2.22-1
|
|
cleaning: sparc-rtems4.11-gcc-4.7.2-newlib-1.20.0-1
|
|
cleaning: sparc-rtems4.11-gdb-7.5.1-1
|
|
Build Set: Time 0:14:37.658460
|
|
$ ls tar
|
|
expat-2.1.0-x86_64-freebsd9.1-1.tar.bz2 sparc-rtems4.11-binutils-2.22-1.tar.bz2
|
|
sparc-rtems4.11-gdb-7.5.1-1.tar.bz2 <2> rtems-4.11-sparc-rtems4.11-1.tar.bz2 <3>
|
|
sparc-rtems4.11-gcc-4.7.2-newlib-1.20.0-1.tar.bz2
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
<1> The option to create packages tar files.
|
|
<2> The GDB package tar file.
|
|
<3> The build set tar file. All the others in a single tar file.
|
|
|
|
Why Build from Source ?
|
|
-----------------------
|
|
|
|
The RTEMS Source Builder is not a replacement for the binary install systems
|
|
you have with commercial operating systems or open source operating system
|
|
distributions. Those products and distributions are critically important and
|
|
are the base that allows the Source Builder to work. The RTEMS Source Builder
|
|
sits somewhere between you manually entering the commands to build a tool set
|
|
and a tool such as +yum+ or +apt-get+ to install binary packages made
|
|
specifically for your host operating system. Building manually or installing a
|
|
binary package from a remote repository are valid and real alternatives while
|
|
the Source Builder is attempting to provide a specific service of repeatably
|
|
being able to build tool sets from source code.
|
|
|
|
If you are developing a system or product that has a long shelf life or is used
|
|
in a critical piece of infrastructure that has a long life cycle being able to
|
|
build from source is important. It insulates the project from the fast ever
|
|
changing world of the host development machines. If your tool set is binary and
|
|
you have lost the ability to build it you have lost a degree of control and
|
|
flexibility open source gives you. Fast moving host environments are
|
|
fantastic. We have powerful multi-core computers with huge amounts of memory
|
|
and state of the art operating systems to run on them how-ever the product or
|
|
project you are part of may need to be maintained well past the life time of
|
|
these host. Being able to build from source an important and critical part of
|
|
this process because you can move to a newer host and create an equivalent tool
|
|
set.
|
|
|
|
Building from source provides you with control over the configuration of the
|
|
package you are building. If all or the most important dependent parts are
|
|
built from source you limit the exposure to host variations. For example the
|
|
GNU C compiler (gcc) currently uses a number of 3rd party libraries internally
|
|
(gmp, mpfr, etc). If your validated compiler generating code for your target
|
|
processor is dynamically linked against the host's version of these libraries
|
|
any change in the host's configuration may effect you. The changes the host's
|
|
package management system makes may be perfectly reasonable in relation to the
|
|
distribution being managed how-ever this may not extend to you and your
|
|
tools. Building your tools from source and controlling the specific version of
|
|
these dependent parts means you are not exposing yourself to unexpected and
|
|
often difficult to resolve problems. On the other side you need to make sure
|
|
your tools build and work with newer versions of the host operating
|
|
system. Given the stability of standards based libraries like 'libc' and ever
|
|
improving support for standard header file locations this task is becoming
|
|
easier.
|
|
|
|
The RTEMS Source Builder is designed to be audited and incorporated into a
|
|
project's verification and validation process. If your project is developing
|
|
critical applications that needs to be traced from source to executable code in
|
|
the target, you need to also consider the tools and how to track them.
|
|
|
|
If your IT department maintains all your computers and you do not have suitable
|
|
rights to install binary packages, building from source lets you create your
|
|
own tool set that you install under your home directory. Avoiding installing
|
|
any extra packages as a super user is always helpful in maintaining a secure
|
|
computing environment.
|
|
|
|
Configuration
|
|
-------------
|
|
|
|
The RTEMS Source Builder has two types of configuration data:
|
|
|
|
. Build Sets
|
|
. Package Build Configurations
|
|
|
|
By default these files can be located in two separate directories and
|
|
searched. The first directory is +config+ in your current working directory
|
|
(+_topdir+) and the second is +config+ located in the base directory of the
|
|
RTEMS Source Builder command you run (+_sbdir+). The RTEMS directory +rtems+
|
|
located at the top of the RTEMS Source Builder source code is an example of a
|
|
specific build configuration directory. You can create custom or private build
|
|
configurations and if you run the RTEMS Source Builder command from that
|
|
directory your configurations will be used.
|
|
|
|
[[X1]] The configuration search path is a macro variable and is reference as
|
|
+%\{_configdir\}+. It's default is defined as:
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
_configdir : dir optional %{_topdir}/config:%{_sbdir}/config <1>
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
<1> The +_topdir+ is the directory you run the command from and +_sbdir+ is the
|
|
location of the RTEMS Source Builder command.
|
|
|
|
Build set files have the file extension +.bset+ and the package build
|
|
configuration files have the file extension of +.cfg+. The +sb-set-builder+
|
|
command will search for _build sets_ and the +sb-builder+ commands works with
|
|
package build configuration files.
|
|
|
|
Both types of configuration files use the \'#' character as a comment
|
|
character. Anything after this character on the line is ignored. There is no
|
|
block comment.
|
|
|
|
Macros and Defaults
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The RTEMS Source Builder uses a table of _macros_ called the _defaults_. The
|
|
values the _defaults_ are initialised to is dependent on your host. This lets
|
|
the Source Builder handle differences in the hosts. Build set and configuration
|
|
files can define new values extending the defaults. For example builds are
|
|
given a release number. This is typically a single number at the end of the
|
|
package name. For RTEMS this is set in the top level build set configuration
|
|
file with:
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%define release 1
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Once defined if can be accessed in a build set or package configuration file
|
|
with:
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%{release}
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
The +sb-defaults+ command lists the defaults for your host. I will not include
|
|
the output of this command becauses of its size.
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
$ ../source-builder/sb-defaults
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Build Set Files
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Build set files lets you list the packages in the build set you are defining
|
|
and have a file extension of +.bset+. Build sets can define macro variables,
|
|
inline include other files and reference other build set or package
|
|
configuration files.
|
|
|
|
Defining macros is performed with the +%define+ macro:
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%define _target m32r-rtems4.11
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Inline including another file with the +%include+ macro continues processing
|
|
with the specified file returning to carry on from just after the include
|
|
point.
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%include rtems-4.11-base.bset
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
This includes the RTEMS 4.11 base set of defines and checks. The configuration
|
|
paths as defined by +_configdir+ are scanned. The file extension is optional.
|
|
|
|
You reference build set or package configuration files by placing the file name
|
|
on a single line.
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
tools/rtems-binutils-2.22-1
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
The +_configdir+ path is scanned for +tools/rtems-binutils-2.22-1.bset+ or
|
|
+tools/rtems-binutils-2.22-1.cfg+. Build set files take precedent over package
|
|
configuration files. If +tools/rtems-binutils-2.22-1+ is a build set a new
|
|
instance of the build set processor is created and if the file is a package
|
|
configuration the package is built with the package builder. This all happens
|
|
once the build set file has finished being scanned.
|
|
|
|
Configuration Control
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The RTEMS Souce Builder is designed to fit within most verification and
|
|
validation processes. All of the RTEMS Source Builder is source code. The
|
|
Python code is source and comes with a commercial friendly license. All
|
|
configuration data is text and can be read or parsed with standard text based
|
|
tools.
|
|
|
|
File naming provides configuration management. A specific version of a package
|
|
is captured in a specific set of configuration files. The top level
|
|
configuration file referenced in a _build set_ or passed to the +sb-builder+
|
|
command relates to a specific configuration of the package being built. For
|
|
example the RTEMS configuration file +rtems-gcc-4.7.2-newlib-2.0.0-1.cfg+
|
|
creates an RTEMS GCC and Newlib package where the GCC version is 4.7.2, the
|
|
Newlib version is 2.0.0, plus any RTEMS specific patches that related to this
|
|
version. The configuration defines the version numbers of the various parts
|
|
that make up this package:
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%define gcc_version 4.7.2
|
|
%define newlib_version 2.0.0
|
|
%define mpfr_version 3.0.1
|
|
%define mpc_version 0.8.2
|
|
%define gmp_version 5.0.5
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
The package build options, if there are any are also defined:
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%define with_threads 1
|
|
%define with_plugin 0
|
|
%define with_iconv 1
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
The generic configuration may provide defaults in case options are not
|
|
specified. The patches this specific version of the package requires can be
|
|
included:
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Patch0: gcc-4.7.2-rtems4.11-20121026.diff
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Finally including the GCC 4.7 configuration script:
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%include %{_configdir}/gcc-4.7-1.cfg
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
The +gcc-4.7-1.cfg+ file is a generic script to build a GCC 4.7 compiler with
|
|
Newlib. It is not specific to RTEMS. A bare no operating system tool set can be
|
|
built with this file.
|
|
|
|
The +-1+ part of the file names is a revision. The GCC 4.7 script maybe revised
|
|
to fix a problem and if this fix effects an existing script the file is copied
|
|
and given a +-2+ revision number. Any dependent scripts referencing the earlier
|
|
revision number will not be effected by the change. This locks down a specific
|
|
configuration over time.
|
|
|
|
Scripting
|
|
~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Configuration files specify how to build a package. Configuration files are
|
|
scripts and have a +.cfg+ file extension. The script format is based loosely on
|
|
the RPM spec file format how-ever the use and purpose in this tool does not
|
|
compare with the functionality and therefore the important features of the spec
|
|
format RPM needs and uses.
|
|
|
|
The script language is implemented in terms of macros. The built-in list is:
|
|
|
|
[horizontal]
|
|
+%{}+:: Macro expansion with conditional logic.
|
|
+%()+:: Shell expansion.
|
|
+%prep+:: The source preparation shell commands.
|
|
+%build+:: The build shell commands.
|
|
+%install+:: The package install shell commands.
|
|
+%clean+:: The package clean shell commands.
|
|
+%include+:: Inline include another configuration file.
|
|
+%name+:: The name of the package.
|
|
+%summary+:: A brief package description. Useful when reporting about a build.
|
|
+%release+:: The package release. A number that is the release as built by this tool.
|
|
+%version+:: The package's version string.
|
|
+%buildarch+:: The build architecture.
|
|
+%setup+:: Setup a source package.
|
|
+%source+:: Define a source code package. This macro has a number appended.
|
|
+%patch+:: Define a patch. This macro has a is number appended.
|
|
+%echo+:: Print the following string as a message.
|
|
+%warning+:: Print the following string as a warning and continue.
|
|
+%error+:: Print the following string as an error and exit.
|
|
+%define+:: Define a macro. Macros cannot be redefined, you must first undefine it.
|
|
+%undefine+:: Undefine a macro.
|
|
+%if+:: Start a conditional logic block that ends with a +%endif+.
|
|
+%ifn+:: Inverted start of a conditional logic block.
|
|
+%ifarch+:: Test the architecture against the following string.
|
|
+%ifnarch+:: Inverted test of the architecture
|
|
+%ifos+:: Test the host operating system.
|
|
+%else+:: Start the _else_ conditional logic block.
|
|
+%endfi+:: End the conditional logic block.
|
|
+%bconf_with+:: Test the build condition _with_ setting. This is the +--with-*+
|
|
command line option.
|
|
+%bconf_without+:: Test the build condition _without_ setting. This is the
|
|
+--without-*+ command line option.
|
|
|
|
Expanding
|
|
^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
A macro can be `%{string}` or the equivalent of `%string`. The following macro
|
|
expansions supported are:
|
|
|
|
`%{string}`;;
|
|
Expand the 'string' replacing the entire macro text with the text in the table
|
|
for the entry 'string . For example if 'var' is 'foo' then `${var}` would
|
|
become `foo`.
|
|
|
|
`%{expand: string}`;;
|
|
Expand the 'string' and then use it as a ``string'' to the macro expanding the
|
|
macro. For example if _foo_ is set to 'bar' and 'bar' is set to 'foovar' then
|
|
`%{expand:foo}` would result in `foobar`. Shell expansion can also be used.
|
|
|
|
`%{with string}`;;
|
|
Expand the macro to '1' if the macro `with_`'string' is defined else expand to
|
|
_0_. Macros with the name `with_`'string' can be define with command line
|
|
arguments to the RTEMS Source Builder commands.
|
|
|
|
`%{defined string}`;;
|
|
Expand the macro to '1' if a macro of name 'string' is defined else expand to '0'.
|
|
|
|
`%{?string: expression}`;;
|
|
Expand the macro to 'expression' if a macro of name 'string' is defined else expand to `%{nil}`.
|
|
|
|
`%{!?string: expression}`;;
|
|
Expand the macro to 'expression' if a macro of name 'string' is not defined. If
|
|
the macro is define expand to `%{nil}`.
|
|
|
|
`%(expression)`;;
|
|
Expand the macro to the result of running the 'expression' in a host shell. It
|
|
is assumed this is a Unix type shell. For example `%(whoami)` will return your
|
|
user name and `%(date)` will return the current date string.
|
|
|
|
%prep
|
|
^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%prep+ macro starts a block that continues until the next block macro. The
|
|
_prep_ or preparation block defines the setup of the package's source and is a
|
|
mix of RTEMS Source Builder macros and shell scripting. The sequence is
|
|
typically +%setup+ macros for source, +%patch+ macros to patch the source
|
|
mixed with some shell commands to correct any source issues. A +%prep+ section
|
|
starts with a +%setup+ command. This creates the package source top level
|
|
directory then is followed by the first source file.
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
<1> <2>
|
|
%setup -q -c -T -n %{name}-%{version}
|
|
%setup -q -T -D -n %{name}-%{version} -a0
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
<1> The package's name.
|
|
<2> The version of the package.
|
|
|
|
The source for a package is declared with the +%source*+ macro where +*+ is
|
|
a number. For example +%source0+ is the source 0 tar file and is defined with
|
|
something similar to this:
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Source0: http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gdb/gdb-%{gdb_version}.tar.bz2
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
This URL is the primary location of the GNU GCC source code and the RTEMS
|
|
Source Builder can download the file from this location and by inspecting the
|
|
file extension use +bzip2+ decompression. When the +%prep+ section is processed
|
|
a check of the local +source+ directory is made to see if the file has already
|
|
been downloaded. If not found in the source cache directory the package is
|
|
downloaded from the URL. You can append other base URLs via the command line
|
|
option +--url+. This option accepts a comma delimited list of sites to try.
|
|
|
|
You can combine the source macro with conditional logic to implement a default
|
|
that can be over-riden in the top level files. This lets you reuse a generic
|
|
build script with different sources. This happens if you have a private source
|
|
package with local modifications. The following example is taken from the
|
|
+gcc-4.8-1.cfg+ build script.
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%ifn %{defined Source0}
|
|
Source0: ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gcc/gcc-%{gcc_version}/gcc-%{gcc_version}.tar.bz2
|
|
VersionContro0: git clone git://gcc.gnu.org/git/gcc.git <1>
|
|
%endif
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
<1> The version control macro is currently not implemented.
|
|
|
|
You could optionally have a few source files that make up the package. For
|
|
example GNU's GCC was a few tar files for a while and it is now a single tar
|
|
file. Support for multiple source files can be conditionally implemented with
|
|
the following scripting:
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%{?source1:%setup -q -T -D -n %{name}-%{version} -a1}
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
The +source1+ macro value is checked and if present the command string after
|
|
the +:+ is executed. It is common to see a number of these present allowing top
|
|
level configuration files including a base configuration the ability to define
|
|
a number of source packages.
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%{?source1:%setup -q -T -D -n %{name}-%{version} -a1}
|
|
%{?source2:%setup -q -T -D -n %{name}-%{version} -a2}
|
|
%{?source3:%setup -q -T -D -n %{name}-%{version} -a3}
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Patching also occurs during the preparation stage. Patches are handled in a
|
|
similar way to the source packages. Most patches are based around the top of
|
|
the source tree. This is an example of the patch scripting for the GCC 4.8
|
|
series of compilers:
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
cd gcc-%{gcc_version} <1>
|
|
%{?patch0:%patch0 -p1} <2>
|
|
%{?patch1:%patch1 -p1}
|
|
%{?patch2:%patch2 -p1}
|
|
%{?patch3:%patch3 -p1}
|
|
%{?patch4:%patch4 -p1}
|
|
%{?patch5:%patch5 -p1}
|
|
%{?patch6:%patch6 -p1}
|
|
%{?patch7:%patch7 -p1}
|
|
%{?patch8:%patch8 -p1}
|
|
%{?patch9:%patch9 -p1}
|
|
cd .. <3>
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
<1> Change from the top of the source tree into the package being patched's top
|
|
directory.
|
|
<2> The conditional macro expansion checks if +%patch0+ is defined and if
|
|
defined issues the +%patch0" macro giving +-p1+ to the patch command.
|
|
<3> Return back to the top of the source tree.
|
|
|
|
%build
|
|
^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%build+ macro starts a block that continues until the next block
|
|
macro. The build block is a series of shell commands that execute to build the
|
|
package. It assumes all source code has been unpacked, patch and adjusted so
|
|
the build will succeed.
|
|
|
|
The following is an example take from the GutHub STLink project:
|
|
|
|
NOTE: STLink is a JTAG debugging device for the ST ARM family of processors.
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%build
|
|
export PATH="%{_bindir}:${PATH}" <1>
|
|
|
|
cd texane-stlink-%{stlink_version} <2>
|
|
|
|
./autogen.sh <3>
|
|
|
|
%if "%{_build}" != "%{_host}"
|
|
CFLAGS_FOR_BUILD="-g -O2 -Wall" \ <4>
|
|
%endif
|
|
CPPFLAGS="-I $SB_TMPPREFIX/include/libusb-1.0" \ <5>
|
|
CFLAGS="$SB_OPT_FLAGS" \
|
|
LDFLAGS="-L $SB_TMPPREFIX/lib" \
|
|
./configure \ <6>
|
|
--build=%{_build} --host=%{_host} \
|
|
--verbose \
|
|
--prefix=%{_prefix} --bindir=%{_bindir} \
|
|
--exec-prefix=%{_exec_prefix} \
|
|
--includedir=%{_includedir} --libdir=%{_libdir} \
|
|
--mandir=%{_mandir} --infodir=%{_infodir}
|
|
|
|
%{__make} %{?_smp_mflags} all <7>
|
|
|
|
cd ..
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
<1> Setup the PATH environment variable. This is not always needed.
|
|
<2> This package builds in the source tree so enter it.
|
|
<3> The package is actually checked directly out from the github project and so
|
|
it needs its autoconf and automake files generated.
|
|
<4> Flags for a cross-compiled build.
|
|
<5> Various settings passed to configure to customise the build. In this
|
|
example an include path is being set to the install point of _libusb_. This
|
|
package requires _libusb_ is built before it.
|
|
<6> The +configure+ command. The RTEMS Source Builder provides all the needed
|
|
paths as macro variables. You just need to provide them to +configure+.
|
|
<7> Running make. Do not use +make+ directly, use the RTEMS Source Builder's
|
|
defined value. This value is specific to the host. A large number of
|
|
packages need GNU make and on BSD systems this is +gmake+. You can
|
|
optionally add the SMP flags if the packages build system can handle
|
|
parallel building with multiple jobs. The +_smp_mflags+ value is
|
|
automatically setup for SMP hosts to match the number of cores the host has.
|
|
|
|
%install
|
|
^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%install+ macro starts a block that continues until the next block
|
|
macro. The install block is a series of shell commands that execute to install
|
|
the package. You can assume the package has build correctly when this block
|
|
starts executing.
|
|
|
|
Never install the package to the actual _prefix_ the package was built
|
|
with. Always install to the RTEMS Source Builder's temporary path defined in
|
|
the macro variable +\__tmpdir+. The RTEMS Source Builder sets up a shell
|
|
environment variable called +SB_BUILD_ROOT+ as the standard install point. Most
|
|
packages support adding +DESTDIR=+ to the _make install_ command.
|
|
|
|
Looking at the same example as in <<_build, %build>>:
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%install
|
|
export PATH="%{_bindir}:${PATH}" <1>
|
|
rm -rf $SB_BUILD_ROOT <2>
|
|
|
|
cd texane-stlink-%{stlink_version} <3>
|
|
%{__make} DESTDIR=$SB_BUILD_ROOT install <4>
|
|
|
|
cd ..
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
<1> Setup the PATH environment variable. This is not always needed.
|
|
<2> Clean any installed files. This make sure the install is just what
|
|
the package installs and not any left over files from a broken build or
|
|
install.
|
|
<3> Enter the build directory. In this example it just happens to be the source
|
|
directory.
|
|
<4> Run +make install+ to install the package overriding the +DESTDIR+ make
|
|
variable.
|
|
|
|
%clean
|
|
^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%clean+ macro starts a block that continues until the next block
|
|
macro. The clean block is a series of shell commands that execute to clean up
|
|
after a package has been built and install. This macro is currenly not been
|
|
used because the RTEMS Source Builder automatically cleans up.
|
|
|
|
%include
|
|
^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%include+ macro inline includes the specific file. The +\__confdir+
|
|
path is searched. Any relative path component of the include file is appended
|
|
to each part of the +\__configdir+. Adding an extension is optional as files
|
|
with +.bset+ and +.cfg+ are automatically searched for.
|
|
|
|
Inline including means the file is processed as part of the configuration at
|
|
the point it is included. Parsing continues from the next line in the
|
|
configuration file that contains the +%include+ macro.
|
|
|
|
Including files allow a kind of configuration file reuse. The outer
|
|
configuration files provide specific information such as package version
|
|
numbers and patches and then include a generic configuration script which
|
|
builds the package.
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%include %{_configdir}/gcc-4.7-1.cfg
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
%name
|
|
^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The name of the package being built. The name typically contains the components
|
|
of the package and their version number plus a revision number. For the GCC
|
|
with Newlib configuration the name is typically:
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Name: %{_target}-gcc-%{gcc_version}-newlib-%{newlib_version}-%{release}
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
%summary
|
|
^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%summary+ is a brief description of the package. It is useful when
|
|
reporting. This information is not capture in the package anywhere. For the GCC
|
|
with Newlib configuration the summary is typically:
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Summary: GCC v%{gcc_version} and Newlib v%{newlib_version} for target %{_target} on host %{_host}
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
%release
|
|
^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%release+ is packaging number that allows revisions of a package to happen
|
|
where none package versions change. This value typically increases when the
|
|
configuration building the package changes.
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%define release 1
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
%version
|
|
^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%version% macro sets the version the package. If the package is a single
|
|
component it tracks that component's version number. For example in the
|
|
_libusb_ configuration the +%version+ is the same as +%libusb_version+,
|
|
how-ever in a GCC with Newlib configuration there is no single version
|
|
number. In this case the GCC version is used.
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Version: %{gcc_version}
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
%buildarch
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%buildarch+ macro is set to the architecture the package contains. This is
|
|
currently not used in the RTEMS Source Builder and may go away. This macro is
|
|
more important in a real packaging system where the package could end up on the
|
|
wrong architecture.
|
|
|
|
%setup
|
|
^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%setup+ macro sets up the source code tree and is used in the +%prep+
|
|
section of the script. The options are:
|
|
|
|
[horizontal]
|
|
*Switch*:: *Description*
|
|
+-n+:: The -n option is used to set the name of the software's build
|
|
directory. This is necessary only when the source archive unpacks into a
|
|
directory named other than +<name>-<version>+.
|
|
+-c+:: The -c option is used to direct %setup to create the top-level build
|
|
directory before unpacking the sources.
|
|
+-D+:: The -D option is used to direct %setup to not delete the build directory
|
|
prior to unpacking the sources. This option is used when more than one source
|
|
archive is to be unpacked into the build directory, normally with the +-b+ or
|
|
+-a+ options.
|
|
+-T+:: The -T option is used to direct %setup to not perform the default
|
|
unpacking of the source archive specified by the first Source: macro. It is used
|
|
with the +-a+ or +-b+ options.
|
|
+-b <n>+:: The -b option is used to direct %setup to unpack the source archive
|
|
specified on the nth Source: macro line before changing directory into the build
|
|
directory.
|
|
+-a <n>+:: The -a option is used to direct %setup to unpack the source archive
|
|
specified on the nth Source: macro line after changing directory into the build
|
|
directory.
|
|
|
|
%source
|
|
^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%source+ macro is numbered and defines a source tar file used in the
|
|
package. The +%setup+ macro references the packages defined here. A macro is
|
|
defined as:
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Source0: ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gcc/gcc-%{gcc_version}/gcc-%{gcc_version}.tar.bz2
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
The setup script is:
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%setup -q -T -D -n %{name}-%{version} -a0
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
The +-a0+ means use +%source0+.
|
|
|
|
%patch
|
|
^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%patch+ macro is numbered and can define a patch and in the +%prep+
|
|
section applies the patch. To define a patch append a +:+ followed by the patch
|
|
filename:
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Patch0: gcc-4.7.2-rtems4.11-20121026.diff
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
The +__patchdir+ path is search.
|
|
|
|
Placing +%patch+ in the +%prep+ section will apply it with any trailing options
|
|
passed to the +patch+ command. This allows the +-p+ option to be passed to
|
|
strip any leading path components from the patch contents.
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%patch0 -p1
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
You will typically see the patch conditionally used as:
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%{patch0:%patch0 -p1}
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
In this case the patch will only be applied if it is defined.
|
|
|
|
%echo
|
|
^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%echo+ macro outputs the following string to stdout. This can also be used
|
|
as `%{echo: message}`.
|
|
|
|
%warning
|
|
^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%warning+ macro outputs the following string as a warning. This can also
|
|
be used as `%{warning: message}`.
|
|
|
|
%error
|
|
^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%error+ macro outputs the follow string as an error and exits the RTEMS
|
|
Source Builder. This can also be used as `%{error: message}`.
|
|
|
|
%define
|
|
^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%define+ macro defines a new macro. If the macro being defined already
|
|
exists a warning is raised. If you value is given it is assumed to be 1.
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%define foo bar
|
|
%define one_plus_one 2
|
|
%define one <1>
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
<1> The macro _one_ is set to 1.
|
|
|
|
%undefine
|
|
^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%undefine+ macro removes a macro if it exists. Any further references to
|
|
it will result in an undefine macro error.
|
|
|
|
%if
|
|
^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%if+ macro starts a conditional logic block that can optionally have a
|
|
_else_ section. A test follows this macro and can have the following operators:
|
|
|
|
[horizontal]
|
|
*Operator*:: *Description*
|
|
+%{}+:: Check the macro is set or _true_, ie non-zero.
|
|
+
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%if ${foo}
|
|
%warning The test passes, must not be empty or is non-zero
|
|
%else
|
|
%error The test fails, must be empty or zero
|
|
%endif
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
+!+:: The _not_ operator inverts the test of the macro.
|
|
+
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%if ! ${foo}
|
|
%warning The test passes, must be empty or zero
|
|
%else
|
|
%error The test fails, must not be empty or is non-zero
|
|
%endif
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
+==+:: The left hand size must equal the right hand side. For example:
|
|
+
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%define one 1
|
|
%if ${one} == 1
|
|
%warning The test passes
|
|
%else
|
|
%error The test fails
|
|
%endif
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
+
|
|
You can also check to see if a macro is empty:
|
|
+
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%if ${nothing} == %{nil}
|
|
%warning The test passes
|
|
%else
|
|
%error The test fails
|
|
%endif
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
+!=+:: The left hand size does not equal the right hand side. For example:
|
|
+
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%define one 1
|
|
%if ${one} != 2
|
|
%warning The test passes
|
|
%else
|
|
%error The test fails
|
|
%endif
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
+
|
|
You can also check to see if something is set:
|
|
+
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%if ${something} != %{nil}
|
|
%warning The test passes
|
|
%else
|
|
%error The test fails
|
|
%endif
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
+>+:: The left hand side is numerically greater than the right hand side.
|
|
+>=+:: The left hand side is numerically greater than or equal to the right
|
|
hand side.
|
|
+<+:: The left hand side is numerically less than the right hand side.
|
|
+\<=+:: The left hand side is numerically less than or equal to the right hand
|
|
side.
|
|
|
|
%ifn
|
|
^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%ifn+ macro inverts the normal +%if+ logic. It avoids needing to provide
|
|
empty _if_ blocks followed by _else_ blocks. It is useful when checking if a
|
|
macro is defined:
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
%ifn %{defined foo}
|
|
%define foo bar
|
|
%endif
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
%ifarch
|
|
^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%ifarch+ is a short cut for "+%if %{\_arch} == i386+". Currently not used.
|
|
|
|
%ifnarch
|
|
^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%ifnarch+ is a short cut for "+%if %{\_arch} != i386+". Currently not
|
|
used.
|
|
|
|
%ifos
|
|
^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%ifos+ is a short cut for "+%if %{\_os} != mingw32+". It allows
|
|
conditional support for various operating system differences when building
|
|
packages.
|
|
|
|
%else
|
|
^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%else+ macro starts the conditional _else_ block.
|
|
|
|
%endfi
|
|
^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%endif+ macro ends a conditional logic block.
|
|
|
|
%bconf_with
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%bconf_with+ macro provides a way to test if the user has passed a
|
|
specific option on the command line with the +--with-<label>+ option. This
|
|
option is only available with the +sb-builder+ command.
|
|
|
|
%bconf_without
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The +%bconf_without+ macro provides a way to test if the user has passed a
|
|
specific option on the command line with the +--without-<label>+ option. This
|
|
option is only available with the +sb-builder+ command.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Project Sets
|
|
------------
|
|
|
|
The RTEMS Source Builder supports project configurations. Project
|
|
configurations can be public or private and can be contained in the RTEMS
|
|
Source Builder project if suitable, other projects they use the RTEM Source
|
|
Builder or privately on your local file system.
|
|
|
|
The configuration file loader searches the macro +_configdir+ and by default
|
|
this is set to +%{\_topdir}/config:%{\_sbdir}/config+ where +_topdir+ is the
|
|
your current working direct, in other words the directory you invoke the RTEMS
|
|
Source Builder command in, and +_sbdir+ is the directory where the RTEMS Source
|
|
Builder command resides. Therefore the +config+ directory under each of these
|
|
is searched so all you need to do is create a +config+ in your project and add
|
|
your configuration files. They do not need to be under the RTEMS Source Builder
|
|
source tree. Public projects are included in the main RTEMS Source Builder such
|
|
as RTEMS.
|
|
|
|
You can also add your own +patches+ directory next to your +config+ directory
|
|
as the +%patch+ command searches the +_patchdir+ macro variable and it is
|
|
by default set to +%{\_topdir}/patches:%{\_sbdir}/patches+.
|
|
|
|
The +source-builder/config+ directory provides generic scripts for building
|
|
various tools. You can specialise these in your private configurations to make
|
|
use of them. If you add new generic configurations please contribute them back
|
|
to the project
|
|
|
|
RTEMS Configurations
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The RTEMS Configurations are grouped by RTEMS version. In RTEMS the tools are
|
|
specific to a specific version because of variations between Newlib and
|
|
RTEMS. Restructuring in RTEMS and Newlib sometimes moves _libc_ functionality
|
|
between them and this makes existing tool incompatible with RTEMS.
|
|
|
|
RTEMS allows architectures to have different tool versions and patches. The
|
|
large number of architectures RTEMS supports can make it difficult to get a
|
|
common stable version of all the packages. An architecture may require a recent
|
|
GCC because an existing bug has been fixed, how-ever the more recent version
|
|
may have a bug in other architecture. Architecture specific patches should be
|
|
limited to the architecture it relates to. The patch may fix a problem on the
|
|
effect architecture how-ever it could introduce a problem in another
|
|
architecture. Limit exposure limits any possible crosstalk between
|
|
architectures.
|
|
|
|
RTEMS supports _stable_ and _unstable_ configuration of tools. The stable build
|
|
sets are referenced as +<version>/rtems-<arch>+ and the unstable build sets are
|
|
references as +<version>/unstable/rtems-<arch>+.
|
|
|
|
Commands
|
|
--------
|
|
|
|
Checker (sb-check)
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
This commands checks your system is set up correctly. Most options are ignored.
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
$ ../source-builder/sb-check --help
|
|
sb-check: [options] [args]
|
|
RTEMS Source Builder, an RTEMS Tools Project (c) 2012-2013 Chris Johns
|
|
Options and arguments:
|
|
--force : Create directories that are not present
|
|
--trace : Trace the execution (not current used)
|
|
--dry-run : Do everything but actually run the build
|
|
--warn-all : Generate warnings
|
|
--no-clean : Do not clean up the build tree
|
|
--no-smp : Run with 1 job and not as many as CPUs
|
|
--rebuild : Rebuild (not used)
|
|
--host : Set the host triplet
|
|
--build : Set the build triplet
|
|
--target : Set the target triplet
|
|
--prefix path : Tools build prefix, ie where they are installed
|
|
--prefixbase path :
|
|
--topdir path : Top of the build tree, default is $PWD
|
|
--configdir path : Path to the configuration directory, default: ./config
|
|
--builddir path : Path to the build directory, default: ./build
|
|
--sourcedir path : Path to the source directory, default: ./source
|
|
--tmppath path : Path to the temp directory, default: ./tmp
|
|
--log file : Log file where all build out is written too
|
|
--url url : URL to look for source
|
|
--targetcflags flags : List of C flags for the target code
|
|
--targetcxxflags flags : List of C++ flags for the target code
|
|
--libstdcxxflags flags : List of C++ flags to build the target libstdc++ code
|
|
--with-<label> : Add the --with-<label> to the build
|
|
--without-<label> : Add the --without-<label> to the build
|
|
$ ../source-builder/sb-check
|
|
RTEMS Source Builder environment is ok
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Defaults (sb-defaults)
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
This commands outputs and the default macros for your when given no
|
|
arguments. Most options are ignored.
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
$ ../source-builder/sb-defaults --help
|
|
sb-defaults: [options] [args]
|
|
RTEMS Source Builder, an RTEMS Tools Project (c) 2012-2013 Chris Johns
|
|
Options and arguments:
|
|
--force : Force the build to proceed
|
|
--trace : Trace the execution (not current used)
|
|
--dry-run : Do everything but actually run the build
|
|
--warn-all : Generate warnings
|
|
--no-clean : Do not clean up the build tree
|
|
--no-smp : Run with 1 job and not as many as CPUs
|
|
--rebuild : Rebuild (not used)
|
|
--host : Set the host triplet
|
|
--build : Set the build triplet
|
|
--target : Set the target triplet
|
|
--prefix path : Tools build prefix, ie where they are installed
|
|
--prefixbase path :
|
|
--topdir path : Top of the build tree, default is $PWD
|
|
--configdir path : Path to the configuration directory, default: ./config
|
|
--builddir path : Path to the build directory, default: ./build
|
|
--sourcedir path : Path to the source directory, default: ./source
|
|
--tmppath path : Path to the temp directory, default: ./tmp
|
|
--log file : Log file where all build out is written too
|
|
--url url : URL to look for source
|
|
--targetcflags flags : List of C flags for the target code
|
|
--targetcxxflags flags : List of C++ flags for the target code
|
|
--libstdcxxflags flags : List of C++ flags to build the target libstdc++ code
|
|
--with-<label> : Add the --with-<label> to the build
|
|
--without-<label> : Add the --without-<label> to the build
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Set Builder (sb-set-builder)
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
This command builds a set.
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
$ ../source-builder/sb-set-builder --help
|
|
sb-set-builder: [options] [args]
|
|
RTEMS Source Builder, an RTEMS Tools Project (c) 2012-2013 Chris Johns
|
|
Options and arguments:
|
|
--force : Force the build to proceed
|
|
--trace : Trace the execution (not current used)
|
|
--dry-run : Do everything but actually run the build
|
|
--warn-all : Generate warnings
|
|
--no-clean : Do not clean up the build tree
|
|
--no-smp : Run with 1 job and not as many as CPUs
|
|
--rebuild : Rebuild (not used)
|
|
--host : Set the host triplet
|
|
--build : Set the build triplet
|
|
--target : Set the target triplet
|
|
--prefix path : Tools build prefix, ie where they are installed
|
|
--prefixbase path :
|
|
--topdir path : Top of the build tree, default is $PWD
|
|
--configdir path : Path to the configuration directory, default: ./config
|
|
--builddir path : Path to the build directory, default: ./build
|
|
--sourcedir path : Path to the source directory, default: ./source
|
|
--tmppath path : Path to the temp directory, default: ./tmp
|
|
--log file : Log file where all build out is written too
|
|
--url url : URL to look for source
|
|
--targetcflags flags : List of C flags for the target code
|
|
--targetcxxflags flags : List of C++ flags for the target code
|
|
--libstdcxxflags flags : List of C++ flags to build the target libstdc++ code
|
|
--with-<label> : Add the --with-<label> to the build
|
|
--without-<label> : Add the --without-<label> to the build
|
|
--list-bsets : List available build sets
|
|
--keep-going : Do not stop on error.
|
|
--no-install : Do not install the packages to the prefix.
|
|
--bset-tar-file : Create a build set tar file
|
|
--list-configs : List available configurations
|
|
--pkg-tar-files : Create package tar files
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
.Arguments
|
|
The +[args]+ are a list build sets to build.
|
|
|
|
.Options
|
|
+--force+;;
|
|
Force the build to proceed even if the host check fails. Typically this happens
|
|
if executable files are found in the path at a different location to the host
|
|
defaults.
|
|
+--trace+;;
|
|
Trace enable printing of debug information to stdout. It is really only of use
|
|
to RTEMS Source Builder's developers.
|
|
+--dry-run+;;
|
|
Do everything but actually run the build commands. This is useful when checking
|
|
a new configuration parses cleanly.
|
|
+--warn-all+;;
|
|
Generate warnings.
|
|
+--no-clean+;;
|
|
Do not clean up the build tree during the cleaning phase of the build. This
|
|
leaves the source and the build output on disk so you can make changes, or
|
|
amend or generate new patches. It also allows you to review configure type
|
|
output such as +config.log+.
|
|
+--no-smp+;;
|
|
Run +make+ with 1 job and not as many as there are cores. This option can help
|
|
isolate parallel make type bugs or make the log file output
|
|
sequential. Parallel jobs can make the output confusing.
|
|
+--host+;;
|
|
Set the host triplet value. Becareful with this option.
|
|
+--build+;;
|
|
Set the build triplet. Becareful with this option.
|
|
+--target+;;
|
|
Set the target triplet. Becareful with this option. This is useful if you have
|
|
a generic configuration script that can work for a range of architectures.
|
|
+--prefix path+;;
|
|
Tools build prefix, ie where they are installed.
|
|
+--prefixbase path+;;
|
|
The prefix base is appended to the build root path.
|
|
+--topdir path+;;
|
|
Top of the build tree, that is the current directory you are in.
|
|
+--configdir path+;;
|
|
Path to the configuration directory. This overrides the built in defaults.
|
|
+--builddir path+;;
|
|
Path to the build directory. This overrides the default of +build+.
|
|
+--sourcedir path+;;
|
|
Path to the source directory. This overrides the default of +source+.
|
|
+--tmppath path+;;
|
|
Path to the temporary directory. This overrides the default of +tmp+.
|
|
+--log file+;;
|
|
Log all the output from the build process. The output is directed to +stdout+
|
|
if no log file is provided.
|
|
+--url url+;;
|
|
URL to look for source when downloading. This is can be comma separate list.
|
|
+--targetcflags flags+;;
|
|
List of C flags for the target code. This allows for specific local
|
|
customisation when testing new variations.
|
|
+--targetcxxflags flags+;;
|
|
List of C++ flags for the target code. This allows for specific local
|
|
customisation when testing new variations.
|
|
+--libstdcxxflags flags+;;
|
|
List of C\++ flags to build the target libstdc++ code. This allows for specific
|
|
local customisation when testing new variations.
|
|
+--with-<label>+;;
|
|
Add the --with-<label> to the build. This can be tested for in a script with
|
|
the +%bconf_with+ macro.
|
|
+--without-<label>+;;
|
|
Add the --without-<label> to the build. This can be tested for in a script with
|
|
the +%bconf_without+ macro.
|
|
+--list-bsets+;;
|
|
List available build sets.
|
|
+--list-configs+;;
|
|
List available configurations.
|
|
+--keep-going+;;
|
|
Do not stop on error. This is useful if your build sets performs a large number
|
|
of testing related builds and there are errors.
|
|
+--no-install+;;
|
|
Do not install the packages to the prefix. Use this if you are only after the
|
|
tar files.
|
|
+--bset-tar-file+;;
|
|
Create a build set tar file. This is a single tar file of all the packages in
|
|
the build set.
|
|
+--pkg-tar-files+;;
|
|
Create package tar files. A tar file will be created for each package built in
|
|
a build set.
|
|
|
|
Set Builder (sb-builder)
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
This command builds a configuration as described in a configuration
|
|
file. Configuration files have the extension of +.cfg+.
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
$ ./source-builder/sb-builder --help
|
|
sb-builder: [options] [args]
|
|
RTEMS Source Builder, an RTEMS Tools Project (c) 2012 Chris Johns
|
|
Options and arguments:
|
|
--force : Create directories that are not present
|
|
--trace : Trace the execution (not current used)
|
|
--dry-run : Do everything but actually run the build
|
|
--warn-all : Generate warnings
|
|
--no-clean : Do not clean up the build tree
|
|
--no-smp : Run with 1 job and not as many as CPUs
|
|
--rebuild : Rebuild (not used)
|
|
--host : Set the host triplet
|
|
--build : Set the build triplet
|
|
--target : Set the target triplet
|
|
--prefix path : Tools build prefix, ie where they are installed
|
|
--prefixbase path :
|
|
--topdir path : Top of the build tree, default is $PWD
|
|
--configdir path : Path to the configuration directory, default: ./config
|
|
--builddir path : Path to the build directory, default: ./build
|
|
--sourcedir path : Path to the source directory, default: ./source
|
|
--tmppath path : Path to the temp directory, default: ./tmp
|
|
--log file : Log file where all build out is written too
|
|
--url url : URL to look for source
|
|
--targetcflags flags : List of C flags for the target code
|
|
--targetcxxflags flags : List of C++ flags for the target code
|
|
--libstdcxxflags flags : List of C++ flags to build the target libstdc++ code
|
|
--with-<label> : Add the --with-<label> to the build
|
|
--without-<label> : Add the --without-<label> to the build
|
|
--list-configs : List available configurations
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Host Setups
|
|
-----------
|
|
|
|
MacOS X
|
|
~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The RTEMS Source Builder has been tested on Mountain Lion. You will need to
|
|
install the Xcode app using the _App Store_ tool, run Xcode and install the
|
|
Developers Tools package within Xcode.
|
|
|
|
Ubuntu
|
|
~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The latest testing was with 12.10. A minimal installation was used and the
|
|
following packages installed.
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
$ sudo apt-get build-dep binutils gcc g++ gdb unzip git
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Raspbian
|
|
~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The is the Debian distribution for the Raspberry Pi. The following packages are
|
|
required.
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
$ sudo apt-get install autoconf automake bison flex binutils gcc g++ gdb \
|
|
texinfo unzip ncurses-dev python-dev git
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
It is recommended you get Model B of the Pi with 512M of memory and to mount a
|
|
remote disk over the network. The tools can be build with a prefix under your
|
|
home directory as recommended and end up on the SD card.
|
|
|
|
CentOS 6
|
|
~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The following packages are required on a minimal CentOS 6.3 installation:
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
# yum install autoconf automake binutils gcc gcc-c++ gdb make patch \
|
|
bison flex xz unzip ncurses-devel texinfo zlib-devel python-devel git
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
The minimal CentOS distribution is a specific DVD that installs a minimal
|
|
system. If you use a full system some of these packages may have been
|
|
installed.
|
|
|
|
History
|
|
-------
|
|
|
|
The RTEMS Source Builder is a stand alone tool based on another tool called the
|
|
'SpecBuilder'. The SpecBuilder was written for the RTEMS project to give me a
|
|
way to build tools on hosts that did not support RPMs. At the time the RTEMS
|
|
tools maintainer only used spec files to create various packages. This meant I
|
|
had either spec files, RPM files or SRPM files. The RPM and SPRM files where
|
|
useless because you needed an 'rpm' type tool to extract and manage them. There
|
|
are versions of 'rpm' for a number of non-RPM hosts how-ever these proved to be
|
|
in various broken states and random-ally maintained. The solution I settled on
|
|
was to use spec files so I wrote a Python based tool that parsed the spec file
|
|
format and allowed me to create a shell script I could run to build the
|
|
package. This approach proved successful and I was able to track the RPM
|
|
version of the RTEMS tools on a non-RPM host over a number of years. How-ever
|
|
the SpecBuilder tool did not help me build tools or other packages not related
|
|
to the RTEMS project where there was no spec file I could use so I needed
|
|
another tool. Rather than start again I decided to take the parsing code for
|
|
the spec file format and build a new tool called the RTEMS Source Builder.
|