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89 lines
4.7 KiB
TeX
89 lines
4.7 KiB
TeX
% Iris: micro-kernel for a capability-based operating system.
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% cross-compiler.tex: Cross-compiler building instructions.
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% Copyright 2009 Bas Wijnen <wijnen@debian.org>
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%
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% This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
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% it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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% the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
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% (at your option) any later version.
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%
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% This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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% but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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% MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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% GNU General Public License for more details.
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%
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% You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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% along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
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\documentclass{shevek}
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\begin{document}
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\title{Setting up a cross-compiler}
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\author{Bas Wijnen}
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\date{\today}
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\maketitle
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\begin{abstract}
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This report details how I have set up a cross-compiler. Since it was not
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trivial, I think it may be useful for others. After reading this, you should
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be able to set up a cross-compiler yourself. It is assumed that the host computer, where the compiler should be running, is a Debian machine.
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\end{abstract}
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\tableofcontents
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\section{Introduction}
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A cross-compiler is a compiler which builds code that should be run on a different platform. This can be useful for building code for embedded devices which are incapable of running a compiler themselves, or where it is not practical to do so. If you are reading this, you probably need one. I'm sure you know why you do. Possibly you have also found out that it is not trivial to set it up. This is a step by step report of how I set up a cross-compiler for mipsel. All problems I encountered (and solved) are explained.
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A cross-compiler needs cross-binutils and some system libraries. I shall first describe how to install these.
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\section{Binutils}
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To create a cross-compiler, cross-binutils are needed. They must be built from
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source. I did \verb+apt-get source binutils+ to get the sources, then I cd'd into the source directory and did
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\verb+TARGET=mipsel-linux-gnu fakeroot debian/rules binary-cross+ to build and
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in the original directory \verb+dpkg -i *.deb+ (as root) to install them.
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\section{System libraries}
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libc6-dev and some other libraries must be installed in cross versions.
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\textit{dpkg-cross} is used to build and install them. However, that doesn't
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resolve dependencies, and can't download files from a mirror. So that's a
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problem. Furthermore, once the compiler is working, other cross-libraries may
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be required for the actual cross-building. Then again, the dependencies must
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be resolved. It is not practical to do that by hand.
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For this purpose, I wrote a script which resolves dependencies of a packages,
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filters them to remove the unneeded ones, downloads them and installs them with
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dpkg-cross. This is very hackish: it uses human-readable output of programs
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like apt-cache to do its work. This output can change its format, I suppose.
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But so far I didn't find any other way, so it'll have to do. At least it works
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for me. Note that the user running the script must be allowed to run
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dpkg-cross as root using sudo. This is achieved (for anyone, not just that
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user) by adding to /etc/sudoers \verb+ALL ALL=NOPASSWD:/usr/bin/dpkg-cross+.
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In /etc/dpkg-cross/cross-compile, you will need to add your gcc version to the
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keepdeps line, in my case \verb+gcc-4.2-base+. This didn't seem to be possible
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with command line options (so the comment above that block probably refers only
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to the removedeps line).
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When this is done, cross-libraries can be installed using the script. I needed
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\verb+./cross-install libc6-dev libc6-dev-mips64 libc6-dev-mipsn32+. This
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results in packages with those names and \verb+-mipsel-cross+ appended.
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\section{Gcc}
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For gcc, I did \verb+apt-get source gcc-4.2+ (4.3 didn't work), followed by
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\verb+export GCC_TARGET=mipsel+ and \verb+export DEB_CROSS_INDEPENDENT=yes+.
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Then in the source directory \verb+debian/rules control+, and finally
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\verb+dpkg-buildpackage -uc -us -b -rfakeroot+ and of course
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\verb+dpkg --install *.deb+ in the original directory. This failed for
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gobjc++-4.2, which I didn't need anyway, so I removed it again.
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That results in a cross compiler which can be called using
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\verb+mipsel-linux-gnu-gcc+.
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\section{Conclusion}
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Setting up a cross-compiler is much harder than it should be. Especially
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sorting out the dependencies and downloading libraries is very hard. It would
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be good if this would be made easier. My cross-install script does this, but
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in a fragile and hackish way. However, it does result in a usable
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cross-building environment, where new libraries for cross-building can be
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easily installed.
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\end{document}
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