General :: How To Cross-compile Program For Openwrt Router
Nov 15, 2010
I want to compile a program with the source I already have but I have to add an option. When I run the command ./autogen.sh the terminal returns aclocal not found. Is it a package or something i have to install?
I wanted to compile a program for my openwrt router from source i already have but to add an option. I ran ./autogen.sh in the terminal but it returned aclocal not found.
I want to cross compile gtk program from linux to arm. I am using ubuntu10.04. How can I cross compile it for arm. I have tried this but this is my output: root@habesh-laptop:~/habesh/gtk# /root/CodeSourcery/Sourcery_G++_Lite/bin/arm-none-linux-gnueabi-gcc -o trail1 base1.c 'pkg-config --cflags --libs gtk+-2.0' cc1: warning: include location "/usr/include/gtk-2.0" is unsafe for cross-compilation cc1: warning: include location "/usr/include/atk-1.0" is unsafe for cross-compilation cc1: warning: include location "/usr/include/cairo" is unsafe for cross-compilation .....
I am trying to monitorize an OpenWRT (Backfire 10.03, r23115) router from an Ubuntu server, but I am having some problems. I have installed Nrpe (2.12) on the remote host (OpenWRT), I have executed the program as a deamon (/usr/sbin/nrpe -d) but when I start the NRPE deamon, I don't get anything about NRPE executing netstat -at or ps -ef.I would need to install check_nrpe on OpenWRT to find out if NRPE is working, but I can't find any ipk package with it. Now, once in the monitoring host when I try to reach the remote host from the server:
i have fedora 11(64 bit).i want to do the cross compilation for 32 bit arm processor.i install all required thing but any of the make command(make,make mrproper,defconfig) is not working.
I have Slackware 13-64 bit and I would like to cross-compile some Fortran and C programs to windows 32 and 64 bit applications. The Linux versions utilize X11 for the graphical users interface. I have tried MINWG but I could not get it to work, either in pre-built binary or source code form. Is there a binary version that works on Slackware 13? Alternatively, is there another method available?
I'm trying to cross compile the GNU make for Alpha Architecture on my i686 PC and the GNU make i compiled would be placed in my virtual hard disk which is a Alpha based linux simulated system. My question is now , I'm able to cross compile the GNU make on my i686 real PC machine , but when i let the make program run in my virtual machine , it pops out the error ..
make: /lib/libc.so.6.1: version `GLIBC_2.4' not found (required by make)
After that, I try another alternative , and I read through the file "INSTALL" on the GNU make directory that I downloaded from the internet . In this case , I downloaded make-3.81. On the sub section "Compiling For Multiple Architectures" It says that
"You can compile the package for more than one kind of computer at the same time, by placing the object files for each architecture in their own directory. To do this, you must use a version of `make' that supports the `VPATH' variable, such as GNU `make'. `cd' to the directory where you want the object files and executables to go and run the `configure' script.`configure' automatically checks for the source code in the directory that `configure' is in and in `..'. If you have to use a `make' that does not support the `VPATH' variable, you have to compile the package for one architecture at a time in the source code directory. After you have installed the package for one architecture, use `make distclean' before reconfiguring for another architecture." And I do not understand the line "by placing the object files for each architecture in their own directory" . What object files that I should put ?
First, I'm trying to cross compile mono 2.6.4 so that it will run on Freescale Embedded Linux for a PowerPC CPU. My host machine is running Fedora 13 on an x86. Freescale provides a copy of the Linux Target Image Builder (LTIB) that has been pre-configured for the particular board I'm using, and LTIB seems to be able to help with the cross compilation of other stuff--you can add in your own packages to be built and included in your newly-built Linux image.
Mono depends on pkg-config and glib-2, so I have selected them in the LTIB package selection config. I've also added a new package for mono that builds mono-2.6.4 from the source tar (after the other deps have also been built).
I'm having a problem getting the glib-2.24.0 package libraries created. Basically they appear to build and link ok, but then libtool runs and errors out claiming it has a syntax error! (numerous wths followed...)
Here is LTIB's temporary build script for only the glib2 package:
Code:
Here is the output when building the glib2 package (configure + make):
Code:
Build path taken because: directory build, build key set, no prebuilt rpm,
What are the pros and cons of various current model ADSL modem routers for use with DD-WRT, OpenWRT or Tomato? There are, of course, hardware compatibility lists (HCLs) for each of these (DD-WRT, OpenWRT and Tomato) but many of the models are no longer available and there are so many that researching them all would be onerous. Many pages on the Internet recommend the WRTG54L and that would be great but it is no longer an option except second user which is increasingly difficult. What are the pros and cons of the various chipsets: ADM5120, AR7, IXP4xx and BCM63xx?
I am trying to build cross-toolchain for arm. I dont want ready-to-use solution. I want my own . I want to build toolchain manually, but I cannot compile gcc. When I invoke "make" I get the following error:
Make fails...my arm-linux-gcc is actually can be built. When I do the following:
Code:
make all-gcc make install
I get my arm-linux-gcc in ~/Progs/cross-compilers/result/arm-linux. So I can compile kernel , but I want user-space , so I do:
Code:
make all-target-libgcc
Make fails when it tries to build libgcc (AFAIK I need libgcc to build glibc). But why does it fails? I have header files like "stdio.h" on my gentoo box. Maybe compiler somehow wants files like "stdio.h" for my TARGET (arm-linux)? But AFAIK these are files are Standart C Library header files, and glibc did not even compiled yet, so I dont have these headers for my TARGET...
I found description of this error here:[URL](gcc part). But when I add additional flags -Dinhibit_libc -D__gthr_posix_h, then make fails when it tries to compile ../gcc-4.4.2/gcc/crtstuff.c with the same errors.
I am trying to nuild executables to run on Windoze under Fedora 12. I have install all of the mingw32 RPMs. Now I just need a URL that discribes how to compile. I am using autoconf and automake. I have done it before but that was installing from Mingw32 source.
I'm trying to cross-compile "sudo" source for Power-PC platform using Montavista tool chain. I'm getting the following error message during configuration: checking host system type... Invalid configuration `ppc_82xx': machine `ppc_82xx' not recognized It is clear that it has found the cross-compiler and configure knows that we are cross-compiling but it fails to recognize the machine. The complete dump follows:
[vhn@localhost sudo-1.7.2p2]$ ./configure --host=ppc_82xx configure: WARNING: If you wanted to set the --build type, don't use --host. If a cross compiler is detected then cross compile mode will be used. configure: Configuring Sudo version 1.7.2p2 checking whether to lecture users the first time they run sudo... yes checking whether sudo should log via syslog or to a file by default... syslog
I am trying to get openswan installed on cygwin. Having issues with that, their mailing list has suggested to cross compile it from linux, and I've had some gcc related errors. So I was wondering what I can use that will install on ubuntu to compile this for cygwin. As am I supposed to run this configure on the gcc package? [URL]
I try to cross compile httpd for power pc.It seems that configure doesn't detect cross compilation. The first error was that sizeof (void*) is less than (long), so I have commented out that check (I think it is a hard work around). I've got another error ./dftables: cannoct execute binary file. Why it tries to execute binary for ppc on x86 machine?This is my build script.
how to cross compile the perl script for arm_v5t.le.gcc??downloaded perl script unable to compile from the cross folder as per the readme.txt instruction
I dual boot Windows/Fedora 11 on my Dell Latitude D830 laptop, which has an Intel PRO/Wireless 3945ABG card and I have just bought a Linksys WRT160NL wireless router. I am currently trying to set up OpenWRT linux on the router. Because of the nature of my problem I have also posted this on their forum.I am having trouble connecting to my OpenWRT install via Fedora. Things seem okay in Windows, but when I try to connect from linux my laptop locks up completely and I have to hard reboot. I previously have never had any trouble connecting to any other router with this install of Fedora.
I need to cross-compile some libs for using in a ARM11 board running Linux (at this time, 2.6.28, but I'll try update it... and for costs reason, maybe it turns on a ARM9 board). The libs are libfprint, libusb-1.0 (that is a requirement of libfprint), libSDL (and some of its extensions) and maybe libsqlite3. How I can make this, with the development files in the host machine (an Ubuntu 10.04 32bits machine) and the runtime files at the host ARM11 Board.
I'm trying to cross-compile glib-2.24.0 for Linux running on a Freescale PPC CPU and running into one problem after another. My host is running Fedora 13, and there I can compile the same source for the host machine with no problems. For the cross compilation, I'm currently using LTIB (provided already configured from Freescale for my board/CPU).
I am trying to cross compile php for "arm" target using "arm-angstrom-linux-gnueabi" tool chain. Apache compilation was successful after using a few ac_cv configuration options(and a few others to get rid of compile errors). But was unable to compile php for the target, as the 'apxs' file used was not executable in the build machine.
I tried creating an apxs file for the build machine architecture(intel 686), and using it. It was able to compile then, but still php page is not getting displayed on the web server. (Have done the procedures like, loading the libphp5 module on httpd conffile and all)
I would like to modify my init.gz and add udp-sender to this image. After copying the program compiled on my system to init image I have error when I try run udp-sender: udp-sender not found When I checked ldd I saw that the some libraries are missing. I copied them from my system but still got the same error. how can I compile program for my init.gz?
i just grabed a book and wrote a program and tried to compile it using 'javac' and everytime i'm getting this error:
javac Example.java /usr/lib64/gcc/x86_64-suse-linux/4.3/../../../../lib64/crt1.o: In function `_start': /usr/src/packages/BUILD/glibc-2.9/csu/../sysdeps/x86_64/elf/start.S:109: undefined reference to `main'
I have a program consists of header files, .cpp, .c, a Makefile and need to include the problem instances file (.tim).May i know how to compile and run them? From google, i have heard bout the command make.
Can anyone tell me of a simple chat program that I can install on both Windows and Linux? I need it more for the local intranet than the internet. I wish to chat with window users in my network? Also please forgive me if this is the wrong forum for this question.
I recently faced a problem. At my college, I linked my laptop with my friend's laptop with an ad-hoc wifi network. I wanted to send him a file. I was running Ubuntu, and he was running XP. Unfortunately, I could not find an easy way to send him the file. Another problem I faced was when I wanted to transfer the contents of my hard disk to another computer. I had to install Filezilla server on the other computer, and upload the files from one computer to the other.
I feel that its a really cumbersome method of transferring files in the same network. Mobile phones have bluetooth, and a file can be sent to another mobile very easily without any fuss. Does anyone know whether any such program exists already? If not, I want to write such a program that will allow one user to add another user to a personal network, and send or recieve files and/or communicate in other ways. The only language I know is Python (self-taught). I was wondering what GUI framework to use. I've never written a GUI program before, and would like to hear your opinions. This will be a very basic program, and must be able to run on many platforms.
Is there any equivalent of WaitFOrMultipleObjects on Linux?
I was finding a cross Platform library that allow you to run another program from your C++ application. I found POCO but it does not support functionality like WaitFOrMultipleObjects for both (linux and windows). I tried boost Process but its not official till now.