Programming :: Sms Server Tools Cross Compiling
Apr 11, 2010
I wanted to cross compile sms server tools(url)for arm-linux with arm-linux-gcc compiler but I can not this is all information that I have from it's error:
Quote:
[root@localhost smstools3]# ls
doc examples install.sh LICENSE Makefile package.sh README scripts src uninstall.sh
Quote:
[root@localhost smstools3]# cat Makefile
# Makefile
# If you change destination of executables, remember to change
# startup script (init.d/sms3) too.
#BINDIR=/usr/local/bin
BINDIR=/mnt/sd/Utility/sms/ ///I changed here for cross compilation
code....
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Mar 27, 2010
I wanted to know how can I cross compile SMS SERVER TOOL for an embedded computer and make just one binary file for it or how can I change all of its default files places like its demon and object file and gather all of them to one directory to execute and use and run.let me explain it better for you : I have an embedded computer with Linux OS that its file system is read only and I can not add any file to /usr /lib and ..... and I can just mount a SD memory card to it and copy all of my programs to it and run them from there as you understand I have two choices to choose, first make one big binary file for each program that I am doing it now and it is not a suitable solution and the second is finding the way to change default place of shared object file of my program.now you tell me what can I do to solving this problem.
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Dec 11, 2014
I am trying to cross-compile my Qt application for armhf on Jessie, so what I did was install qt5-default:armhf, but when I tried running qmake I found out that it contains also an armhf version of qmake so I was not able to run it.Then I installed the amd64 version to have at least a runnable version of qmake, but it was only to find out that qmake contains only hardcoded paths, so I could not use it for the armhf libraries, well I could but I had to run qmake (amd64 version) and afterwards open the makefile and change all paths from amd64 to armhf.
But as this is not so convenient I was wondering if there is a normal way to do this, I know you can compile the source yourself but I had quite a lot of problems with dependencies there. Is it possible with the standard repository binaries or should I just go back to compiling the source myself? Maybe I can compile only the building tools without building all the libraries I already got from the repository.
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May 14, 2010
I have an odd thing. And thats the following:
I entered: gcc raw.c -m32 -g -static -o raw
And I got:
I installed all bin32 libs I am on a x64 system.
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Feb 4, 2010
I have written a program that I would like to cross compile for x86 and x86_64 architectures. I have tried google and the search function here to no success, most information I find is too specific (instructions for a specific program), or dealing with cross compiling for windows on linux.Does anyone know of a tutorial dealing with straight making a 32 bit binary on a 64 bit processor (both are intel)?
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Nov 14, 2013
I just finished building a cross-compiler for i386-elf. But when I try to use it, the terminal gives me this error:
Code: Select all/home/isaac/Cross-compiler/lib/gcc/i386-elf/4.8.2/../../../../i386-elf/bin/ld: cannot find crt0.o: No such file or directory
/home/isaac/Cross-compiler/lib/gcc/i386-elf/4.8.2/../../../../i386-elf/bin/ld: cannot find -lc
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
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Sep 20, 2010
I am trying to cross compile a package from source for an embedded arm board, however I am not having much luck creating an arm binary.
After running make, this is what I get:
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Jul 2, 2009
I'm trying to compile the upnp sdk for the arm-linux card (which uses atmel processor at91rm9200), but it doesn't work!
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May 15, 2011
I try to cross compile udev-160 for arm.I use the buildroot toolchain.I work on a PC i386 with the Debian system.I started by running "configure" script to generate the makefile:$./configure --host=arm-linux
but I obtain the following error :checking for acl_init in -lacl... no configure: error: libacl not found
I don't know how to install the libacl for ARM. I can't found the libacl when I configure the buildroot toolchain.
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Jan 27, 2011
I'm trying to build some boot and kernel images for my WD Mybook world edition, which uses an arm processor on my x86_64 host box. Ultimately i'd like to install slackarm. Lilo doesn't work on arm so you have to compile your own kernel and have the bootloader statically linked to kernel inorder to boot the OS. So i'm using my slackware install to cross compile the boot loaders (u-boot) and kernel image (uImage).
I've successfully compiled the buildroot environment which has generated the arm-linux-* binaries, eg, gcc 3.4.2 for arm.
Code:
These are in a build folder (shortened in text below), which i add to my PATH
Code:
I then move to the directory where i want to build the stage1 boot loader, which is supplied in the GPL code from WD.
Code:
However the build fails with a segfault, which looks to be caused by the incorrect libraries and compiler being used:
Code:
It seems to be using my x86_64 libs and gcc 4.4.4 which is the host compiler not the target.
I've tried setting ARCH=arm but got the same results.
Do i need to export some additional variables or unset some to prevent the host files being used instead of the targets?
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Jan 27, 2011
I need a cross compiler for C/C++.
Unfortunately, I can't find the GCC cross compiler in the repositories.
There is only a package with the binutils: cross-ppc-binutils
But nothing like: cross-ppc-gcc
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Jul 22, 2010
I have synology nas box DS710+ that has intel atom processor inside. i've installed ubuntu under virtual box, downloaded needed toolchain for x86 processors, and decided to cross-compile openvpn.
I 've started from compiling lzo library, but first question that appeared in my head - how i have to move all compiled binaries to my synology?
1. configure - okay
2. make - okay
3. make install - this is not necessary?
Will --prefix parameter helps me? or do i have to use chroot? cause there is a plenty amount of files that i need to move to my synology.
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Mar 2, 2011
We want to use GCC for cross compiling C source code for POWERPC MPC8260 target. How do we build cross compiler in windows?
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Feb 21, 2011
I developed a test program(my first under linux) some thing like g++ -I$(BOOST_INCLUDE) -L$(BOOST_LIBS) threading.cpp -lpthread -lboostThread -lOtherLib -o threadingTest.out...This thing works in GCC4.5, but to compile it under windows visual studio 2008, do I have to create a new project file and then include all libs?
In short, is there any IDE or utility, where I just compile it either on linux or windows without going and modifying project options again and again ?
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May 28, 2010
i am trying to compile too the sqlite for arm9 - mini2440.could you please tell me what was the steps you make? im read that book but im still having some trouble while i compile i have been trying to do the compilation.
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Nov 22, 2010
i am trying to cross compile sqlite3 with following options(i got these options from previous threads in these forum)./configure --host=arm-linux CC=/usr/local/arm-linux/bin/arm-linux-gcc AR=arm-linux-ar STRIP=arm-linux-strip RANLIB=arm-linux-ranlib while executing make command i am getting following error
rm -fr .libs/libsqlite3.so .libs/libsqlite3.so.0 .libs/libsqlite3.so.0.8.6
/usr/local/arm-linux/bin/arm-linux-gcc -shared .libs/sqlite3.o -ldl -lpthread -Wl,-soname -Wl,libsqlite3.so.0 -o .libs/libsqlite3.so.0.8.6
[code]....
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Jan 14, 2011
I need a tutorial on using mingw in Linux to compile programs for windows.
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Feb 1, 2010
I have been installing gentoo on my desktop for the past few weeks. (Not a whole lot of time to get to it) and I must say that I wished I had made the move a whole lot earlier. Anyway, my next canididate for gentoo would be my ibook g3 which has a slow processor. I have heard that for these systems cross compiling is a lot better of an option than compiling on the system itself. I have read the cross-compiling guide and am left a bit confused. Could I use my thumbdrive to transfer compiled binaries from my desktop to my laptop and install the packages that way? Also, what would I do when updates come out for my laptop. Is there any way of monitoring the package statuses?
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Feb 9, 2011
I am cross compiling a linux kernel for the mips platform. I have installed the tool chain and everything. When i try to build the kernel i get the following error message.
HOSTCC -static scripts/basic/fixdep
scripts/basic/fixdep.c: In function traps
scripts/basic/fixdep.c:377:2: warning: dereferencing type-punned pointer will break strict-aliasing rules
scripts/basic/fixdep.c:379:4: warning: dereferencing type-punned pointer will break strict-aliasing rules
[Code].....
If i set up the toolchain on a fedora 13 machine with the exact same procedure, the cross compilation works fine. I can't figure out how this can be fixed. I am currently considering downgrading to fedora 13 due to this.
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Jul 5, 2010
I'm a newbie when it comes to embedded linux / cross compiling. Never had to have anything to do with it b4 I bought my NAS. The Nas only has a 500MHZ ARM9 so compiling anything is painfully slow. Also only has 128MB ram. I managed to cross compile the kernel but am not sure how would you cross compile something like HPLIP for example.
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Apr 15, 2010
I wonder if there is an easy way to accomplish the following: I made a tool and part of it needs to be compiled. It would be easy if I can automate compilation for multiple platforms (x86 / x86_64 / RHEL / SLES / Ubuntu). Is there a way to do this automated on a single host? Or should I set up an os for each distro? Also is there a way to generate RPM and deb files also on the same host without having to edit the meta files each time a version changes?
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Dec 31, 2010
I hve following doubts regarding cross-compiling
1. if cross toolchain build wth differnet library other than the one using presently on host, will it b matter.
2. if toolchain build for 32-bit nd if i'm running it on 64-bit will it b matter.
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Feb 28, 2011
We have a device here at work running an Arm processor, I have a cross-compiler for the device, it was distributed to our company with the linux distribution we are using on the device (montavista linux). I would love to be able to cross compile some software for this device, however, I really suck at this kind of thing.
Whenever I try to cross compile software, I usually get an error like "unrecognized host platform" (I'm paraphrasing obviously), but the toolchain is not that much different from a generic Arm toolchain, just with some extra libraries installed and stuff. I tried using other arm toolchains, but those are a crapshoot, they compile fine, but they don't always run correctly on the device (for instance, busybox).
The reason I get the unrecognized platform error is because the toolchain has a weird prefix on it (arm_v5t_le-) which the configure script can't handle, but if it would just try to cross compile it like it does with other arm targets, it would work fine. How do I make it work?
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Feb 20, 2010
Pretty much self explanatory:This morning I went into the update manager, and found a bunch of RPM package-management stuff such as rpm, alien, compiling tools, etc. What is up with this?I suspect they are setting the scenery for some big press release saying they now support RPM packages in Ubuntu too. Any ideas? (or better, inside info from someone who knows)
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Dec 6, 2010
I want to run a program under ... something like strace, something like gdb. Let's call the something Fred. Every time I run a particular program under Fred, it detects when a system call is about to take place or a signal has occurred, and traps to Fred, which decides dynamically how to respond, whether the stimulus is a signal or an attempted open(), close(), read(), write(), socket(), connect(), listen(), select(), ioctl(), time(), or whatever. Although strace does this marvelously, what I'd like Fred to do is use code that I supply to doctor up what the subject program sees. In the case of write(), it should be able to modify what actually gets written. In other words, a hard shell environment around the program which completely mediates between the subject program and the outside world. I'll start with the source code for strace and gdb if I have to. But has this been done already?
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Jun 8, 2014
What are the availability`s for cross platform sql , gui, application development using raw code in the Debian environment. I would rather work with raw code. I have been working with PHP MySQL, need to advance to Universe Application Development cross platform Raw Code for both mobile and desk top.
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Aug 11, 2010
I am using a arm compiler to build my program but getting following compiler error at the end -
init.c.text+0x2c): undefined reference to '__libc_csu_fini'
init.c.text+0x34): undefined reference to '__libc_csu_init'
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Feb 3, 2010
I have a large existing codebase that all compiles under Ubuntu 8.04 with g++ using Scons. I've been given the task of getting it to compile for Arm9 running uclinux. I have a arm-elf-g++ compiler that I need to use instead of the gcc version. I ended up borking my /usr/lib/scons/SCons/Tool/g++.py file to use arm-elf-g++ instead of g++, but I know that this is not correct, as I have to go edit that file every time I change compilers.
These are the 2 lines I switch out:
Code:
compilers = ['arm-elf-g++']
#compilers = ['g++']
I simply can not find anywhere in the scons documentation that indicates how to tell it to use a different compiler. It seems that it would go under "Environment" but beyond that I'm lost. The CPPPATH variable seems like it only tells scons where to find #include files. I suppose I could rename arm-elf-g++ to g++ and just set my path to find that one first, but that seems like a bit of a hack as well. It would also break other things on my machine.
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Jun 22, 2011
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
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Oct 30, 2014
I'm looking for a way to create a cross-platform GUI application. The result must be able to run on linux, windows and OSX. And it must be a point-and-click GUI.For development I should be able to rely on Open-Source tools on linux only (that means no access to Windows or OSX)The target should be able to install the result relatively easily, that means any dependencies must be freely available, and the setup steps must be very minimal (probably means no installing development tools or running compilers)
My first thought was java, but the standard Swing GUI can look a bit ugly on some platforms. So I'm wondering if there's anything else. My next thought was C++/Qt, but I don't think I can cross-compile this from Debian for Windows or OSX, can I? Next I thought of python and PyQt, but it looks like PyQt isn't available for OSX. And finally I even thought of making some kind of web application running on a tiny web server of some kind, then accessing it with a native browser, but I'm pretty sure this doesn't meet the "easy to install" criteria. I'm finding this so tricky, do all the existing cross-platform applications use natively-compiled C++ for this? Or is there an obvious alternative that I'm overlooking?
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