Xiaofan Chen <xiaofanc@gmail.com> document my experiment
with MinGW cross build. git-svn-id: svn://svn.berlios.de/openocd/trunk@2512 b42882b7-edfa-0310-969c-e2dbd0fdcd60__archive__
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README
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README
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@ -416,4 +416,70 @@ one user; please correct us if this is wrong.
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2) Run './configure --enable-maintainer-mode' with other options.
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2) Run './configure --enable-maintainer-mode' with other options.
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The following URL is a good reference if you want to build OpenOCD
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under cygwin.
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http://forum.sparkfun.com/viewtopic.php?t=11221
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Alternatively you can build the Windows binary under Linux using
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MinGW cross compiler. The following documents some tips of
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using this cross build option.
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a) libusb-win32
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You can choose to use the libusb-win32 binary distribution from
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its Sourceforge page. As of this writing, the latest version
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is 0.1.12.2. This is the recommend version to use since it fixed
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an issue with USB composite device and this is important for FTDI
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based JTAG debuggers.
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http://sourceforge.net/projects/libusb-win32/
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You need to download the libusb-win32-device-bin-0.1.12.2.tar.gz
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package. Please extract this file into a temp directory.
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Copy the file libusb-win32-device-bin-0.1.12.2\include\usb.h
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to your MinGW include directory.
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Copy the library libusb-win32-device-bin-0.1.12.2\lib\gcc\libusb.a
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to your MinGW library directory.
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Take note that different Linux distros often have different
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MinGW installation directory. Some of them also put the
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library and include into a seperate sys-root directory.
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If there is a new svn version of libusb-win32, you can build it
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as well.
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This is the instrunction from the libusb-win32 Makefile.
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# If you're cross-compiling and your mingw32 tools are called
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# i586-mingw32msvc-gcc and so on, then you can compile libusb-win32
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# by running
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# make host_prefix=i586-mingw32msvc all
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b) libftdi
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libftdi source codes can be download from the following website.
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http://www.intra2net.com/en/developer/libftdi/download.php
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It does not provide Windows binary. You can build it from the
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source tarball or the git tree.
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If you are using the git tree, the following is the instruction
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from README.mingw. You need to have cmake installed.
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- Edit Toolchain-mingw32.cmake to point to the correct MinGW
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installation.
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- Create a build directory like "mkdir build-win32", e.g in ../libftdi/
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- cd in that directory and run
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"cmake -DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=../Toolchain-mingw32.cmake .."
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- Copy src/ftdi.h to your MinGW include directory.
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- Copy build-win32/src/*.a to your MinGW lib directory.
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c) OpenOCD
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Now you can build OpenOCD under Linux using MinGW.
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You need to use --host=your_mingW_prefix in the configure option.
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Example for libftdi (in one line, tested under Ubuntu 9.04):
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./configure --host=i586-mingw32msvc --enable-maintainer-mode
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--disable-shared --enable-ft2232_libftdi
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Example for ftd2xx (in one line, tested under Ubuntu 9.04)
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./configure --host=i586-mingw32msvc --enable-maintainer-mode
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--disable-shared --enable-ft2232_ftd2xx
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--with-ftd2xx-win32-zipdir=/home/mcuee/Desktop/build/openocd/libftd2xx-win32
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