mirror of https://github.com/acidanthera/audk.git
f7496d7173
1. Do not use tab characters 2. No trailing white space in one line 3. All files must end with CRLF Contributed-under: TianoCore Contribution Agreement 1.1 Signed-off-by: Liming Gao <liming.gao@intel.com> Cc: Yonghong Zhu <yonghong.zhu@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Yonghong Zhu <yonghong.zhu@intel.com> |
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README.txt | ||
mingw-gcc-build.py |
README.txt
You may run these scripts to build a UEFI/PI gcc cross compiler. Cross compilers built with these scripts are tested on Linux, OS X and Cygwin. Please note that you may need to modify your edk2 tree's Conf/tools_def.txt file to point to the location where you installed the cross compiler. === tianoCross-gcc-4.1 === This script will build an x86 (ia32) cross compiler. The results of this script are very similar to the 'mingw' cross compiler which is commonly available on linux and OS X. But, since the cross compiler produced by this script is tested, it is the only 'supported' way to build UEFI/PI images. To use this script, you will need: * A recent version (3.0 or later should be fine) of gcc that is able to produce executables for the machine that you want to run this compiler on (the host machine). * wget or curl * tar * bzip * gzip * bash * As well as (possibly) others tools and development packages === x86_64-mingw-gcc-build.py == This script will build an x86_64 (x64/Intel 64/amd64) cross compiler. To use this script, you will need: * A recent version (3.0 or later should be fine) of gcc that is able to produce executables for the machine that you want to run this compiler on (the host machine). * Python 2.5 * texinfo * bison * flex * libmpfr * libgmp * As well as (possibly) others tools and development packages === Ubuntu Notes === On Ubuntu, the following command should install all the necessary build packages to utilize the x86_64-mingw-gcc-build.py script: sudo apt-get install build-essential texinfo bison flex libgmp3-dev libmpfr-dev === CYGWIN Notes === You should setup cygwin to use binmode on all mounts. When you initially install cygwin it gives you the choice of Unix file mode (recommended) or DOS file mode. Unix mode will cause all the cygwin directories to be mounted in binmode, while DOS will mount the dirs in textmode. Here is an example of a cygwin install where the dirs are (properly) mounted in binmode. C:\cygwin\bin on /usr/bin type user (binmode) C:\cygwin\lib on /usr/lib type user (binmode) c:\workspace on /workspace type system (binmode) C:\cygwin on / type user (binmode) If you use textmode, it is likely that the build will fail in a way that is hard to debug. Cygwin is pretty slow, so it is not recommended for large builds.