Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Sebastian Sumpf
e337b844e5 depot: support for ARM 64-bit for base-foc on rpi3
issue #3407
2019-07-09 08:55:22 +02:00
Stefan Kalkowski
f0d28eeca7 foc: add support for Raspberry Pi 3
Ref #3260
2019-05-27 14:52:51 +02:00
Stefan Kalkowski
a1e70b9ba4 kernel: differentiate board-specific components
Components like kernel, core, and bootstrap that are built for a
specific board need to reside inside the same architectural dependent
build directory. For instance there are sel4, foc, and hw kernel builds
for imx6q_sabrelite and imx7d_sabre, which have to reside inside the same
arm_v7 build directory.
This commit names those components explicitely, and adapts the run-tool to it.

Fix #3316
2019-05-27 14:46:52 +02:00
Stefan Kalkowski
dd214a8b15 foc: suppress gcc warnings of L4Re components
Ref #2405
2017-05-31 13:16:22 +02:00
Stefan Kalkowski
9e3fc9414f foc: update to recent revision r72 (fix #2405) 2017-05-31 13:16:08 +02:00
Christian Helmuth
f59a5ef258 foc, fiasco: ensure build fails if port build fails 2017-05-31 13:15:55 +02:00
Norman Feske
c450ddcb3d Disambiguate kernel-specific file names
This patch removes possible ambiguities with respect to the naming of
kernel-dependent binaries and libraries. It also removes the use of
kernel-specific global side effects from the build system. The reach of
kernel-specific peculiarities has thereby become limited to the actual
users of the respective 'syscall-<kernel>' libraries.

Kernel-specific build artifacts are no longer generated at magic places
within the build directory (like okl4's includes, or the L4 build
directories of L4/Fiasco and Fiasco.OC, or the build directories of
various kernels). Instead, such artifacts have been largely moved to the
libcache. E.g., the former '<build-dir>/l4/' build directory for the L4
build system resides at '<build-dir>/var/libcache/syscall-foc/build/'.
This way, the location is unique to the kernel. Note that various tools
are still generated somewhat arbitrarily under '<build-dir>/tool/' as
there is no proper formalism for building host tools yet.

As the result of this work, it has become possible to use a joint Genode
build directory that is usable with all kernels of a given hardware
platform. E.g., on x86_32, one can now seamlessly switch between linux,
nova, sel4, okl4, fiasco, foc, and pistachio without rebuilding any
components except for core, the kernel, the dynamic linker, and the timer
driver. At the current stage, such a build directory must still be
created manually. A change of the 'create_builddir' tool will follow to
make this feature easily available.

This patch also simplifies various 'run/boot_dir' plugins by removing
the option for an externally hosted kernel. This option remained unused
for many years now.

Issue #2190
2016-12-23 16:51:32 +01:00