On Fri, 29 May 2009 13:34:44 +0200
"Oliver Schneider" wrote:
> Hi,
>
> > What are you planning to do?
> The plan is to have one host machine that has a unified (all the same
> versions) set of GCC and a libc (not necessarily glibc) that can be used to
> build our product for different platform
Hi,
> What are you planning to do?
The plan is to have one host machine that has a unified (all the same versions)
set of GCC and a libc (not necessarily glibc) that can be used to build our
product for different platforms.
Potentially distcc would be used to speed up the builds.
> You may fin
On Thu, May 28, 2009 at 01:33:26PM +0200, Oliver Schneider wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Debian is available for a whole lot of different architectures. Is there
> a cross compiler tool chain
What are you planning to do?
You may find Emdebian useful:
http://www.emdebian.org/
> which is used t
Oliver Schneider:
>
> Debian is available for a whole lot of different architectures. Is
> there a cross compiler tool chain which is used to do the builds and
> if so, is it available to the Debian users?
As far as I know, all packages ending up in the official archive need to
be bu
Hi,
Debian is available for a whole lot of different architectures. Is there a
cross compiler tool chain which is used to do the builds and if so, is it
available to the Debian users?
Thanks,
// Oliver
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Hey guys,
I've been reading up quite a bit on cross-compiling. The basic idea is
that we need to set up a GNU toolchain for a specific architecture that
we want to build on. Based on my research there are several tools that
do this automatically:
1. Crosstool - looks to be outdated
2. Scratchbo
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