The way to do this would be to use the AstLinux build environment and
create your own package there.  In other words cross compile on a host
build environment with target as the AstLinux system.

Start by following the developer instructions on AstLinux web site.  Once
you are able to create your own AstLinux system you can then add in your
own package by copying an existing one.   If you run into problems seek
help at the AstLinux Developer mailing list.  Note if you don't want to
have to always build your own AstLinux you don't have to -- you just use
the build environment as a place to build your package which you can then
copy over onto a system that has one of the stock AstLinux images on it.

David.




On Tue, Jun 7, 2016 at 7:06 AM, Michael Keuter <li...@mksolutions.info>
wrote:

>
> Am 07.06.2016 um 13:03 schrieb Michael Keuter <li...@mksolutions.info>:
>
> >
> > Am 07.06.2016 um 09:54 schrieb Stefan Ulm <s....@divus.biz>:
> >
> >> Hi all,
> >>
> >> For a special connectivity over UDP I need to write a UDP dameon for
> astlinux platform,
> >> Is there c/C++ compiler on board I could use directly on the astlinux
> OS, or have I to make the programming on x86 standard platform and then copy
> >> The result?
> >>
> >>
> >> Best regards
> >>
> >> Stefan Ulm
> >> Technical Department | Research & Development
> >> stefan....@divus.eu
> >
> > Hi Stefan,
> >
> > there is no C compiler on board (only Perl, PHP + Lua)
>
> For some UDP stuff netcat (nc) can be "misused" :-).
>
> nc -h
> BusyBox v1.19.4 (2016-06-05 00:18:49 UTC) multi-call binary.
>
> Usage: nc [OPTIONS] HOST PORT  - connect
> nc [OPTIONS] -l -p PORT [HOST] [PORT]  - listen
>
>         -e PROG Run PROG after connect (must be last)
>         -l      Listen mode, for inbound connects
>         -p PORT Local port
>         -s ADDR Local address
>         -w SEC  Timeout for connects and final net reads
>         -i SEC  Delay interval for lines sent
>         -n      Don't do DNS resolution
>         -u      UDP mode
>         -v      Verbose
>         -o FILE Hex dump traffic
>         -z      Zero-I/O mode (scanning)
>
> Michael
>
> http://www.mksolutions.info
>
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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> are
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
What NetFlow Analyzer can do for you? Monitors network bandwidth and traffic
patterns at an interface-level. Reveals which users, apps, and protocols are 
consuming the most bandwidth. Provides multi-vendor support for NetFlow, 
J-Flow, sFlow and other flows. Make informed decisions using capacity 
planning reports. https://ad.doubleclick.net/ddm/clk/305295220;132659582;e
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