I'm trying to build one of the ASF examples (the A3BU XPLAINED demo application). But I can't find instructions on using GCC. I checked the AVR Freaks forum, but search is failing me miserably (basic search turns up crappy results, advanced search, server keeps resetting the connection), and what few results I did find show another person with a similar question, and an unhelpful "check the forums" answer.
I try CDing to the gcc directory and typing make, but that fails miserably. Clearly the makefile is not properly set up: /usr/local/CrossPack-AVR-20120217/lib/gcc/avr/4.5.1/../../../../avr/include/avr/io.h:428:6: warning: #warning "device type not defined" I looked quickly through the ASF docs, but it just says it supports GCC, doesn't say how to actually build with GCC. <rant>FUCK. Every time I go to use some embedded development stuff like this, it's the same story. No comprehensive, straightforward, introductory recipe for how to get started. You have to comb through reams of docs, search and search against shitty search engines (google included), and post to forums and mailing lists and wait hours or days for a response. It took me forever to get up and running with the BlueGiga BLE112 modules. I must be incredibly inept at this, but these things never come easily to me. I've been developing for decades, at all levels of architecture, and embedded-related seems to be the worst. I'm very glad for resources like avr-chat and AVR Freaks, but Atmel should get their shit together better. A single paragraph could fill the gap.</rant> -- Rick _______________________________________________ AVR-chat mailing list [email protected] https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/avr-chat
