Am Freitag, 22. August 2003 13:51 schrieb Erich Titl: > Hi > > At 09:06 22.08.2003 +0100, Luis.F.Correia wrote: > >... > >The current uClibc development does not use UML. > > What is the minimal environment then for: > > a) Kernel compile > Is it really different from the Bering standard kernel enviroonment? I > always thought Kernels are library independent...?
There is no minimal environment to compile a kernel. As you said it's independent from library. > b) userland compile > > It would be nice If one could prepare a filesystem which can be chrooted to > (no UML necessary) to compile the necessary pieces. IMHO it should be > possible to just loop mount a file, chroot there and do what's needed to > compile the bits and pieces. You cannot test what you compiled this way but > that is another matter. The easiest way to compile your apps against uClibc is to follow the instructions on http://leaf.sourceforge.net/mod.php?mod=userpage&menu=91018&page_id=52 Anyway, what you are asking for is already available: Point you're browser to: http://www.uclibc.org/ look for "30 June March 2003, dev systems updated to uClibc 0.9.20 The uClibc development systems for i386, powerpc, arm, mips, have been updated to uClibc 0.9.20. Several problems have been fixed up, gcc has been updated to version 3.3, and Perl 5.8.0 is now included. " and follow the links. Pls note, none of the Bering-uClibc tested it so far, but we are always interested in results. kp ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.net email is sponsored by: VM Ware With VMware you can run multiple operating systems on a single machine. WITHOUT REBOOTING! Mix Linux / Windows / Novell virtual machines at the same time. Free trial click here:http://www.vmware.com/wl/offer/358/0 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ leaf-user mailing list: [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/leaf-user SR FAQ: http://leaf-project.org/pub/doc/docmanager/docid_1891.html
