From b1ccc3532333fb46f04dc1d522f5e4646546adee Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: oharboe Date: Sun, 12 Jul 2009 19:32:22 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Xiaofan Chen document my experiment with MinGW cross build. git-svn-id: svn://svn.berlios.de/openocd/trunk@2512 b42882b7-edfa-0310-969c-e2dbd0fdcd60 --- README | 68 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++- 1 file changed, 67 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/README b/README index 537bb0cbd2..c97bc2a765 100644 --- a/README +++ b/README @@ -416,4 +416,70 @@ one user; please correct us if this is wrong. 2) Run './configure --enable-maintainer-mode' with other options. - +The following URL is a good reference if you want to build OpenOCD +under cygwin. +http://forum.sparkfun.com/viewtopic.php?t=11221 + +Alternatively you can build the Windows binary under Linux using +MinGW cross compiler. The following documents some tips of +using this cross build option. + +a) libusb-win32 +You can choose to use the libusb-win32 binary distribution from +its Sourceforge page. As of this writing, the latest version +is 0.1.12.2. This is the recommend version to use since it fixed +an issue with USB composite device and this is important for FTDI +based JTAG debuggers. +http://sourceforge.net/projects/libusb-win32/ + +You need to download the libusb-win32-device-bin-0.1.12.2.tar.gz +package. Please extract this file into a temp directory. + +Copy the file libusb-win32-device-bin-0.1.12.2\include\usb.h +to your MinGW include directory. + +Copy the library libusb-win32-device-bin-0.1.12.2\lib\gcc\libusb.a +to your MinGW library directory. + +Take note that different Linux distros often have different +MinGW installation directory. Some of them also put the +library and include into a seperate sys-root directory. + +If there is a new svn version of libusb-win32, you can build it +as well. + +This is the instrunction from the libusb-win32 Makefile. +# If you're cross-compiling and your mingw32 tools are called +# i586-mingw32msvc-gcc and so on, then you can compile libusb-win32 +# by running +# make host_prefix=i586-mingw32msvc all + +b) libftdi +libftdi source codes can be download from the following website. +http://www.intra2net.com/en/developer/libftdi/download.php + +It does not provide Windows binary. You can build it from the +source tarball or the git tree. + +If you are using the git tree, the following is the instruction +from README.mingw. You need to have cmake installed. +- Edit Toolchain-mingw32.cmake to point to the correct MinGW +installation. +- Create a build directory like "mkdir build-win32", e.g in ../libftdi/ +- cd in that directory and run + "cmake -DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=../Toolchain-mingw32.cmake .." +- Copy src/ftdi.h to your MinGW include directory. +- Copy build-win32/src/*.a to your MinGW lib directory. + +c) OpenOCD +Now you can build OpenOCD under Linux using MinGW. +You need to use --host=your_mingW_prefix in the configure option. + +Example for libftdi (in one line, tested under Ubuntu 9.04): +./configure --host=i586-mingw32msvc --enable-maintainer-mode +--disable-shared --enable-ft2232_libftdi + +Example for ftd2xx (in one line, tested under Ubuntu 9.04) +./configure --host=i586-mingw32msvc --enable-maintainer-mode +--disable-shared --enable-ft2232_ftd2xx +--with-ftd2xx-win32-zipdir=/home/mcuee/Desktop/build/openocd/libftd2xx-win32 -- 2.30.2