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git-svn-id: svn://svn.code.sf.net/p/nuttx/code/trunk@3459 42af7a65-404d-4744-a932-0658087f49c3 |
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.. | ||
configure.sh | ||
define.sh | ||
incdir.sh | ||
indent.sh | ||
link.sh | ||
Makefile.host | ||
mkconfig.c | ||
mkdeps.sh | ||
mkimage.sh | ||
mknulldeps.sh | ||
mkromfsimg.sh | ||
mksyscall.c | ||
README.txt | ||
unlink.sh | ||
winlink.sh | ||
zipme.sh |
tools/README.txt ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ This README file addresses the contents of the NuttX tools/ directory. The tools/ directory contains miscellaneous scripts and host C programs that are necessary parts of the the NuttX build system. These files include: README.txt This file configure.sh This is a bash script that is used to configure NuttX for a given target board. See configs/README.txt or Documentation/NuttxPortingGuide.html for a description of how to configure NuttX with this script. mkconfig.c This is C file that is used to build mkconfig program. The mkconfig program is used during the initial NuttX build. When you configure NuttX, you will copy a configuration file called .config into the top level NuttX directory (See configs/README.txt or Documentation/NuttxPortingGuide.html). The first time you make NuttX, the top-level makefile will build the mkconfig executable from mkconfig.c (using Makefile.mkconfig). The top-level Makefile will then execute the mkconfig program to convert the .config file in the top level directory into include/nuttx/config.h. config.h is a another version of the NuttX configuration that can be included by C files. mksyscall.c This is C file that is used to build mksyscall program. The mksyscall program is used during the initial NuttX build by the logic in the top- level syscall/ directory. If you build NuttX as a separately compiled, monolithic kernel and separate applications, then there is a syscall layer that is used to get from the user application space to the NuttX kernel space. In the user application "proxies" for each of the kernel functions are provided. The proxies have the same function signature as the kernel function, but only execute a system call. Within the kernel, there are "stubs" for each of the system calls. The stubs receive the marshalled system call data, and perform the actually kernel function call (in kernel-mode) on behalf of the proxy function. Information about the stubs and proxies is maintained in a comma separated value (CSV) file in the syscall/ directory. The mksyscall program will accept this CVS file as input and generate all of the required proxy or stub files as output. See syscall/README.txt for additonal information. Makefile.host This is the makefile that is used to make the mkconfig program from the mkconfig.c C file or the mksyscall program from the mksyscall.c file. mkromfsimg.sh This script may be used to automate the generate of a ROMFS file system image. It accepts an rcS script "template" and generates and image that may be mounted under /etc in the NuttX pseudo file system. mkdeps.sh mknulldeps.sh NuttX uses the GCC compilers capabilities to create Makefile dependencies. The bash script mkdeps.sh is used to run GCC in order to create the dependencies. If a NuttX configuration uses the GCC toolchain, its Make.defs file (see configs/README.txt) will include a line like: MKDEP = $(TOPDIR)/tools/mkdeps.sh If the NuttX configuration does not use a GCC compatible toolchain, then it cannot use the dependencies and instead it uses mknulldeps.sh: MKDEP = $(TOPDIR)/tools/mknulldeps.sh The mknulldeps.sh is a stub script that does essentially nothing. incdir.sh Different compilers have different conventions for specifying lists of include file paths on the the compiler command line. This bash script allows the build system to create include file paths without concern for the particular compiler in use. link.sh winlink.sh unlink.sh Different file system have different capabilities for symbolic links. Some windows file systems have no native support for symbolic links. Cygwin running under windows has special links built in that work with all cygwin tools. However, they do not work when Windows native tools are used with cygwin. In that case something different must be done. If you are building under Linux or under cygwin with a cygwin tool chain, then your Make.defs file may have definitions like the following: DIRLINK = $(TOPDIR)/tools/link.sh DIRUNLINK = (TOPDIR)/tools/unlink.sh The first definition is not always present because link.sh is the default. link.sh is a bash script that performs a normal, Linux-style symbolic link; unlink.sh is a do-it-all unlinking script. But if you are building under cygwin using a Windows native toolchain, then you will need something like the following in you Make.defs file: DIRLINK = $(TOPDIR)/tools/winlink.sh DIRUNLINK = (TOPDIR)/tools/unlink.sh winlink.sh will copy the whole directory instead of linking it. NOTE: I have been told that some NuttX users have been able to build successfully using the GnuWin32 tools and modifying the link.sh script so that it uses the NTFS mklink command. But I have never tried that mkimage.sh The creates a downloadable image as needed with the rrload bootloader. indent.sh This script can be used to indent .c and .h files in a manner similar to my coding NuttX coding style. It doesn't do a really good job, however (see the comments at the top of the indent.sh file). zipme.sh I use this script to create the nuttx-xx.yy.tar.gz tarballs for release on SourceForge. It is handy because it also does the kind of clean that you need to do to make a clean code release.