Xiaofan Chen <xiaofanc@gmail.com> document my experiment

with MinGW cross build.


git-svn-id: svn://svn.berlios.de/openocd/trunk@2512 b42882b7-edfa-0310-969c-e2dbd0fdcd60
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oharboe 2009-07-12 19:32:22 +00:00
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README
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@ -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