01-15-2020, 06:56 PM
(This post was last modified: 01-15-2020, 07:12 PM by Jeremiah Cornelius.
Edit Reason: update
)
(01-11-2020, 04:21 PM)dhivael Wrote: for anyone wishing to use upstream uboot/atf, here's a guide on how to do that: https://eno.space/blog/2020/01/pbp-uboot.
<SNIP>
Hey! I'm looking to build this on stock mrfixit Debian, the USB boot is very necessary right now. ;-)
You list the build reqs for Manjaro. Have you an idea of what required dev packages are needed on Debian? I get thrown GCC errors on commandline options, which I assume are from not having build deps.
Also, I pull from your git, but the command stalls without cloning. I have to CTRL-C and exit, with no sources pulled or directory created.
Thanks!
(01-15-2020, 06:56 PM)Jeremiah Cornelius Wrote:I solved this for building on Debian, with apt search. The packages to install are:(01-11-2020, 04:21 PM)dhivael Wrote: for anyone wishing to use upstream uboot/atf, here's a guide on how to do that: https://eno.space/blog/2020/01/pbp-uboot.
<SNIP>
Hey! I'm looking to build this on stock mrfixit Debian, the USB boot is very necessary right now. ;-)
You list the build reqs for Manjaro. Have you an idea of what required dev packages are needed on Debian? I get thrown GCC errors on commandline options, which I assume are from not having build deps.
Also, I pull from your git, but the command stalls without cloning. I have to CTRL-C and exit, with no sources pulled or directory created.
Thanks!
build-essential
gcc-arm-none-eabi
device-tree-compiler
However? I still get CLI option errors:
gcc: error: unrecognized command line option '-mstrict-align'; did you mean '-Wstrict-aliasing'?
gcc: error: unrecognized command line option '-mgeneral-regs-only'
A quick search online shows that this is likely an older GCC version problem. What GCC are you using? Is Manjaro also aarch64?
— Jeremiah Cornelius
"Be the first person not to do something, that no one has thought of not doing before’’
— Brian Eno, "Oblique Strategies"
"Be the first person not to do something, that no one has thought of not doing before’’
— Brian Eno, "Oblique Strategies"