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LOCALEDIR point into /usr rather than /usr/local. |
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Makefile | ||
mknative-gdb | ||
README.mknative |
$NetBSD: README.mknative,v 1.1 2006/06/02 15:33:34 nathanw Exp $ This file describes how to use the cross-compiler to generate the native files for GDB on a target platform. NOTE: DO NOT RUN "mknative" BY HAND! It requires the Makefile in this directory to set up certain environments first. Since libc's features change over time, the config.h files can change as a result; thus the instructions below are the same no matter whether bootstrapping on a cross or native host. This is important: even on a "native" host, you should bootstrap the toolchain by building from an up-to-date source tree to a $DESTDIR using the exact same instructions. In these notes, MACHINE is the $MACHINE of the target. These files can be cross-generated. Though a $MACHINE_ARCH all uses the same config files, you must pick a specific $MACHINE so that building the requisite bits below will work. 1. Set MKMAINTAINERTOOLS=yes in mk.conf. (Needed so that src/tools/gettext gets built, eliciting proper HAVE_*GETTEXT* defns in config.h files.) 2. Build and install a cross toolchain (via "build.sh -m MACHINE tools"). 3. At top level, do "nbmake-MACHINE do-distrib-dirs obj includes". 4. In src/gnu/lib/crtstuff3 do "nbmake-MACHINE depend all install" 5. In src/lib/csu, src/gnu/lib/libgcc3, and src/lib, do "nbmake-MACHINE all install". 6. In src/tools/gdb, do "nbmake-MACHINE obj native-gdb". This will do a full configury in ${.OBJDIR}/.native that is a "Canadian" cross toolchain (--build reflects the host platform, but --host and --target are the target). The result is a tree that would build a native-to-NetBSD GDB on a cross host, and mknative pulls glue data from this. 7. Try out a full build using "nbmake-MACHINE" in src/gnu/usr.bin/gdb6; the result should include a native GDB. 8. If all is well, commit the glue files and directories added to src/gnu/usr.bin/gdb6.