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Stephan Aßmus b8435574d1 * Currently, it's always supposed to be busses/ide. All the drivers there
publish themselves in busses/ide, so you cannot just move them to busses/ata
  without changing that in the source as well. The object files are still built
  in the separate busses/ata under generated.
* src/system/kernel/device_manager/device_manager.cpp also hardcodes
  busses/ide in two places.

I tried changing all of this to add busses/ata, but my system remains
unbootable with the new ATA stack. I do have another system, and because
of the previous mixup in HaikuImage, there it installed the drivers in
busses/ide when building for the new ATA stack (by mistake), but those
drivers actually publish themselves in busses/ide, so this system actually
boots with the new ATA stack, because of the mixup. Therefore My change here
to install into busses/ide for either stack should be correct for now and should
actually fix building the *old* stack.


git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@30671 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
2009-05-08 09:53:21 +00:00
3rdparty Add check for git repositories and update action for them (git pull), since the aGITated QEMU devs just migrated to it. 2009-04-26 00:01:28 +00:00
build * Currently, it's always supposed to be busses/ide. All the drivers there 2009-05-08 09:53:21 +00:00
data Added the icons which are the current Bluetooth server and prefs icons. Please 2009-05-02 11:22:13 +00:00
docs Purged the last reference of /boot/beos/. Thanks bbjimmy. 2009-04-27 15:20:52 +00:00
headers Should have been part of r30624: Renamed _SniffFile() to _GetFileType(). 2009-05-04 13:37:03 +00:00
src * Currently, it's always supposed to be busses/ide. All the drivers there 2009-05-08 09:53:21 +00:00
configure added other target architectures (m68k, arm, mipsel). 2009-04-18 18:37:07 +00:00
Jamfile Applied patch by PulkoMandy, adjusted and extended by myself: 2009-05-01 21:56:16 +00:00
Jamrules * Moved the optional package dependency definitions into the new 2009-04-08 10:07:17 +00:00
makehaikufloppy Updated makehaikufloppy script, based on a patch by Rob Judd. I have no idea 2009-04-15 19:26:03 +00:00
ReadMe Note on mkisofs requirement to avoid newbies asking why it fails. 2008-03-06 01:33:46 +00:00
ReadMe.cross-compile * added two autoheader and gawk to the list of dependencies 2007-05-30 16:55:47 +00:00

Building on BeOS
================

For building on BeOS you need the development tools from:

  http://haiku-os.org/downloads

Please always use the most recent versions. They are required to build Haiku.


Building on a non-BeOS platform
===============================

Please read the file 'ReadMe.cross-compile' before continuing. It describes
how to build the cross-compilation tools and configure the build system for
building Haiku. After following the instructions you can directly continue
with the section Building.


Configuring on BeOS
===================

Open a Terminal and change to your Haiku trunk folder. To configure the build
you can run configure like this:

  ./configure --target=TARGET

Where "TARGET" is the target platform that the compiled code should run on:
  * haiku (default)
  * r5
  * bone
  * dano (also for Zeta)

The configure script generates a file named "BuildConfig" in the "build"
directory. As long as configure is not modified (!), there is no need to call
it again. That is for re-building you only need to invoke jam (see below).
If you don't update the source tree very frequently, you may want to execute
'configure' after each update just to be on the safe side.


Building
========

Haiku can be built in either of two ways, as disk image file (e.g. for use
with emulators) or as installation in a directory.

Image File
----------

  jam -q haiku-image

This generates an image file named 'haiku.image' in your output directory
under 'generated/'.

VMware Image File
-----------------

  jam -q haiku-vmware-image

This generates an image file named 'haiku.vmdk' in your output
directory under 'generated/'.

Directory Installation
----------------------

  HAIKU_INSTALL_DIR=/Haiku jam -q install-haiku

Installs all Haiku components into the volume mounted at "/Haiku" and
automatically marks it as bootable. To create a partition in the first place
use DriveSetup and initialize it to BFS.

Note that installing Haiku in a directory only works as expected under BeOS,
but it is not yet supported under Linux and other non-BeOS platforms.

Bootable CD-ROM Image
---------------------

* UNSUPPORTED yet *

This _requires_ having the mkisofs tool installed.
On Debian GNU/Linux for example you can install it with:
  apt-get install mkisofs
On BeOS you can get it from http://bebits.com/app/3964 along with cdrecord.

Creating a bootable CD requires burning 2 tracks on a single CD.
The first track is an El-Torito bootable ISO file-system containing a boot 
floppy image, and is created with:

  jam -q haiku-boot-cd

This generates an image file named 'haiku-boot-cd.iso' in your output directory
under 'generated/'.
The second track is the raw BFS image 'haiku.image' in 'generated/' created 
with:

  jam -q haiku-image

Under Unix/Linux, and BeOS you can use cdrecord to create a CD with:

  cdrecord dev=x,y,z -v -eject -dao -data generated/haiku-boot-cd.iso generated/haiku.image

Here x,y,z is the device number as found with cdrecord -scanbus, it can also 
be a device path on Linux.

Windows users will find '3rdparty/nero/haiku-cd.cue' useful.

Since the CD has two tracks it is not easy to test it from an emulator.
Instead it is simpler to use the 'haiku.image' as CD image and the floppy
image 'haiku-boot-floppy.image' to boot from it.

For Qemu:

qemu -cdrom generated/haiku.image -fda generated/haiku-boot-floppy.image -boot a

Building Components
-------------------

If you don't want to build the complete Haiku, but only a certain
app/driver/etc. you can specify it as argument to jam, e.g.:

  jam Pulse

Alternatively, you can 'cd' to the directory of the component you want to
build and run 'jam' from there.

You can also force rebuilding of a component by using the "-a" parameter:

  jam -a Pulse


Running
=======

Generally there are two ways of running Haiku. On real hardware using a
partition and on emulated hardware using an emulator like Bochs or QEmu.

On Real Hardware
----------------

If you have installed Haiku to its own partition you can include this
partition in your bootmanager and try to boot Haiku like any other OS you
have installed. To include a new partition in the BeOS bootmanager run this
in a Terminal:

  bootman

On Emulated Hardware
--------------------

For emulated hardware you should build disk image (see above). How to setup
this image depends on your emulater. A tutorial for Bochs on BeOS is below.
If you use QEmu, you can usually just provide the path to the image as
command line argument to the "qemu" executable.

Bochs
-----

Version 2.2 of Bochs for BeOS (BeBochs) can be downloaded from BeBits:

  http://www.bebits.com/app/3324

The package installs to: /boot/apps/BeBochs2.2

You have to set up a configuration for Bochs. You should edit the ".bochsrc" to
include the following:

ata0-master: type=disk, path="/path/to/haiku.image", cylinders=122, heads=16, spt=63
boot: disk

Now you can start Bochs:

  $ cd /boot/apps/BeBochs2.2
  $ ./bochs

Answer with RETURN and with some patience you will see Haiku booting.
If booting into the graphical evironment fails you can try to hit "space" at the
very beginning of the boot process. The Haiku bootloader should then come up and
you can select some safe mode options.


Docbook documentation
=====================

Our documentation can be found in 'src/documentation/'. You can build it by
running 'jam' in that folder. The results will be stored in the 'generated/'
folder.