strip down makefile

SVN-Revision: 53
This commit is contained in:
Mike Baker 2004-06-01 08:09:11 +00:00
parent a034ab1a56
commit bda9839388

View file

@ -28,63 +28,21 @@
#
#############################################################
# What sortof target system shall we compile this for?
#ARCH:=i386
#ARCH:=arm
#ARCH:=mips
SNAPSHOT:=20040531
ARCH:=mipsel
#ARCH:=powerpc
#ARCH:=sh4
# Busybox link failing due to needing libgcc functions that are statics.
#ARCH:=cris
# The following currently fail to build since no shared lib support.
#ARCH:=sh64
#ARCH:=m68k
#ARCH:=v850
#ARCH:=sparc
#ARCH:=whatever
# If you are building a native gcc toolchain, do you want to
# build the old gcc-2.95 based toolchain, or would you prefer
# a nice and shiny new gcc-3.3.2 toolchain?
# WARNING -- 2.95 currently only builds for i386, arm, mips*, and powerpc.
# WARNING -- 2.95 does not currently build natively for the target.
GCC_2_95_TOOLCHAIN:=false
# Enable this to use the uClibc daily snapshot instead of a released
# version. Daily snapshots may contain new features and bugfixes. Or
# they may not even compile at all, depending on what Erik is doing...
#USE_UCLIBC_SNAPSHOT:=
#USE_UCLIBC_SNAPSHOT:=snapshot
USE_UCLIBC_SNAPSHOT:=20040509
# Temporary option... Fall back to (slightly modified) ldso 0.9.24 code?
# This is here temporarily since I'm having problems with the current
# cvs ldso code on mipsel.
USE_UCLIBC_LDSO_0_9_24:=true
#USE_UCLIBC_LDSO_0_9_24:=false
# Enable this to use the busybox daily snapshot instead of a released
# version. Daily snapshots may contain new features and bugfixes. Or
# they may not even compile at all....
#USE_BUSYBOX_SNAPSHOT:=
#USE_BUSYBOX_SNAPSHOT:=snapshot
USE_BUSYBOX_SNAPSHOT:=20040509
# Enable large file (files > 2 GB) support
USE_UCLIBC_SNAPSHOT:=$(SNAPSHOT)
USE_UCLIBC_LDSO_0_9_24:=false
USE_BUSYBOX_SNAPSHOT:=$(SNAPSHOT)
USE_NETFILTER_SNAPSHOT:=$(SNAPSHOT)
USE_BRIDGE_VERSION:=0.9.7
BUILD_WITH_LARGEFILE:=true
OPTIMIZE_FOR_CPU=$(ARCH)
# Command used to download source code
WGET:=wget --passive-ftp
# Optimize toolchain for which type of CPU?
OPTIMIZE_FOR_CPU=$(ARCH)
#OPTIMIZE_FOR_CPU=i686
# Note... gcc 2.95 does not seem to like anything higher than i586.
#OPTIMIZE_FOR_CPU=i586
#OPTIMIZE_FOR_CPU=whatever
# Soft floating point options.
# Notes:
# Currently builds with gcc 3.3 for arm, mips, mipsel, powerpc.
@ -106,8 +64,8 @@ TARGET_DEBUGGING= #-g
# Currently the unwind stuff seems to work for staticly linked apps but
# not dynamic. So use setjmp/longjmp exceptions by default.
GCC_USE_SJLJ_EXCEPTIONS:=--enable-sjlj-exceptions
#GCC_USE_SJLJ_EXCEPTIONS:=
# GCC_USE_SJLJ_EXCEPTIONS:=--enable-sjlj-exceptions
GCC_USE_SJLJ_EXCEPTIONS:=
# Any additional gcc options you may want to include....
EXTRA_GCC_CONFIG_OPTIONS:=
@ -137,85 +95,7 @@ INSTALL_LIBGCJ:=false
# The list of stuff to build for the target filesystem
#
#############################################################
TARGETS:=host-sed
ifeq ($(GCC_2_95_TOOLCHAIN),true)
TARGETS+=uclibc-configured binutils gcc2_95
else
TARGETS+=uclibc-configured binutils gcc3_3
endif
# Do you want user mode Linux (x86 only), or are you building a
# your own kernel that will run on its own? Perhaps you have a
# kernel you have already configured and you want to use that?
# The default is to just use a set of known working kernel
# headers. Unless you want to build a kernel, I recommend just
# using that...
#TARGETS+=kernel-headers
#TARGETS+=linux
#TARGETS+=user-mode-linux
#TARGETS+=system-linux
TARGETS+= openwrt-base
# The default minimal set
#TARGETS+=busybox tinylogin
# Openssh...
#TARGETS+=zlib openssl openssh
# Dropbear sshd is much smaller than openssl + openssh
#TARGETS+=dropbear_sshd
# Everything needed to build a full uClibc development system!
#TARGETS+=coreutils findutils bash make diffutils patch sed
#TARGETS+=ed flex bison file gawk tar grep bzip2
#If you want a development system, you probably want gcc built
# with uClibc so it can run within your dev system...
#TARGETS+=gcc2_95_target ccache_target # NOT WORKING!!!
#TARGETS+=gcc3_3_target ccache_target
# Of course, if you are installing a development system, you
# may want some header files so you can compile stuff....
#TARGETS+=ncurses-headers zlib-headers openssl-headers
# More development system stuff for those that want it
#TARGETS+=m4 autoconf automake libtool
# Perl
#TARGETS+=perl
# Some nice debugging tools
#TARGETS+=gdb strace ltrace
# The Valgrind debugger (x86 only)
#TARGETS+=valgrind
# Some stuff for access points and firewalls
#TARGETS+=iptables hostap wtools dhcp_relay bridge
#TARGETS+=iproute2 netsnmp
# Run customize.mk at the very end to add your own special config.
# This is useful for making your own distro within the buildroot
# process.
# TARGETS+=customize
#############################################################
#
# Pick your root filesystem type.
#
#############################################################
#TARGETS+=ext2root
# Must mount cramfs with 'ramdisk_blocksize=4096'
#TARGETS+=cramfsroot
# You may need to edit make/jffs2root.mk to change target
# endian-ness or similar, but this is sufficient for most
# things as-is...
#TARGETS+=jffs2root
#TARGETS+= openwrt-linux.trx
TARGETS+= openwrt-code.bin
TARGETS:=gcc3_3 openwrt-base openwrt-code.bin
#############################################################
#