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15e8d2e0b7
This patch brings up the net5501 platform. Note that the x86/ target included support for all x86/ class processors. That's not technically correct. This should be constrained only to the "generic" subtarget. Every x86-class target that isn't generic should be able to select only the optimizations/capabilities applicable to that architectural variant. It's also assumed that all x86 processors have keyboard & mouse ports, ISA, DMI, ACPI... the embedded ones typically don't. Again, moving that to the generic subtarget. Fortunately, this was a fairly benign tweak. The net5501 board includes the following logic: Geode/LX processor CS5535 super-I/O chip PC87360 sensor chip Via Rhine Ethernet controllers Via Sata controllers USB, LEDS, I2C Signed-off-by: Philip Prindeville <philipp_subx@redfish-solutions.com> SVN-Revision: 20794 |
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docs | ||
include | ||
package | ||
scripts | ||
target | ||
toolchain | ||
tools | ||
.gitignore | ||
BSDmakefile | ||
Config.in | ||
feeds.conf.default | ||
LICENSE | ||
Makefile | ||
README | ||
rules.mk |
This is the buildsystem for the OpenWrt Linux distribution Please use "make menuconfig" to configure your appreciated configuration for the toolchain and firmware. You need to have installed gcc, binutils, patch, bzip2, flex, make, gettext, pkg-config, unzip, libz-dev and libc headers. Simply running 'make' will build your firmware. It will download all sources, build the cross-compile toolchain, the kernel and all choosen applications. You can use scripts/flashing/flash.sh for remotely updating your embedded system via tftp. The OpenWrt system is documented in docs/. You will need a LaTeX distribution and the tex4ht package to build the documentation. Type make -C docs/ to build it. Building your own firmware you need to have access to a Linux, BSD or MacOSX system. Cygwin will not be supported because of the lack of case sensitiveness. Sunshine! Your OpenWrt Project http://openwrt.org