[Top][All Lists]
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: [avr-gcc-list] makefile for ubuntu
From: |
David Kelly |
Subject: |
Re: [avr-gcc-list] makefile for ubuntu |
Date: |
Thu, 13 Oct 2005 22:04:31 -0500 |
On Oct 13, 2005, at 9:02 PM, Patrick Blanchard wrote:
On Thu, 2005-10-13 at 20:10 -0500, David Kelly wrote:
You lost me in "linux tooling process".
I have yet to find 2 linux boxes 'tooled' the same way.
Agreed. Thats no small part of the reason I Don't Do Linux. No point
in putting up with that headache when there are solutions which are
cheaper and better.
The Makefile I sent to Vincent
which was reposted here yesterday works unchanged on WinAVR, FreeBSD,
and undoubtedly on Vincent's Linux.
It will probably work, but only until Vincent tries it on his own
linux
box (which is different from my linux box(es)) will he be undoubtedly
certain that it works or not. And if it doesn't work, it might get him
so frustrated that he gives up linux for good.
No, Vincent posted his own slightly revised version. It did exactly
the opposite of what you suggest. Where originally he was searching
for an IDE to magically "handle it", else write a script to handle
the repetitive build steps, a simple yet full featured Makefile made
a convert of him.
I couldn't write an advanced makefile like you did.
Sure you could. Read the Makefile Vincent posted, its very top-to-
bottom and straightforward. Its nothing compared to those used to
build FreeBSD and/or FreeBSD ports.
Some comments:
This line mostly came from one of Joerg's Makefiles. The big change
is that eeprom skips the first address and starts at 0x0001.
LDFLAGS= -Wl,-Map,address@hidden -Wl,--section-start=.eeprom=00810001
This is something that aids when cross compiling. A blank .SUFFIXES:
line erases Make's default suffixes list. Listing suffixes appends to
the existing list:
.SUFFIXES:
.SUFFIXES: .c .o .bin .elf .hex .srec .cof .list
Use the macros $(CC) and $(CFLAGS) to turn .c's into .o's:
.c.o:
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c $<
Pretty much the same as above but in GNU Make syntax. Turns .elf's
into _flash.hex's:
%_flash.hex: %.elf
avr-objcopy -j .text -j .data -O ihex $< $@
We previously defined a list of source files in $(SRCS). This
substitutes .o for .c and makes a list of $(OBJS):
OBJS = $(SRCS:.c=.o)
This is the first target for Make. Says that "all" needs the listed
files. Just make sure a file named "all" doesn't exist because if it
does then nothing will happen if all is newer than the listed files
and the files the listed files depend on:
all: object.elf object.list object_flash.hex object_eeprom.hex
Above "all:" needs object.elf. So here is an object.elf target saying
it depends on $(OBJS). And if something in $(OBJS) is newer then do
the following 2 lines:
object.elf: $(OBJS)
$(CC) -o $@ $(CFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) $(OBJS) $(LDLIBS)
avr-size $@
This is the part I had the most trouble with. The target "depend:"
will invoke gcc in a special way that gcc writes to stdout in
Makefile format the target files and all included files used to
compile the target.
You could manually tell make that main.o depends on myintdefs.h,
myglobals.h, ... or you can let gcc figure that out for you:
# BSD make automatically reads .depend if it exists
depend: clean $(SRCS)
$(CC) -E -M $(SRCS) > .depend
In BSD make the following include is implied. BSD make will silently
include a .depend file if one is found. GNU make will not. But the
problem is that if .depend does not exist then "include .depend" will
cause a fatal abort preventing one from doing "make depend" to
create .depend. Catch-22. Then I learned of "-include" which will
fail silently and non-fatally if the specified file does not exist.
The irony of the situation is that this breaks BSD Make. "-include"
is not accepted in BSD. So having broke BSD make I later added the "%
_flash.hex: %.elf" stuff above which is also totally non-BSD. I have
GNU Make installed as gmake on my BSD system.
A .depend file isn't really necessary. Its just a Very Nice Thing To
Have. Makes it easy to edit a .h file and have the correct files
rebuilt rather than "make clean" && "make all" to brute force build.
But the above goes even deeper, it lists all of the required *system*
includes, recursively, down the the last one. Update avr-libc and
Make will notice.
# -include fails silently in GNU Make if .depend does not exist
# OTOH -include is not BSD Make compatible.
-include .depend
Other than the lack of GNU Make on default BSD machines there isn't
one thing above preventing the Makefile from working perfectly on
Linux, WinAVR, FreeBSD, or MacOS.
--
David Kelly N4HHE, address@hidden
========================================================================
Whom computers would destroy, they must first drive mad.