问题
Swiften is a XMPP client library and my objective was to build it for a ARM-embedded target running Linux.
I hacked my way to a successful cross-compile with little knowledge of SCons. I'll lay out my hack here with the hope that someone can point me to a maintainable solution using the two makery files, SConscript.boot
and SConstruct
.
I had two tasks (neither accomplished satisfactorily):
- Successfully switching the tool-chain from native-compile to cross-compile
- Ensuring that OpenSSL libraries were successfully linked (not supplied by the swiftim project; they has to be installed and built in the
3rdParty
folder).
Switching the tool-chain from native-compile to cross-compile for ARM
My ARM cross tool-chain components, gcc, g++, ld, etc are located here.
/opt/toolchain/gcc-linaro-arm-linux-gnueabihf-4.7-2013.01-20130125_linux/arm-linux-gnueabihf/bin/
I couldn't find a way to tell scons
to use the cross tool-chain (from the above location) instead of the native tool (in the usual place, /usr/bin
). Prefacing the invocation (./scons Swiften
) with the fully-qualified values for the environment variables, CC and CXX didn't work (while not recommended, its alluded to in one place).
Scons would only pick up the native tool-chain even after many ad hoc changes to the makery.
So, as a hack, I had to change the native tool-chain to point to the cross tool-chain.
/usr/bin/gcc -> /opt/toolchain/gcc-linaro-arm-linux-gnueabihf-4.7-2013.01-20130125_linux/bin/arm-linux-gnueabihf-gcc-4.7.3*
/usr/bin/g++ -> /opt/toolchain/gcc-linaro-arm-linux-gnueabihf-4.7-2013.01-20130125_linux/bin/arm-linux-gnueabihf-g++*
The first compile-break for ARM was fixed by adding the line below to the default portion of the build script, SConscript.boot
.
env.Append(CPPDEFINES = ["_LITTLE_ENDIAN"])
The next compile-break has to do with the OpenSSL header files not being found. To fix the location issue, I had to introduce the line below into SConscript.boot
vars.Add(PackageVariable("openssl", "OpenSSL location", "/home/auro-tripathy/swiftim/swift/3rdParty/OpenSSL/openssl-1.0.1c/"))
Linking with OpenSSL
For the sample Switften programs to link with the OpenSSL libraries, I had to move libssl.a
and libcrypto.a
(built separately) from the location they were built to the toolchain library-location like so.
mv ~/swiftim/swift/3rdParty/OpenSSL/openssl-1.0.1c/libcrypto.a /opt/toolchain/gcc-linaro-arm-linux-gnueabihf-4.7-2013.01-20130125_linux/lib/gcc/arm-linux-gnueabihf/4.7.3/.
Help
Not understanding of the working of scons, I've made some hacks to get it to work.
I’d like some help to:
- Introduce a new target called ARM-embedded, just like other targets; iPhone, android, etc
- Clean way to integrate OpenSSL into the build .
Update Per dirkbaechle, retried the script below and it works
export CC=/opt/toolchain/gcc-linaro-arm-linux-gnueabihf-4.7-2013.01-20130125_linux/arm-linux-gnueabihf/bin/gcc
export CXX=/opt/toolchain/gcc-linaro-arm-linux-gnueabihf-4.7-2013.01-20130125_linux/arm-linux-gnueabihf/bin/g++
./scons Swiften
回答1:
Brady's answer is correct, regarding how you'd do it in plain SCons. I'd just like to mention that the top-level SConstruct of Swiften already provides arguments like "cc=
" and "cxx=
" for using local toolchains.
You might want to inspect the ouput of scons -h
for a complete list of available options.
In addition, the SConscript for the OpenSSL build expects the sources to be located in the relative folder named "openssl
", not "openssl-1.0.1c
" as in your case. Maybe that's where your build problems are mainly coming from.
回答2:
I left a comment above regarding the cross-compilation. Its already been answered in the link provided, but basically you just need to set the appropriate construction variables: CC, CXX, LINK, etc.
As for a "Clean way to integrate OpenSSL into the build" this can be performed simply by adding library and include paths appropriately as follows replacing the quoted values appropriately: (without having to copy/move the original files)
# This sets the location of the OpenSSL Include paths
env.Append(CPPPATH="path/to/openssl/includes")
# This sets the location of the OpenSSL Libraries
env.Append(LIBPATH="path/to/openssl/libraries")
# These are the OpenSSL libraries to be linked into the binary
env.Append(LIBS=["OpenSSL_lib", "OpenSSL_lib2"])
回答3:
The choice of compiler, and additional flags, can all be set in Swift's config.py file. A snippet from config.py using a custom compiler and flags is below (the one I use on one of my dev boxes):
cc = link = "/usr/local/llvm-git/bin/clang"
cxx = "/usr/local/llvm-git/bin/clang++"
bothflags = " -std=c++11 -stdlib=libc++ -nostdinc++"
cxxflags = bothflags + " -I/usr/local/libcxx/include -Wno-deprecated"
linkflags = bothflags + " -L/usr/local/libcxx/lib"
This should work for cross-compiling in the same manner.
To use a bundled openssl, you should just be able to extract into 3rdParty/OpenSSL, and add openssl_force_bundled = True
to your config.py. You should not need to fiddle with setting include paths to this yourself. It's conceivable that this is tied to a particular openssl release as I've not compiled a bundled openssl since 1.0.0a, but if it doesn't work with the current version it's probably a bug that ought to be fixed. You could also cross-compile openssl yourself and use openssl='/path/to/openssl'
, but that's a little more of a nuisance for you.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/24112641/cross-compiling-swiften-library-for-arm-embedded-with-scons-makery