u-boot/config.mk

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2002-11-02 23:30:20 +00:00
#
Licenses: introduce SPDX Unique Lincense Identifiers Like many other projects, U-Boot has a tradition of including big blocks of License headers in all files. This not only blows up the source code with mostly redundant information, but also makes it very difficult to generate License Clearing Reports. An additional problem is that even the same lincenses are referred to by a number of slightly varying text blocks (full, abbreviated, different indentation, line wrapping and/or white space, with obsolete address information, ...) which makes automatic processing a nightmare. To make this easier, such license headers in the source files will be replaced with a single line reference to Unique Lincense Identifiers as defined by the Linux Foundation's SPDX project [1]. For example, in a source file the full "GPL v2.0 or later" header text will be replaced by a single line: SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ We use the SPDX Unique Lincense Identifiers here; these are available at [2]. Note: From the legal point of view, this patch is supposed to be only a change to the textual representation of the license information, but in no way any change to the actual license terms. With this patch applied, all files will still be licensed under the same terms they were before. Note 2: The apparent difference between the old "COPYING" and the new "Licenses/gpl-2.0.txt" only results from switching to the upstream version of the license which is differently formatted; there are not any actual changes to the content. Note 3: There are some recurring questions about linense issues, such as: - Is a "All Rights Reserved" clause a problem in GPL code? - Are files without any license header a problem? - Do we need license headers at all? The following excerpt from an e-mail by Daniel B. Ravicher should help with these: | Message-ID: <4ADF8CAA.5030808@softwarefreedom.org> | Date: Wed, 21 Oct 2009 18:35:22 -0400 | From: "Daniel B. Ravicher" <ravicher@softwarefreedom.org> | To: Wolfgang Denk <wd@denx.de> | Subject: Re: GPL and license cleanup questions | | Mr. Denk, | | Wolfgang Denk wrote: | > - There are a number of files which do not include any specific | > license information at all. Is it correct to assume that these files | > are automatically covered by the "GPL v2 or later" clause as | > specified by the COPYING file in the top level directory of the | > U-Boot source tree? | | That is a very fact specific analysis and could be different across the | various files. However, if the contributor could reasonably be expected | to have known that the project was licensed GPLv2 or later at the time | she made her contribution, then a reasonably implication is that she | consented to her contributions being distributed under those terms. | | > - Do such files need any clean up, for example should we add GPL | > headers to them, or is this not needed? | | If the project as a whole is licensed under clear terms, you need not | identify those same terms in each file, although there is no harm in | doing so. | | > - There are other files, which include both a GPL license header | > _plus_ some copyright note with an "All Rights Reserved" clause. It | > has been my understanding that this is a conflict, and me must ask | > the copyright holders to remove such "All Rights Reserved" clauses. | > But then, some people claim that "All Rights Reserved" is a no-op | > nowadays. License checking tools (like OSLC) seem to indicate this is | > a problem, but then we see quite a lot of "All rights reserved" in | > BSD-licensed files in gcc and glibc. So what is the correct way to | > deal with such files? | | It is not a conflict to grant a license and also reserve all rights, as | implicit in that language is that you are reserving all "other" rights | not granted in the license. Thus, a file with "Licensed under GPL, All | Rights Reserved" would mean that it is licensed under the GPL, but no | other rights are given to copy, modify or redistribute it. | | Warm regards, | --Dan | | Daniel B. Ravicher, Legal Director | Software Freedom Law Center (SFLC) and Moglen Ravicher LLC | 1995 Broadway, 17th Fl., New York, NY 10023 | (212) 461-1902 direct (212) 580-0800 main (212) 580-0898 fax | ravicher@softwarefreedom.org www.softwarefreedom.org [1] http://spdx.org/ [2] http://spdx.org/licenses/ Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Denk <wd@denx.de>
2013-06-21 08:22:36 +00:00
# (C) Copyright 2000-2013
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# Wolfgang Denk, DENX Software Engineering, wd@denx.de.
#
Licenses: introduce SPDX Unique Lincense Identifiers Like many other projects, U-Boot has a tradition of including big blocks of License headers in all files. This not only blows up the source code with mostly redundant information, but also makes it very difficult to generate License Clearing Reports. An additional problem is that even the same lincenses are referred to by a number of slightly varying text blocks (full, abbreviated, different indentation, line wrapping and/or white space, with obsolete address information, ...) which makes automatic processing a nightmare. To make this easier, such license headers in the source files will be replaced with a single line reference to Unique Lincense Identifiers as defined by the Linux Foundation's SPDX project [1]. For example, in a source file the full "GPL v2.0 or later" header text will be replaced by a single line: SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ We use the SPDX Unique Lincense Identifiers here; these are available at [2]. Note: From the legal point of view, this patch is supposed to be only a change to the textual representation of the license information, but in no way any change to the actual license terms. With this patch applied, all files will still be licensed under the same terms they were before. Note 2: The apparent difference between the old "COPYING" and the new "Licenses/gpl-2.0.txt" only results from switching to the upstream version of the license which is differently formatted; there are not any actual changes to the content. Note 3: There are some recurring questions about linense issues, such as: - Is a "All Rights Reserved" clause a problem in GPL code? - Are files without any license header a problem? - Do we need license headers at all? The following excerpt from an e-mail by Daniel B. Ravicher should help with these: | Message-ID: <4ADF8CAA.5030808@softwarefreedom.org> | Date: Wed, 21 Oct 2009 18:35:22 -0400 | From: "Daniel B. Ravicher" <ravicher@softwarefreedom.org> | To: Wolfgang Denk <wd@denx.de> | Subject: Re: GPL and license cleanup questions | | Mr. Denk, | | Wolfgang Denk wrote: | > - There are a number of files which do not include any specific | > license information at all. Is it correct to assume that these files | > are automatically covered by the "GPL v2 or later" clause as | > specified by the COPYING file in the top level directory of the | > U-Boot source tree? | | That is a very fact specific analysis and could be different across the | various files. However, if the contributor could reasonably be expected | to have known that the project was licensed GPLv2 or later at the time | she made her contribution, then a reasonably implication is that she | consented to her contributions being distributed under those terms. | | > - Do such files need any clean up, for example should we add GPL | > headers to them, or is this not needed? | | If the project as a whole is licensed under clear terms, you need not | identify those same terms in each file, although there is no harm in | doing so. | | > - There are other files, which include both a GPL license header | > _plus_ some copyright note with an "All Rights Reserved" clause. It | > has been my understanding that this is a conflict, and me must ask | > the copyright holders to remove such "All Rights Reserved" clauses. | > But then, some people claim that "All Rights Reserved" is a no-op | > nowadays. License checking tools (like OSLC) seem to indicate this is | > a problem, but then we see quite a lot of "All rights reserved" in | > BSD-licensed files in gcc and glibc. So what is the correct way to | > deal with such files? | | It is not a conflict to grant a license and also reserve all rights, as | implicit in that language is that you are reserving all "other" rights | not granted in the license. Thus, a file with "Licensed under GPL, All | Rights Reserved" would mean that it is licensed under the GPL, but no | other rights are given to copy, modify or redistribute it. | | Warm regards, | --Dan | | Daniel B. Ravicher, Legal Director | Software Freedom Law Center (SFLC) and Moglen Ravicher LLC | 1995 Broadway, 17th Fl., New York, NY 10023 | (212) 461-1902 direct (212) 580-0800 main (212) 580-0898 fax | ravicher@softwarefreedom.org www.softwarefreedom.org [1] http://spdx.org/ [2] http://spdx.org/licenses/ Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Denk <wd@denx.de>
2013-06-21 08:22:36 +00:00
# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+
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#
#########################################################################
# Set shell to bash if possible, otherwise fall back to sh
SHELL := $(shell if [ -x "$$BASH" ]; then echo $$BASH; \
else if [ -x /bin/bash ]; then echo /bin/bash; \
else echo sh; fi; fi)
export SHELL
ifeq ($(CURDIR),$(SRCTREE))
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dir :=
else
dir := $(subst $(SRCTREE)/,,$(CURDIR))
endif
ifneq ($(OBJTREE),$(SRCTREE))
# Create object files for SPL in a separate directory
ifeq ($(CONFIG_SPL_BUILD),y)
ifeq ($(CONFIG_TPL_BUILD),y)
obj := $(if $(dir),$(TPLTREE)/$(dir)/,$(TPLTREE)/)
else
obj := $(if $(dir),$(SPLTREE)/$(dir)/,$(SPLTREE)/)
endif
else
obj := $(if $(dir),$(OBJTREE)/$(dir)/,$(OBJTREE)/)
endif
src := $(if $(dir),$(SRCTREE)/$(dir)/,$(SRCTREE)/)
$(shell mkdir -p $(obj))
else
# Create object files for SPL in a separate directory
ifeq ($(CONFIG_SPL_BUILD),y)
ifeq ($(CONFIG_TPL_BUILD),y)
obj := $(if $(dir),$(TPLTREE)/$(dir)/,$(TPLTREE)/)
else
obj := $(if $(dir),$(SPLTREE)/$(dir)/,$(SPLTREE)/)
endif
$(shell mkdir -p $(obj))
else
obj :=
endif
src :=
endif
# clean the slate ...
PLATFORM_RELFLAGS =
PLATFORM_CPPFLAGS =
PLATFORM_LDFLAGS =
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#########################################################################
makefiles: fixes for building build tools Currently, some of the tools instead set CC to be HOSTCC in order to re-use some pattern rules -- but this fails when the user overrides CC on the make command line. Also, the HOSTCFLAGS in tools/Makefile are currently not being used because config.mk overwrites them. This patch adds static pattern rules for files that have been requested to be built with the native compiler using $(HOSTSRCS) and $(HOSTOBJS), and converts the tools to use them. It restores easylogo to using the host compiler, which was broken by commit 38d299c2db81bd889c601b5dfc12c4e83ef83333 (if this was an intentional change, please let me know -- but it seems to be a build tool). It restores -pedantic and the special flags for darwin and cygwin that were requested in tools/makefile (but keeps the flags added by config.mk) -- hopefully someone can test this on those platforms. It no longer conditionalizes -pedantic on not being darwin; it wasn't clear that that was intentional, and unless there's a real problem it's just inviting people to contribute non-pedantic patches to those files (I'm not a fan of -pedantic personally, but if it's on for one platform it should be on for all). HOST_LDFLAGS is renamed HOSTLDFLAGS for consistency with the previous HOST_CFLAGS to HOSTCFLAGS rename. A new HOSTCFLAGS_NOPED is made available for those files which currently cannot be built with -pedantic, and replaces the old FIT_CFLAGS. imls now uses the cross compiler properly, rather than by trying to reconstruct CC using the typoed $(CROSS_COMPILER). envcrc.c is now dependency-processed unconditionally -- previously it would be built without being on (HOST)SRCS if CONFIG_ENV_IS_EMBEDDED was not selected. Signed-off-by: Scott Wood <scottwood@freescale.com>
2009-11-05 00:41:41 +00:00
HOSTCFLAGS = -Wall -Wstrict-prototypes -O2 -fomit-frame-pointer \
$(HOSTCPPFLAGS)
HOSTSTRIP = strip
#
# Mac OS X / Darwin's C preprocessor is Apple specific. It
# generates numerous errors and warnings. We want to bypass it
# and use GNU C's cpp. To do this we pass the -traditional-cpp
makefiles: fixes for building build tools Currently, some of the tools instead set CC to be HOSTCC in order to re-use some pattern rules -- but this fails when the user overrides CC on the make command line. Also, the HOSTCFLAGS in tools/Makefile are currently not being used because config.mk overwrites them. This patch adds static pattern rules for files that have been requested to be built with the native compiler using $(HOSTSRCS) and $(HOSTOBJS), and converts the tools to use them. It restores easylogo to using the host compiler, which was broken by commit 38d299c2db81bd889c601b5dfc12c4e83ef83333 (if this was an intentional change, please let me know -- but it seems to be a build tool). It restores -pedantic and the special flags for darwin and cygwin that were requested in tools/makefile (but keeps the flags added by config.mk) -- hopefully someone can test this on those platforms. It no longer conditionalizes -pedantic on not being darwin; it wasn't clear that that was intentional, and unless there's a real problem it's just inviting people to contribute non-pedantic patches to those files (I'm not a fan of -pedantic personally, but if it's on for one platform it should be on for all). HOST_LDFLAGS is renamed HOSTLDFLAGS for consistency with the previous HOST_CFLAGS to HOSTCFLAGS rename. A new HOSTCFLAGS_NOPED is made available for those files which currently cannot be built with -pedantic, and replaces the old FIT_CFLAGS. imls now uses the cross compiler properly, rather than by trying to reconstruct CC using the typoed $(CROSS_COMPILER). envcrc.c is now dependency-processed unconditionally -- previously it would be built without being on (HOST)SRCS if CONFIG_ENV_IS_EMBEDDED was not selected. Signed-off-by: Scott Wood <scottwood@freescale.com>
2009-11-05 00:41:41 +00:00
# option to the compiler. Note that the -traditional-cpp flag
# DOES NOT have the same semantics as GNU C's flag, all it does
# is invoke the GNU preprocessor in stock ANSI/ISO C fashion.
#
# Apple's linker is similar, thanks to the new 2 stage linking
# multiple symbol definitions are treated as errors, hence the
# -multiply_defined suppress option to turn off this error.
#
ifeq ($(HOSTOS),darwin)
# get major and minor product version (e.g. '10' and '6' for Snow Leopard)
DARWIN_MAJOR_VERSION = $(shell sw_vers -productVersion | cut -f 1 -d '.')
DARWIN_MINOR_VERSION = $(shell sw_vers -productVersion | cut -f 2 -d '.')
os_x_before = $(shell if [ $(DARWIN_MAJOR_VERSION) -le $(1) -a \
$(DARWIN_MINOR_VERSION) -le $(2) ] ; then echo "$(3)"; else echo "$(4)"; fi ;)
# Snow Leopards build environment has no longer restrictions as described above
HOSTCC = $(call os_x_before, 10, 5, "cc", "gcc")
HOSTCFLAGS += $(call os_x_before, 10, 4, "-traditional-cpp")
HOSTLDFLAGS += $(call os_x_before, 10, 5, "-multiply_defined suppress")
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else
HOSTCC = gcc
endif
makefiles: fixes for building build tools Currently, some of the tools instead set CC to be HOSTCC in order to re-use some pattern rules -- but this fails when the user overrides CC on the make command line. Also, the HOSTCFLAGS in tools/Makefile are currently not being used because config.mk overwrites them. This patch adds static pattern rules for files that have been requested to be built with the native compiler using $(HOSTSRCS) and $(HOSTOBJS), and converts the tools to use them. It restores easylogo to using the host compiler, which was broken by commit 38d299c2db81bd889c601b5dfc12c4e83ef83333 (if this was an intentional change, please let me know -- but it seems to be a build tool). It restores -pedantic and the special flags for darwin and cygwin that were requested in tools/makefile (but keeps the flags added by config.mk) -- hopefully someone can test this on those platforms. It no longer conditionalizes -pedantic on not being darwin; it wasn't clear that that was intentional, and unless there's a real problem it's just inviting people to contribute non-pedantic patches to those files (I'm not a fan of -pedantic personally, but if it's on for one platform it should be on for all). HOST_LDFLAGS is renamed HOSTLDFLAGS for consistency with the previous HOST_CFLAGS to HOSTCFLAGS rename. A new HOSTCFLAGS_NOPED is made available for those files which currently cannot be built with -pedantic, and replaces the old FIT_CFLAGS. imls now uses the cross compiler properly, rather than by trying to reconstruct CC using the typoed $(CROSS_COMPILER). envcrc.c is now dependency-processed unconditionally -- previously it would be built without being on (HOST)SRCS if CONFIG_ENV_IS_EMBEDDED was not selected. Signed-off-by: Scott Wood <scottwood@freescale.com>
2009-11-05 00:41:41 +00:00
ifeq ($(HOSTOS),cygwin)
HOSTCFLAGS += -ansi
endif
# We build some files with extra pedantic flags to try to minimize things
# that won't build on some weird host compiler -- though there are lots of
# exceptions for files that aren't complaint.
HOSTCFLAGS_NOPED = $(filter-out -pedantic,$(HOSTCFLAGS))
HOSTCFLAGS += -pedantic
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#########################################################################
#
# Option checker, gcc version (courtesy linux kernel) to ensure
# only supported compiler options are used
#
CC_OPTIONS_CACHE_FILE := $(OBJTREE)/include/generated/cc_options.mk
CC_TEST_OFILE := $(OBJTREE)/include/generated/cc_test_file.o
-include $(CC_OPTIONS_CACHE_FILE)
cc-option-sys = $(shell mkdir -p $(dir $(CC_TEST_OFILE)); \
if $(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(1) -S -xc /dev/null -o $(CC_TEST_OFILE) \
> /dev/null 2>&1; then \
echo 'CC_OPTIONS += $(strip $1)' >> $(CC_OPTIONS_CACHE_FILE); \
echo "$(1)"; fi)
ifeq ($(CONFIG_CC_OPT_CACHE_DISABLE),y)
cc-option = $(strip $(if $(call cc-option-sys,$1),$1,$2))
else
cc-option = $(strip $(if $(findstring $1,$(CC_OPTIONS)),$1,\
$(if $(call cc-option-sys,$1),$1,$2)))
endif
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# cc-version
# Usage gcc-ver := $(call cc-version)
cc-version = $(shell $(SHELL) $(SRCTREE)/scripts/gcc-version.sh $(CC))
binutils-version = $(shell $(SHELL) $(SRCTREE)/scripts/binutils-version.sh $(AS))
dtc-version = $(shell $(SHELL) $(SRCTREE)/scripts/dtc-version.sh $(DTC))
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#
# Include the make variables (CC, etc...)
#
AS = $(CROSS_COMPILE)as
# Always use GNU ld
LD = $(shell if $(CROSS_COMPILE)ld.bfd -v > /dev/null 2>&1; \
then echo "$(CROSS_COMPILE)ld.bfd"; else echo "$(CROSS_COMPILE)ld"; fi;)
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CC = $(CROSS_COMPILE)gcc
CPP = $(CC) -E
AR = $(CROSS_COMPILE)ar
NM = $(CROSS_COMPILE)nm
LDR = $(CROSS_COMPILE)ldr
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STRIP = $(CROSS_COMPILE)strip
OBJCOPY = $(CROSS_COMPILE)objcopy
OBJDUMP = $(CROSS_COMPILE)objdump
RANLIB = $(CROSS_COMPILE)RANLIB
DTC = dtc
CHECK = sparse
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#########################################################################
# Load generated board configuration
ifeq ($(CONFIG_TPL_BUILD),y)
# Include TPL autoconf
sinclude $(OBJTREE)/include/tpl-autoconf.mk
else
ifeq ($(CONFIG_SPL_BUILD),y)
# Include SPL autoconf
sinclude $(OBJTREE)/include/spl-autoconf.mk
else
# Include normal autoconf
sinclude $(OBJTREE)/include/autoconf.mk
endif
endif
sinclude $(OBJTREE)/include/config.mk
# Some architecture config.mk files need to know what CPUDIR is set to,
# so calculate CPUDIR before including ARCH/SOC/CPU config.mk files.
# Check if arch/$ARCH/cpu/$CPU exists, otherwise assume arch/$ARCH/cpu contains
# CPU-specific code.
CPUDIR=arch/$(ARCH)/cpu/$(CPU)
ifneq ($(SRCTREE)/$(CPUDIR),$(wildcard $(SRCTREE)/$(CPUDIR)))
CPUDIR=arch/$(ARCH)/cpu
endif
sinclude $(TOPDIR)/arch/$(ARCH)/config.mk # include architecture dependend rules
sinclude $(TOPDIR)/$(CPUDIR)/config.mk # include CPU specific rules
ifdef SOC
sinclude $(TOPDIR)/$(CPUDIR)/$(SOC)/config.mk # include SoC specific rules
endif
ifdef VENDOR
BOARDDIR = $(VENDOR)/$(BOARD)
else
BOARDDIR = $(BOARD)
endif
ifdef BOARD
sinclude $(TOPDIR)/board/$(BOARDDIR)/config.mk # include board specific rules
endif
#########################################################################
# We don't actually use $(ARFLAGS) anywhere anymore, so catch people
# who are porting old code to latest mainline but not updating $(AR).
ARFLAGS = $(error update your Makefile to use cmd_link_o_target and not AR)
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RELFLAGS= $(PLATFORM_RELFLAGS)
DBGFLAGS= -g # -DDEBUG
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OPTFLAGS= -Os #-fomit-frame-pointer
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Patches by Murray Jensen, 17 Jun 2003: - Hymod board database mods: add "who" field and new xilinx chip types - provide new "init_cmd_timeout()" function so code external to "common/main.c" can use the "reset_cmd_timeout()" function before entering the main loop - add DTT support for adm1021 (new file dtt/adm1021.c; config slightly different. see include/configs/hymod.h for an example (requires CONFIG_DTT_ADM1021, CONFIG_DTT_SENSORS, and CFG_DTT_ADM1021 defined) - add new "eeprom_probe()" function which has similar args and behaves in a similar way to "eeprom_read()" etc. - add 8260 FCC ethernet loopback code (new "eth_loopback_test()" function which is enabled by defining CONFIG_ETHER_LOOPBACK_TEST) - gdbtools copyright update - ensure that set_msr() executes the "sync" and "isync" instructions after the "mtmsr" instruction in cpu/mpc8260/interrupts.c - 8260 I/O ports fix: Open Drain should be set last when configuring - add SIU IRQ defines for 8260 - allow LDSCRIPT override and OBJCFLAGS initialization: change to config.mk to allow board configurations to override the GNU linker script, selected via the LDSCRIPT, make variable, and to give an initial value to the OBJCFLAGS make variable - 8260 i2c enhancement: o correctly extends the timeout depending on the size of all queued messages for both transmit and receive o will not continue with receive if transmit times out o ensures that the error callback is done for all queued tx and rx messages o correctly detects both tx and rx timeouts, only delivers one to the callback, and does not overwrite an earlier error o logic in i2c_probe now correct - add "vprintf()" function so that "panic()" function can be technically correct - many Hymod board changes
2003-06-19 23:40:20 +00:00
OBJCFLAGS += --gap-fill=0xff
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gccincdir := $(shell $(CC) -print-file-name=include)
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CPPFLAGS := $(DBGFLAGS) $(OPTFLAGS) $(RELFLAGS) \
-D__KERNEL__
# Enable garbage collection of un-used sections for SPL
ifeq ($(CONFIG_SPL_BUILD),y)
CPPFLAGS += -ffunction-sections -fdata-sections
LDFLAGS_FINAL += --gc-sections
endif
# TODO(sjg@chromium.org): Is this correct on Mac OS?
# MXSImage needs LibSSL
ifneq ($(CONFIG_MX23)$(CONFIG_MX28),)
HOSTLIBS += -lssl -lcrypto
# Add CONFIG_MXS into host CFLAGS, so we can check whether or not register
# the mxsimage support within tools/mxsimage.c .
HOSTCFLAGS += -DCONFIG_MXS
endif
ifdef CONFIG_FIT_SIGNATURE
HOSTLIBS += -lssl -lcrypto
# This affects include/image.h, but including the board config file
# is tricky, so manually define this options here.
HOSTCFLAGS += -DCONFIG_FIT_SIGNATURE
endif
ifneq ($(CONFIG_SYS_TEXT_BASE),)
CPPFLAGS += -DCONFIG_SYS_TEXT_BASE=$(CONFIG_SYS_TEXT_BASE)
endif
ifeq ($(CONFIG_SPL_BUILD),y)
CPPFLAGS += -DCONFIG_SPL_BUILD
ifeq ($(CONFIG_TPL_BUILD),y)
CPPFLAGS += -DCONFIG_TPL_BUILD
endif
endif
# Does this architecture support generic board init?
ifeq ($(__HAVE_ARCH_GENERIC_BOARD),)
ifneq ($(CONFIG_SYS_GENERIC_BOARD),)
CHECK_GENERIC_BOARD = $(error Your architecture does not support generic board. \
Please undefined CONFIG_SYS_GENERIC_BOARD in your board config file)
endif
endif
# Sandbox needs the base flags and includes, so keep them around
BASE_CPPFLAGS := $(CPPFLAGS)
ifneq ($(OBJTREE),$(SRCTREE))
BASE_INCLUDE_DIRS := $(OBJTREE)/include
endif
BASE_INCLUDE_DIRS += $(TOPDIR)/include $(SRCTREE)/arch/$(ARCH)/include
CPPFLAGS += $(patsubst %, -I%, $(BASE_INCLUDE_DIRS))
CPPFLAGS += -fno-builtin -ffreestanding -nostdinc \
-isystem $(gccincdir) -pipe $(PLATFORM_CPPFLAGS)
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CFLAGS := $(CPPFLAGS) -Wall -Wstrict-prototypes
ifdef BUILD_TAG
CFLAGS += -DBUILD_TAG='"$(BUILD_TAG)"'
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endif
CFLAGS_SSP := $(call cc-option,-fno-stack-protector)
CFLAGS += $(CFLAGS_SSP)
# Some toolchains enable security related warning flags by default,
# but they don't make much sense in the u-boot world, so disable them.
CFLAGS_WARN := $(call cc-option,-Wno-format-nonliteral) \
$(call cc-option,-Wno-format-security)
CFLAGS += $(CFLAGS_WARN)
# Report stack usage if supported
CFLAGS_STACK := $(call cc-option,-fstack-usage)
CFLAGS += $(CFLAGS_STACK)
BCURDIR = $(subst $(SRCTREE)/,,$(CURDIR:$(obj)%=%))
ifeq ($(findstring examples/,$(BCURDIR)),)
ifeq ($(CONFIG_SPL_BUILD),)
ifdef FTRACE
CFLAGS += -finstrument-functions -DFTRACE
endif
endif
endif
# $(CPPFLAGS) sets -g, which causes gcc to pass a suitable -g<format>
# option to the assembler.
AFLAGS_DEBUG :=
# turn jbsr into jsr for m68k
ifeq ($(ARCH),m68k)
ifeq ($(findstring 3.4,$(shell $(CC) --version)),3.4)
AFLAGS_DEBUG := -Wa,-gstabs,-S
endif
endif
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AFLAGS := $(AFLAGS_DEBUG) -D__ASSEMBLY__ $(CPPFLAGS)
LDFLAGS += $(PLATFORM_LDFLAGS)
LDFLAGS_FINAL += -Bstatic
LDFLAGS_u-boot += -T $(obj)u-boot.lds $(LDFLAGS_FINAL)
ifneq ($(CONFIG_SYS_TEXT_BASE),)
LDFLAGS_u-boot += -Ttext $(CONFIG_SYS_TEXT_BASE)
endif
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LDFLAGS_$(SPL_BIN) += -T $(obj)u-boot-spl.lds $(LDFLAGS_FINAL)
ifneq ($(CONFIG_SPL_TEXT_BASE),)
LDFLAGS_$(SPL_BIN) += -Ttext $(CONFIG_SPL_TEXT_BASE)
endif
# Linus' kernel sanity checking tool
CHECKFLAGS := -D__linux__ -Dlinux -D__STDC__ -Dunix -D__unix__ \
-Wbitwise -Wno-return-void -D__CHECK_ENDIAN__ $(CF)
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# Location of a usable BFD library, where we define "usable" as
# "built for ${HOST}, supports ${TARGET}". Sensible values are
# - When cross-compiling: the root of the cross-environment
# - Linux/ppc (native): /usr
# - NetBSD/ppc (native): you lose ... (must extract these from the
# binutils build directory, plus the native and U-Boot include
# files don't like each other)
#
# So far, this is used only by tools/gdb/Makefile.
ifeq ($(HOSTOS),darwin)
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BFD_ROOT_DIR = /usr/local/tools
else
ifeq ($(HOSTARCH),$(ARCH))
# native
BFD_ROOT_DIR = /usr
else
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#BFD_ROOT_DIR = /LinuxPPC/CDK # Linux/i386
#BFD_ROOT_DIR = /usr/pkg/cross # NetBSD/i386
BFD_ROOT_DIR = /opt/powerpc
endif
endif
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makefiles: fixes for building build tools Currently, some of the tools instead set CC to be HOSTCC in order to re-use some pattern rules -- but this fails when the user overrides CC on the make command line. Also, the HOSTCFLAGS in tools/Makefile are currently not being used because config.mk overwrites them. This patch adds static pattern rules for files that have been requested to be built with the native compiler using $(HOSTSRCS) and $(HOSTOBJS), and converts the tools to use them. It restores easylogo to using the host compiler, which was broken by commit 38d299c2db81bd889c601b5dfc12c4e83ef83333 (if this was an intentional change, please let me know -- but it seems to be a build tool). It restores -pedantic and the special flags for darwin and cygwin that were requested in tools/makefile (but keeps the flags added by config.mk) -- hopefully someone can test this on those platforms. It no longer conditionalizes -pedantic on not being darwin; it wasn't clear that that was intentional, and unless there's a real problem it's just inviting people to contribute non-pedantic patches to those files (I'm not a fan of -pedantic personally, but if it's on for one platform it should be on for all). HOST_LDFLAGS is renamed HOSTLDFLAGS for consistency with the previous HOST_CFLAGS to HOSTCFLAGS rename. A new HOSTCFLAGS_NOPED is made available for those files which currently cannot be built with -pedantic, and replaces the old FIT_CFLAGS. imls now uses the cross compiler properly, rather than by trying to reconstruct CC using the typoed $(CROSS_COMPILER). envcrc.c is now dependency-processed unconditionally -- previously it would be built without being on (HOST)SRCS if CONFIG_ENV_IS_EMBEDDED was not selected. Signed-off-by: Scott Wood <scottwood@freescale.com>
2009-11-05 00:41:41 +00:00
export HOSTCC HOSTCFLAGS HOSTLDFLAGS PEDCFLAGS HOSTSTRIP CROSS_COMPILE \
AS LD CC CPP AR NM STRIP OBJCOPY OBJDUMP MAKE
export CONFIG_SYS_TEXT_BASE PLATFORM_CPPFLAGS PLATFORM_RELFLAGS CPPFLAGS CFLAGS AFLAGS
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# Allow boards to use custom optimize flags on a per dir/file basis
ALL_AFLAGS = $(AFLAGS) $(AFLAGS_$(BCURDIR)/$(@F)) $(AFLAGS_$(BCURDIR))
ALL_CFLAGS = $(CFLAGS) $(CFLAGS_$(BCURDIR)/$(@F)) $(CFLAGS_$(BCURDIR))
EXTRA_CPPFLAGS = $(CPPFLAGS_$(BCURDIR)/$(@F)) $(CPPFLAGS_$(BCURDIR))
ALL_CFLAGS += $(EXTRA_CPPFLAGS)
# The _DEP version uses the $< file target (for dependency generation)
# See rules.mk
EXTRA_CPPFLAGS_DEP = $(CPPFLAGS_$(BCURDIR)/$(addsuffix .o,$(basename $<))) \
$(CPPFLAGS_$(BCURDIR))
$(obj)%.s: %.S
$(CPP) $(ALL_AFLAGS) -o $@ $<
$(obj)%.o: %.S
$(CC) $(ALL_AFLAGS) -o $@ $< -c
$(obj)%.o: %.c
ifneq ($(CHECKSRC),0)
$(CHECK) $(CHECKFLAGS) $(ALL_CFLAGS) $<
endif
$(CC) $(ALL_CFLAGS) -o $@ $< -c
$(obj)%.i: %.c
$(CPP) $(ALL_CFLAGS) -o $@ $< -c
$(obj)%.s: %.c
$(CC) $(ALL_CFLAGS) -o $@ $< -c -S
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# If the list of objects to link is empty, just create an empty built-in.o
cmd_link_o_target = $(if $(strip $1),\
$(LD) $(LDFLAGS) -r -o $@ $1,\
rm -f $@; $(AR) rcs $@ )
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