Mike, It's been a long time since I had to build a cross compiler. What a bear that task is! I fought and researched and learned a lot about it. Still what ultimately helped me accomplish it was the work that was started by Dan Kegel on a tool called crosstool. http://kegel.com/crosstool/ That tool didn't have exactly the support for what I needed at the time but I found it cleanly designed and easily updatable to accomplish what I was targeting (Which was ppc from x86). Building a toolchain takes many hours of compiling and lots of frustrations when some error during the process... Im not sure if crosstool has been updated in a long time but it might be worth looking at least as some instructions in script form. Good luck! On Tue, May 13, 2014 at 2:39 PM, Mike Bushroe wrote: > I am working on the switch/routers that form the backbone of the Space > Station LAN (Joint Station LAN or JSL). The ppc processors that control the > switching fabric, perform the routing functions, SNMP, and all other > network functions are about 10 years old. Parts of the Flash have been > updated frequently for Firmware Upgrades. But the OS files (Linux > 2.4.22-1.3 "Red Haggis" Kernel) have never been refreshed and are at the > end of the manufacture's data retention time. It looks like I may need to > cross-compile a stripped down version of busybox, load it into the ramdisk, > change root to the ramdisk, unmount then remount (?) the Flash drive to > make sure no files are active, then run a script to go through every file > in the system to copy it, md5sum old and new, if no errors delete the old > and rename the new. > > From what I have read so far, this will require getting a copy of the > kernel header files, which the vendor of the card is not currently willing > to do. The next best would be to get the generic header files for this or a > close release and use those. I am also confused about this process. The > header files define the functions and variables, but not their address in > memory. I am assuming that dynamic linking to the kernel function happens > when the program starts, or are the function calls all sent to one address > which then determines which call was requested and branches of to the > correct code? Or is there another file(s) that contains the loader > information on the kernel routines and I will need to find or decipher that > too before a successful cross-compile can happen? > > Sorry to dump a tough one on the group when I have added little > recently, but if I can get this going soon enough, it might actually get > used on the flight hardware. Otherwise it will be deemed a 'science > project' and cancelled in favor of just copying over the minimum number of > system files to run the script and using that instead of a stripped busy > box. On the other hand, if I can get this to work, I can also tweak the > nandflash calls to attempt to recover bad blocks that are only bad because > the data aged out. Currently, all the programs that work with nand flash > don't allow any interaction with marked bad blocks. But if the blocks only > failed because the data evaporated, a few write - erase cycles should > freshen it back up to being fully functional and probably just as reliable > as the blocks that hadn't aged out yet! > > > Mike > -- > "Creativity is intelligence having fun." — Albert Einstein > > --------------------------------------------------- > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org > To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: > http://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss >