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Francois Perrad 7669aab6b4 luarocks: remove luainterpreter dependency
All packages using the luarocks infrastructure need a dependency on
luainterpreter, because having the Lua interpreter for the target is
needed to built native Lua modules. This dependency is already taken
care of in pkg-luarocks.mk.

However, host-luarocks, which is built as a dependency of the extract
step of any luarocks package, also had a dependency on
luainterpreter. Not only this was not necessary, but it was causing
problems with 'make legal-info'. Since 'make legal-info' triggers the
extraction of all packages, as soon as a luarocks package was enabled,
it would trigger the build of host-luarocks, itself triggering the
build of luainterpreter and therefore its dependencies, amongst which
the entire cross-compilation toolchain.

[Thomas: reword commit log to include more detailed explanations.]

Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
2014-03-01 23:47:40 +01:00
arch
board
boot
configs
docs manual: document minimal kernel headers dependency 2014-03-01 19:47:49 +01:00
fs
linux
package luarocks: remove luainterpreter dependency 2014-03-01 23:47:40 +01:00
support toolchain/external: check kernel headers version for custom toolchain 2014-03-01 19:47:22 +01:00
system
toolchain toolchain/external: check kernel headers version for custom toolchain 2014-03-01 19:47:22 +01:00
.defconfig
.gitignore
CHANGES
Config.in
Config.in.legacy package/linux-headers: remove 2.6 snapshot 2014-03-01 17:14:37 +01:00
COPYING
Makefile Makefile: ensure system is built even if no filesystem image is selected 2014-03-01 12:53:28 +01:00
Makefile.legacy

To build and use the buildroot stuff, do the following:

1) run 'make menuconfig'
2) select the packages you wish to compile
3) run 'make'
4) wait while it compiles
5) Use your shiny new root filesystem. Depending on which sort of
    root filesystem you selected, you may want to loop mount it,
    chroot into it, nfs mount it on your target device, burn it
    to flash, or whatever is appropriate for your target system.

You do not need to be root to build or run buildroot.  Have fun!

Offline build:
==============

In order to do an offline-build (not connected to the net), fetch all
selected source by issuing a
$ make source

before you disconnect.
If your build-host is never connected, then you have to copy buildroot
and your toplevel .config to a machine that has an internet-connection
and issue "make source" there, then copy the content of your dl/ dir to
the build-host.

Building out-of-tree:
=====================

Buildroot supports building out of tree with a syntax similar
to the Linux kernel. To use it, add O=<directory> to the
make command line, E.G.:

$ make O=/tmp/build

And all the output files (including .config) will be located under /tmp/build.

More finegrained configuration:
===============================

You can specify a config-file for uClibc:
$ make UCLIBC_CONFIG_FILE=/my/uClibc.config

And you can specify a config-file for busybox:
$ make BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FILE=/my/busybox.config

To use a non-standard host-compiler (if you do not have 'gcc'),
make sure that the compiler is in your PATH and that the library paths are
setup properly, if your compiler is built dynamically:
$ make HOSTCC=gcc-4.3.orig HOSTCXX=gcc-4.3-mine

Depending on your configuration, there are some targets you can use to
use menuconfig of certain packages. This includes:
$ make HOSTCC=gcc-4.3 linux-menuconfig
$ make HOSTCC=gcc-4.3 uclibc-menuconfig
$ make HOSTCC=gcc-4.3 busybox-menuconfig

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