Has anyone tried to port Mono to RTEMS
Russell Haley
russ.haley at gmail.com
Sun Jul 23 22:44:46 UTC 2017
So I downloaded mono from git and changed to "mono-4.8.0-branch" branch and
ran ./autogen.sh. I had to install some tools and modify autogen.sh to work
on FreeBSD.
My commands are here: https://pastebin.com/y0XN7FDf
The output from autogen.sh is here: https://pastebin.com/zNVJB6qp
Note that my output is *much* different from yours. My system does NOT
check for the same items - notably your missing timezone item. Possibly for
one a few reasons that I could see: Different host operating system,
different compiler version or different compiler requirements. You won't
know unless you build for your host system first.
Anyway, I ran make. The whole thing fails on line 1. Ha ha!
root at rtems412:~/mono # gmake
Git submodules updated successfully
gmake all-recursive
gmake[1]: Entering directory '/root/mono'
Making all in po
gmake[2]: Entering directory '/root/mono/po'
Making all in mcs
gmake[3]: Entering directory '/root/mono/po/mcs'
test ! -f ./mcs.pot || \
test -z "es.gmo ja.gmo de.gmo pt_BR.gmo" || gmake es.gmo ja.gmo de.gmo
pt_BR.gmo
gmake[4]: Entering directory '/root/mono/po/mcs'
: --update --lang=es es.po mcs.pot
rm -f es.gmo && : -c --statistics --verbose -o es.gmo es.po
mv: rename t-es.gmo to es.gmo: No such file or directory
gmake[4]: *** [Makefile:181: es.gmo] Error 1
gmake[4]: Leaving directory '/root/mono/po/mcs'
gmake[3]: *** [Makefile:218: stamp-po] Error 2
gmake[3]: Leaving directory '/root/mono/po/mcs'
gmake[2]: *** [Makefile:451: all-recursive] Error 1
gmake[2]: Leaving directory '/root/mono/po'
gmake[1]: *** [Makefile:535: all-recursive] Error 1
gmake[1]: Leaving directory '/root/mono'
gmake: *** [Makefile:465: all] Error 2
Your still a long way off from compiling, it still needs to clone a bunch
of packages and download binaries that it uses for bootstrapping the
builds. I would check autogen.sh against the rtems compilers but I'm still
unable to complete the RSB for FreeBSD reasons.
HTH
Russ
On Sun, Jul 23, 2017 at 8:40 AM, Joel Sherrill <joel at rtems.org> wrote:
> I would add that if you got far enough for the timezone probe to fail, you
> can try io compile that test code by hand. Then figure out which side is at
> fault. Maybe timezone as a variable is not required by POSIX so we don't
> have it. Then Mono needs adjustment. Maybe you need to add a -Dxxx to turn
> on optional features in the C Library.
>
> A port like this has to get the build working but then it is a series of
> small steps about issues like this.
>
>
>
> On Jul 23, 2017 10:35 AM, "Russell Haley" <russ.haley at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Did you run make? Did you get it to build? Lets slow down a sec:
>>
>> (Once again, I'm just another schmuck on the board, this is not rtems
>> position, but I'm interested in your work):
>>
>> The reason nobody can help you is because from what I can tell, nobodies
>> tried this yet. You need to get all the other parts in order before you
>> attempt something new. I know you don't want to here this (I hate hearing
>> it too!). That's what I had to do to get new drivers working in the FreeBSD
>> kernel, I had to stop, slow down and start with the basics and work back
>> up, and now I have an SSD working on my IMX6 board! (I was trying to build
>> the whole image. I had to back up and started with the snapshot image from
>> the website, and then modified the kernel, then when back and compared my
>> image to the stock image to find what was wrong).
>>
>> So here's a thought. If you could record what you are doing and send the
>> instructions and the complete output then I would be able to a) see what
>> your running and b) try to follow along and reproduce what your attempting.
>> If you don't feel like sharing, that's fine, but currently nobody here has
>> much clarity into what you're doing or what you've done. None of us are
>> able to follow along. If you write down each step you take in a document,
>> then you (or us if you share it) can see what you have done and attempt to
>> reproduce it. When your running your commands, record your outputs at the
>> same time. I use "script /tmp/output.txt ... end" or just cut and paste
>> into a document and then upload that to pastebin.com to share.
>>
>> A good indication of where you should direct your work output and
>> questions would be who's source code you are compiling (sometimes, I just
>> got a terse email from the lua maintainer about where a FreeBSD patch
>> should be applied. double entendre intended!). However:
>>
>> How did you build your compiler (it is assumed you used the rsb)?
>> Can you build rtems currently and link in a test application? Does it run
>> on your target?
>> Can you build mono separately with the default host compilers?
>> Can you build mono separately and make it run on your target?
>> Can you build something simple like a little C program with the rtems
>> compilers you're using? Does it work with rtems?
>>
>> (IMHO) it would be good for you to organise your notes because you are
>> obviously smart and determined enough on this to perhaps get it done.
>>
>> SO, start from the beginning. Can you compile Mono for your host?
>>
>>
>>
>> On Sun, Jul 23, 2017 at 7:27 AM, xuelin.tian <xuelin.tian at qkmtech.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> In my thought, it is not just like the build environment like RSB, it is
>>> like everything... including mcs, CLR, and so on. And these should all be
>>> installed in RTEMS, so I tried to cross-compile it. I do not know if I am
>>> on the right path. How do I run (or install) these in RTEMS?
>>>
>>>
>>> ------------------ Original ------------------
>>> *From: * "Russell Haley"<russ.haley at gmail.com>;
>>> *Date: * Fri, Jul 21, 2017 01:09 PM
>>> *To: * "xuelin.tian"<xuelin.tian at qkmtech.com>;
>>> *Cc: * "Joel Sherrill"<joel at rtems.org>; "users"<users at rtems.org>;
>>> *Subject: * Re: Has anyone tried to port Mono to RTEMS
>>>
>>> This is just the configuration step. It's setting up your build
>>> environment akin to what the rtems-source-builder sb-check does.
>>>
>>> It looks like your on the right path. It checked your compilers and
>>> verified it can use them.
>>>
>>> Russ
>>>
>>> Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Virgin Mobile network.
>>> *From: *xuelin.tian at qkmtech.com
>>> *Sent: *Thursday, July 20, 2017 8:11 PM
>>> *To: *Russell Haley
>>> *Cc: *Joel Sherrill; users at rtems.org
>>> *Subject: *Re: Re: Has anyone tried to port Mono to RTEMS
>>>
>>> Sorry about some missing information.
>>> My host is ubuntu 14.4 (--host=x86_64-unknown-linux), and target is
>>> Zynq, ARM family (--target=arm-rtems4.11).
>>> I want to cross-compile Mono from source, downloaded from Github, the
>>> version is 4.8.1.0, not the HEAD.
>>>
>>> I think what you mean by build output is shown below:
>>> =================================================
>>> Running libtoolize...
>>> libtoolize: putting auxiliary files in `.'.
>>> libtoolize: copying file `./ltmain.sh'
>>> libtoolize: putting macros in AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIR, `m4'.
>>> libtoolize: copying file `m4/libtool.m4'
>>> libtoolize: copying file `m4/ltoptions.m4'
>>> libtoolize: copying file `m4/ltsugar.m4'
>>> libtoolize: copying file `m4/ltversion.m4'
>>> libtoolize: copying file `m4/lt~obsolete.m4'
>>> Running aclocal -I m4 -I . ...
>>> Running autoheader...
>>> Running automake --gnu ...
>>> Running autoconf ...
>>> Running libgc/autogen.sh ...
>>> Running libtoolize...
>>> libtoolize: putting auxiliary files in `.'.
>>> libtoolize: copying file `./ltmain.sh'
>>> libtoolize: putting macros in AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIR, `m4'.
>>> libtoolize: copying file `m4/libtool.m4'
>>> libtoolize: copying file `m4/ltoptions.m4'
>>> libtoolize: copying file `m4/ltsugar.m4'
>>> libtoolize: copying file `m4/ltversion.m4'
>>> libtoolize: copying file `m4/lt~obsolete.m4'
>>> Running aclocal -Wnone ...
>>> Running automake --gnu ...
>>> Makefile.am:32: error: Libtool library used but 'LIBTOOL' is undefined
>>> Makefile.am:32: The usual way to define 'LIBTOOL' is to add 'LT_INIT'
>>> Makefile.am:32: to 'configure.ac' and run 'aclocal' and 'autoconf'
>>> again.
>>> Makefile.am:32: If 'LT_INIT' is in 'configure.ac', make sure
>>> Makefile.am:32: its definition is in aclocal's search path.
>>> **Error**: automake failed.
>>> Done running libgc/autogen.sh ...
>>> Running eglib/autogen.sh ...
>>> Running libtoolize...
>>> libtoolize: putting macros in AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIR, `m4'.
>>> libtoolize: copying file `m4/libtool.m4'
>>> libtoolize: copying file `m4/ltoptions.m4'
>>> libtoolize: copying file `m4/ltsugar.m4'
>>> libtoolize: copying file `m4/ltversion.m4'
>>> libtoolize: copying file `m4/lt~obsolete.m4'
>>> Running aclocal -I m4 ...
>>> Running autoheader...
>>> Running automake --gnu ...
>>> Running autoconf ...
>>> Skipping configure process.
>>> Done running eglib/autogen.sh ...
>>> Running ./configure --enable-maintainer-mode --enable-compile-warnings
>>> --prefix=/opt/Mono/mono-4.8.1.0/mono-arm --target=arm-rtems4.11
>>> --host=x86_64-unknown-linux CC=/opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4
>>> .11-tools/bin/arm-rtems4.11-gcc CFLAGS=-qrtems
>>> -B/opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-bsp/arm-rtems4.11/lib
>>> -B/opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-bsp/arm-rtems4.11/xilinx_zynq_zedboard/lib/
>>> -I//opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-bsp/arm-rtems4.11/xilinx_zynq_zedboard/lib/include
>>> --specs bsp_specs -march=armv7-a -mthumb -mfpu=neon -mfloat-abi=hard
>>> -mtune=cortex-a9 ...
>>> checking build system type... x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
>>> checking host system type... x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
>>> checking target system type... arm-unknown-rtems4.11
>>> checking for a BSD-compatible install... /usr/bin/install -c
>>> checking whether build environment is sane... yes
>>> checking for x86_64-unknown-linux-strip... no
>>> checking for strip... strip
>>> checking for a thread-safe mkdir -p... /bin/mkdir -p
>>> checking for gawk... no
>>> checking for mawk... mawk
>>> checking whether make sets $(MAKE)... yes
>>> checking how to create a ustar tar archive... gnutar
>>> checking whether to enable maintainer-specific portions of Makefiles...
>>> yes
>>> checking whether ln -s works... yes
>>> checking whether make supports nested variables... yes
>>> checking host platform characteristics... ok
>>> checking for x86_64-unknown-linux-gcc... /opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11
>>> -tools/bin/arm-rtems4.11-gcc
>>> checking for x86_64-unknown-linux-gcc... (cached)
>>> /opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-tools/bin/arm-rtems4.11-gcc
>>> checking whether the C compiler works... yes
>>> checking for C compiler default output file name... a.out
>>> checking for suffix of executables...
>>> checking whether we are cross compiling... yes
>>> checking for suffix of object files... o
>>> checking whether we are using the GNU C compiler... yes
>>> checking whether /opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-tools/bin/arm-rtems4.11-gcc
>>> accepts -g... yes
>>> checking for /opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-tools/bin/arm-rtems4.11-gcc
>>> option to accept ISO C89... none needed
>>> checking for style of include used by make... GNU
>>> checking dependency style of /opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11
>>> -tools/bin/arm-rtems4.11-gcc... gcc3
>>> checking for x86_64-unknown-linux-g++... no
>>> checking for g++... g++
>>> configure: WARNING: using cross tools not prefixed with host triplet
>>> checking whether we are using the GNU C++ compiler... yes
>>> checking whether g++ accepts -g... yes
>>> checking dependency style of g++... gcc3
>>> checking dependency style of /opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11
>>> -tools/bin/arm-rtems4.11-gcc... gcc3
>>> checking for gawk... (cached) mawk
>>> checking whether /opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-tools/bin/arm-rtems4.11-gcc
>>> and cc understand -c and -o together... yes
>>> checking how to run the C preprocessor... /opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-tools/bin/arm-rtems4.11-gcc
>>> -E
>>> checking for grep that handles long lines and -e... /bin/grep
>>> checking for egrep... /bin/grep -E
>>> checking for ANSI C header files... yes
>>> checking how to print strings... printf
>>> checking for a sed that does not truncate output... /bin/sed
>>> checking for fgrep... /bin/grep -F
>>> checking for ld used by /opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11
>>> -tools/bin/arm-rtems4.11-gcc... /opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11
>>> -tools/arm-rtems4.11/bin/ld
>>> checking if the linker (/opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-tools/arm-rtems4.11/bin/ld)
>>> is GNU ld... yes
>>> checking for BSD- or MS-compatible name lister (nm)... /usr/bin/nm -B
>>> checking the name lister (/usr/bin/nm -B) interface... BSD nm
>>> checking the maximum length of command line arguments... 1572864
>>> checking whether the shell understands some XSI constructs... yes
>>> checking whether the shell understands "+="... yes
>>> checking how to convert x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu file names to
>>> x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu format... func_convert_file_noop
>>> checking how to convert x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu file names to toolchain
>>> format... func_convert_file_noop
>>> checking for /opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-tools/arm-rtems4.11/bin/ld
>>> option to reload object files... -r
>>> checking for x86_64-unknown-linux-objdump... objdump
>>> checking how to recognize dependent libraries... pass_all
>>> checking for x86_64-unknown-linux-dlltool... dlltool
>>> checking how to associate runtime and link libraries... printf %s\n
>>> checking for x86_64-unknown-linux-ar... no
>>> checking for ar... ar
>>> checking for archiver @FILE support... @
>>> checking for x86_64-unknown-linux-strip... strip
>>> checking for x86_64-unknown-linux-ranlib... no
>>> checking for ranlib... ranlib
>>> checking command to parse /usr/bin/nm -B output from
>>> /opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-tools/bin/arm-rtems4.11-gcc object... ok
>>> checking for sysroot... no
>>> checking for x86_64-unknown-linux-mt... no
>>> checking for mt... mt
>>> checking if mt is a manifest tool... no
>>> checking for sys/types.h... yes
>>> checking for sys/stat.h... yes
>>> checking for stdlib.h... yes
>>> checking for string.h... yes
>>> checking for memory.h... yes
>>> checking for strings.h... yes
>>> checking for inttypes.h... yes
>>> checking for stdint.h... yes
>>> checking for unistd.h... yes
>>> checking for dlfcn.h... yes
>>> checking for objdir... .libs
>>> checking if /opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-tools/bin/arm-rtems4.11-gcc
>>> supports -fno-rtti -fno-exceptions... no
>>> checking for /opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-tools/bin/arm-rtems4.11-gcc
>>> option to produce PIC... -fPIC -DPIC
>>> checking if /opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-tools/bin/arm-rtems4.11-gcc
>>> PIC flag -fPIC -DPIC works... yes
>>> checking if /opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-tools/bin/arm-rtems4.11-gcc
>>> static flag -static works... yes
>>> checking if /opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-tools/bin/arm-rtems4.11-gcc
>>> supports -c -o file.o... yes
>>> checking if /opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-tools/bin/arm-rtems4.11-gcc
>>> supports -c -o file.o... (cached) yes
>>> checking whether the /opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-tools/bin/arm-rtems4.11-gcc
>>> linker (/opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-tools/arm-rtems4.11/bin/ld -m
>>> elf_i386) supports shared libraries... no
>>> checking dynamic linker characteristics... GNU/Linux ld.so
>>> checking how to hardcode library paths into programs... unsupported
>>> checking whether stripping libraries is possible... yes
>>> checking if libtool supports shared libraries... no
>>> checking whether to build shared libraries... no
>>> checking whether to build static libraries... yes
>>> checking how to run the C++ preprocessor... g++ -E
>>> checking for ld used by g++... /opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-tools/arm-rtems4.11/bin/ld
>>> -m elf_i386
>>> checking if the linker (/opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-tools/arm-rtems4.11/bin/ld
>>> -m elf_i386) is GNU ld... no
>>> checking whether the g++ linker (/opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-tools/arm-rtems4.11/bin/ld
>>> -m elf_i386) supports shared libraries... yes
>>> checking for g++ option to produce PIC... -fPIC -DPIC
>>> checking if g++ PIC flag -fPIC -DPIC works... yes
>>> checking if g++ static flag -static works... yes
>>> checking if g++ supports -c -o file.o... yes
>>> checking if g++ supports -c -o file.o... (cached) yes
>>> checking whether the g++ linker (/opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-tools/arm-rtems4.11/bin/ld
>>> -m elf_i386) supports shared libraries... yes
>>> checking dynamic linker characteristics... (cached) GNU/Linux ld.so
>>> checking how to hardcode library paths into programs... unsupported
>>> checking for bash... /bin/bash
>>> checking if dolt supports this host... yes, replacing libtool
>>> checking for ld used by /opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11
>>> -tools/bin/arm-rtems4.11-gcc... (cached) /opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11
>>> -tools/arm-rtems4.11/bin/ld
>>> checking if the linker (/opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-tools/arm-rtems4.11/bin/ld)
>>> is GNU ld... (cached) yes
>>> checking for ld used by GCC... /opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11
>>> -tools/arm-rtems4.11/bin/ld
>>> checking if the linker (/opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-tools/arm-rtems4.11/bin/ld)
>>> is GNU ld... yes
>>> checking for shared library run path origin... done
>>> checking for iconv... yes
>>> checking for working iconv... guessing yes
>>> checking for iconv declaration...
>>> extern size_t iconv (iconv_t cd, char * *inbuf, size_t
>>> *inbytesleft, char * *outbuf, size_t *outbytesleft);
>>> checking sys/filio.h usability... yes
>>> checking sys/filio.h presence... no
>>> configure: WARNING: sys/filio.h: accepted by the compiler, rejected by
>>> the preprocessor!
>>> configure: WARNING: sys/filio.h: proceeding with the compiler's result
>>> checking for sys/filio.h... yes
>>> checking sys/sockio.h usability... yes
>>> checking sys/sockio.h presence... no
>>> configure: WARNING: sys/sockio.h: accepted by the compiler, rejected by
>>> the preprocessor!
>>> configure: WARNING: sys/sockio.h: proceeding with the compiler's result
>>> checking for sys/sockio.h... yes
>>> checking netdb.h usability... no
>>> checking netdb.h presence... no
>>> checking for netdb.h... no
>>> checking utime.h usability... yes
>>> checking utime.h presence... yes
>>> checking for utime.h... yes
>>> checking sys/utime.h usability... yes
>>> checking sys/utime.h presence... yes
>>> checking for sys/utime.h... yes
>>> checking semaphore.h usability... yes
>>> checking semaphore.h presence... yes
>>> checking for semaphore.h... yes
>>> checking sys/un.h usability... no
>>> checking sys/un.h presence... no
>>> checking for sys/un.h... no
>>> checking linux/rtc.h usability... no
>>> checking linux/rtc.h presence... no
>>> checking for linux/rtc.h... no
>>> checking sys/syscall.h usability... no
>>> checking sys/syscall.h presence... no
>>> checking for sys/syscall.h... no
>>> checking sys/mkdev.h usability... no
>>> checking sys/mkdev.h presence... no
>>> checking for sys/mkdev.h... no
>>> checking sys/uio.h usability... yes
>>> checking sys/uio.h presence... no
>>> configure: WARNING: sys/uio.h: accepted by the compiler, rejected by the
>>> preprocessor!
>>> configure: WARNING: sys/uio.h: proceeding with the compiler's result
>>> checking for sys/uio.h... yes
>>> checking sys/param.h usability... yes
>>> checking sys/param.h presence... yes
>>> checking for sys/param.h... yes
>>> checking sys/sysctl.h usability... no
>>> checking sys/sysctl.h presence... no
>>> checking for sys/sysctl.h... no
>>> checking libproc.h usability... no
>>> checking libproc.h presence... no
>>> checking for libproc.h... no
>>> checking sys/prctl.h usability... no
>>> checking sys/prctl.h presence... no
>>> checking for sys/prctl.h... no
>>> checking for sys/param.h... (cached) yes
>>> checking sys/socket.h usability... no
>>> checking sys/socket.h presence... no
>>> checking for sys/socket.h... no
>>> checking sys/ipc.h usability... no
>>> checking sys/ipc.h presence... no
>>> checking for sys/ipc.h... no
>>> checking sys/utsname.h usability... yes
>>> checking sys/utsname.h presence... no
>>> configure: WARNING: sys/utsname.h: accepted by the compiler, rejected by
>>> the preprocessor!
>>> configure: WARNING: sys/utsname.h: proceeding with the compiler's result
>>> checking for sys/utsname.h... yes
>>> checking alloca.h usability... yes
>>> checking alloca.h presence... yes
>>> checking for alloca.h... yes
>>> checking ucontext.h usability... no
>>> checking ucontext.h presence... no
>>> checking for ucontext.h... no
>>> checking pwd.h usability... yes
>>> checking pwd.h presence... yes
>>> checking for pwd.h... yes
>>> checking sys/select.h usability... no
>>> checking sys/select.h presence... no
>>> checking for sys/select.h... no
>>> checking netinet/tcp.h usability... no
>>> checking netinet/tcp.h presence... no
>>> checking for netinet/tcp.h... no
>>> checking netinet/in.h usability... no
>>> checking netinet/in.h presence... no
>>> checking for netinet/in.h... no
>>> checking for unistd.h... (cached) yes
>>> checking for sys/types.h... (cached) yes
>>> checking link.h usability... yes
>>> checking link.h presence... no
>>> configure: WARNING: link.h: accepted by the compiler, rejected by the
>>> preprocessor!
>>> configure: WARNING: link.h: proceeding with the compiler's result
>>> checking for link.h... yes
>>> checking asm/sigcontext.h usability... no
>>> checking asm/sigcontext.h presence... no
>>> checking for asm/sigcontext.h... no
>>> checking sys/inotify.h usability... no
>>> checking sys/inotify.h presence... no
>>> checking for sys/inotify.h... no
>>> checking arpa/inet.h usability... no
>>> checking arpa/inet.h presence... no
>>> checking for arpa/inet.h... no
>>> checking complex.h usability... yes
>>> checking complex.h presence... yes
>>> checking for complex.h... yes
>>> checking unwind.h usability... yes
>>> checking unwind.h presence... yes
>>> checking for unwind.h... yes
>>> checking for linux/netlink.h... no
>>> checking for linux/rtnetlink.h... no
>>> checking for sys/user.h... no
>>> checking linux/serial.h usability... no
>>> checking linux/serial.h presence... no
>>> checking for linux/serial.h... no
>>> checking zlib.h usability... yes
>>> checking zlib.h presence... no
>>> configure: WARNING: zlib.h: accepted by the compiler, rejected by the
>>> preprocessor!
>>> configure: WARNING: zlib.h: proceeding with the compiler's result
>>> checking for zlib.h... yes
>>> Using system zlib
>>> checking elf.h usability... no
>>> checking elf.h presence... no
>>> checking for elf.h... no
>>> checking poll.h usability... no
>>> checking poll.h presence... no
>>> checking for poll.h... no
>>> checking sys/poll.h usability... yes
>>> checking sys/poll.h presence... no
>>> configure: WARNING: sys/poll.h: accepted by the compiler, rejected by
>>> the preprocessor!
>>> configure: WARNING: sys/poll.h: proceeding with the compiler's result
>>> checking for sys/poll.h... yes
>>> checking sys/wait.h usability... yes
>>> checking sys/wait.h presence... yes
>>> checking for sys/wait.h... yes
>>> checking grp.h usability... yes
>>> checking grp.h presence... yes
>>> checking for grp.h... yes
>>> checking syslog.h usability... no
>>> checking syslog.h presence... no
>>> checking for syslog.h... no
>>> checking wchar.h usability... yes
>>> checking wchar.h presence... yes
>>> checking for wchar.h... yes
>>> checking ieeefp.h usability... yes
>>> checking ieeefp.h presence... yes
>>> checking for ieeefp.h... yes
>>> checking for isinf... yes
>>> checking for _finite... no
>>> checking for _finite in math.h... no
>>> checking linux/magic.h usability... no
>>> checking linux/magic.h presence... no
>>> checking for linux/magic.h... no
>>> checking size of void *... 4
>>> checking for clang... no
>>> checking for -Wno-unused-but-set-variable option to gcc... yes
>>> checking whether NLS is requested... profile_default
>>> checking for msgfmt... /usr/bin/msgfmt
>>> checking for gmsgfmt... /usr/bin/msgfmt
>>> checking for xgettext... /usr/bin/xgettext
>>> checking for msgmerge... /usr/bin/msgmerge
>>> checking for pkg-config... /usr/bin/pkg-config
>>> checking for -mno-tls-direct-seg-refs option to gcc... no
>>> yes
>>> checking for visibility __attribute__... yes
>>> checking whether /opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-tools/bin/arm-rtems4.11-gcc
>>> supports zero length arrays... yes
>>> checking nacl/nacl_dyncode.h usability... no
>>> checking nacl/nacl_dyncode.h presence... no
>>> checking for nacl/nacl_dyncode.h... no
>>> checking signal.h usability... yes
>>> checking signal.h presence... yes
>>> checking for signal.h... yes
>>> checking for sigaction... yes
>>> checking for kill... yes
>>> checking for signal... yes
>>> checking for library containing clock_gettime... none required
>>> checking for clock_nanosleep... no
>>> checking for dlopen... yes
>>> checking for preceeding underscore in symbols... (cached) no
>>> checking for dlerror... yes
>>> checking execinfo.h usability... no
>>> checking execinfo.h presence... no
>>> checking for execinfo.h... no
>>> checking sys/auxv.h usability... no
>>> checking sys/auxv.h presence... no
>>> checking for sys/auxv.h... no
>>> checking sys/resource.h usability... yes
>>> checking sys/resource.h presence... yes
>>> checking for sys/resource.h... yes
>>> checking for getgrgid_r... yes
>>> checking for getgrnam_r... yes
>>> checking for getpwnam_r... yes
>>> checking for getpwuid_r... yes
>>> checking for getresuid... no
>>> checking for setresuid... no
>>> checking for kqueue... no
>>> checking for backtrace_symbols... no
>>> checking for mkstemp... yes
>>> checking for mmap... yes
>>> checking for madvise... no
>>> checking for getrusage... yes
>>> checking for getpriority... no
>>> checking for setpriority... no
>>> checking for dl_iterate_phdr... no
>>> checking for dladdr... no
>>> checking for sysconf... yes
>>> checking for getrlimit... no
>>> checking for prctl... no
>>> checking for sched_getaffinity... no
>>> checking for sched_setaffinity... no
>>> checking for sched_getcpu... no
>>> checking for sched_setaffinity from glibc < 2.3.4... yes
>>> checking if off_t is 64 bits wide... ok
>>> checking for socket in -lsocket... no
>>> checking for MSG_NOSIGNAL... no
>>> checking for IPPROTO_IP... no
>>> checking for IPPROTO_IPV6... no
>>> checking for IPPROTO_TCP... no
>>> checking for SOL_IP... no
>>> checking for SOL_IPV6... no
>>> checking for SOL_TCP... no
>>> checking for IP_PKTINFO... no
>>> checking for IPV6_PKTINFO... no
>>> checking for IP_DONTFRAG... no
>>> checking for IP_DONTFRAGMENT... no
>>> checking for IP_MTU_DISCOVER... no
>>> checking for IP_PMTUDISC_DO... no
>>> checking for struct ip_mreqn... no
>>> checking for struct ip_mreq... no
>>> checking for getaddrinfo... no
>>> checking for gethostbyname2_r... no
>>> checking for gethostbyname2... no
>>> checking for gethostbyname... no
>>> checking for getprotobyname... no
>>> checking for getnameinfo... no
>>> checking for inet_ntop... no
>>> checking for gethostbyaddr... no
>>> checking for gethostbyaddr in -lnsl... no
>>> checking for inet_pton... no
>>> checking for inet_aton... no
>>> checking for main in -lpthread... no
>>> checking pthread.h usability... yes
>>> checking pthread.h presence... yes
>>> checking for pthread.h... yes
>>> checking pthread_np.h usability... no
>>> checking pthread_np.h presence... no
>>> checking for pthread_np.h... no
>>> checking for pthread_mutex_timedlock... yes
>>> checking for pthread_getattr_np... yes
>>> checking for pthread_attr_get_np... no
>>> checking for pthread_setname_np... no
>>> checking for pthread_kill... yes
>>> checking for PTHREAD_MUTEX_RECURSIVE... ok
>>> checking for pthread_attr_setstacksize... yes
>>> checking for pthread_attr_getstack... yes
>>> checking for pthread_attr_getstacksize... yes
>>> checking for pthread_get_stacksize_np... no
>>> checking for pthread_get_stackaddr_np... no
>>> checking for mincore... no
>>> checking for working __thread... cross compiling
>>> checking for working sigaltstack... cross compiling
>>> checking for library containing sem_init... none required
>>> checking for library containing shm_open... no
>>> checking for shm_open... no
>>> checking for tm_gmtoff in struct tm... no
>>> checking for timezone variable... no
>>> configure: error: unable to find a way to determine timezone
>>> ===============================================
>>> I googled the time zone variable, and still working on it.
>>>
>>> But actually, I want to know whether I am doing it the right way? I
>>> mean, is this a right way to port Mono to RTEMS, just modifying some
>>> configuration options? I am still confusing about it.
>>>
>>> ------------------------------
>>> Best wishes,
>>> xuelin.tian at qkmtech.com
>>>
>>>
>>> *From:* Russell Haley <russ.haley at gmail.com>
>>> *Date:* 2017-07-21 10:42
>>> *To:* xuelin.tian at qkmtech.com
>>> *CC:* Joel Sherrill <joel at rtems.org>; users at rtems.org
>>> *Subject:* Re: Re: Has anyone tried to port Mono to RTEMS
>>>
>>> On Thu, Jul 20, 2017 at 7:07 PM, xuelin.tian at qkmtech.com <
>>> xuelin.tian at qkmtech.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> I just followed the instructions from Mono, and did some changes
>>>> obviously.
>>>> I did not use ScratchBox to cross-compile my Mono on ARM, just use
>>>> arm-rtems4.11-gcc to cross-compile it. Is that right?
>>>> Do I need to modify the source code from Mono to port to RTEMS?
>>>>
>>> Some context you really should provide:
>>> - What platform are you building on?
>>> - Where did you get the source files? (if git, are you building head? I
>>> have had many problems building mono from head)
>>> - Without posting your complete build output there is no way to tell
>>> what is happening.
>>>
>>> This is just a shot in the dark, but did you google Time Zone variable?
>>> Google says you need to set a TZ environment variable.
>>>
>>> Russ
>>>
>>>> ------------------------------
>>>> Best wishes,
>>>> xuelin.tian at qkmtech.com
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> *From:* Russell Haley <russ.haley at gmail.com>
>>>> *Date:* 2017-07-21 00:16
>>>> *To:* xuelin.tian <xuelin.tian at qkmtech.com>; Joel Sherrill
>>>> <joel at rtems.org>
>>>> *CC:* users <users at rtems.org>
>>>> *Subject:* Re: Has anyone tried to port Mono to RTEMS
>>>> Did you get it to build natively? What is your host. Build output
>>>> would be helpful.
>>>>
>>>> Russ
>>>>
>>>> Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Virgin Mobile network.
>>>> *From: *xuelin.tian at qkmtech.com
>>>> *Sent: *Thursday, July 20, 2017 5:53 AM
>>>> *To: *Russell Haley; Joel Sherrill
>>>> *Cc: *users at rtems.org
>>>> *Subject: *Re: Re: Has anyone tried to port Mono to RTEMS
>>>>
>>>> I have been struck by it for like 2 days.
>>>> I want to cross-compile Mono for a test, and I enter:
>>>>
>>>> *./autogen.sh --prefix=/opt/Mono/mono-4.8.1.0/mono-arm
>>>> --target=arm-rtems4.11 --host=x86_64-unknown-linux
>>>> CC=/opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-tools/bin/arm-rtems4.11-gcc
>>>> CFLAGS="-qrtems -B/opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-bsp/arm-rtems4.11/lib
>>>> -B/opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-bsp/arm-rtems4.11/xilinx_zynq_zedboard/lib/
>>>> -I//opt/rtems-4.11.1-release/4.11-bsp/arm-rtems4.11/xilinx_zynq_zedboard/lib/include
>>>> --specs bsp_specs -march=armv7-a -mthumb -mfpu=neon -mfloat-abi=hard
>>>> -mtune=cortex-a9"*
>>>>
>>>> It goes well at first, then the error came up:
>>>>
>>>> *checking for timezone variable... noconfigure: error: unable to find a
>>>> way to determine timezone*
>>>>
>>>> I can not really understand the content from config.log
>>>>
>>>> Can anyone help me with this? Thanks a lot
>>>>
>>>> ------------------------------
>>>> Best wishes,
>>>> xuelin.tian at qkmtech.com
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> *From:* Russell Haley <russ.haley at gmail.com>
>>>> *Date:* 2017-07-14 12:44
>>>> *To:* xuelin.tian <xuelin.tian at qkmtech.com>; Joel Sherrill
>>>> <joel at rtems.org>
>>>> *CC:* users <users at rtems.org>
>>>> *Subject:* Re: Has anyone tried to port Mono to RTEMS
>>>> Thinking about it, Lua is designed to be statically linked into C
>>>> applications and your scripts are loaded and executed by your application
>>>> at runtime. This is how lua is plugged into many video games like world or
>>>> warcraft and roblox.
>>>>
>>>> From my simplistic understanding of rtems (and everything I just said),
>>>> that would be the way you would statically link lua into rtems?
>>>>
>>>> Russ
>>>>
>>>> Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Virgin Mobile network.
>>>> *From: *xuelin.tian at qkmtech.com
>>>> *Sent: *Thursday, July 13, 2017 9:03 PM
>>>> *To: *Russell Haley; Joel Sherrill
>>>> *Cc: *users at rtems.org
>>>> *Subject: *Re: Re: Has anyone tried to port Mono to RTEMS
>>>>
>>>> OK, thanks a lot.
>>>> I will go through Lua today, to see if there is something interesting
>>>> there.
>>>>
>>>> ------------------------------
>>>> Best wishes,
>>>> xuelin.tian at qkmtech.com
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> *From:* Russell Haley <russ.haley at gmail.com>
>>>> *Date:* 2017-07-14 11:57
>>>> *To:* xuelin.tian <xuelin.tian at qkmtech.com>; Joel Sherrill
>>>> <joel at rtems.org>
>>>> *CC:* users <users at rtems.org>
>>>> *Subject:* Re: Has anyone tried to port Mono to RTEMS
>>>> Just my opinion on the 'or other vm' comment.
>>>>
>>>> If your requirement is not strictly mono, I highly suggest something
>>>> small and simple like Lua. It's a a very efficient vm and is cross
>>>> compatible with all major platforms. The only requirement for Lua is c99.
>>>>
>>>> The language is very simple and bare bones. You pick your tools from
>>>> git or a repository manager called luarocks (luarocks.org). That's
>>>> where the 'hard part' of Lua comes in. It's very hands on because you need
>>>> to find or write almost everything you need.
>>>>
>>>> I am putting together a 'lightweight' IoT platform using Lua 5.3 and a
>>>> very sophisticated polling library called cqueues. There is an http library
>>>> called lua-http based on cqueues that contains a client and server
>>>> implementation of most major http standards including http2 and websockets.
>>>> The requirements for cqueues are a polling library such as epoll or kqueues
>>>> (or even poll or select). I'm not sure how well that would plug into rtems.
>>>> At this point I'm cross compatible for most major Nixs' though.
>>>>
>>>> Nonetheless, the overhead of mono is not really worth it if you are
>>>> doing simple things. That's why I switched away from DotNet for my
>>>> project. If you have code to port, or have DotNet developers, mono makes
>>>> sense.
>>>>
>>>> Just my opinion.
>>>>
>>>> HTH
>>>> Russ
>>>>
>>>> Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Virgin Mobile network.
>>>> *From: *xuelin.tian at qkmtech.com
>>>> *Sent: *Thursday, July 13, 2017 8:38 PM
>>>> *To: *Joel Sherrill; Russell Haley
>>>> *Cc: *users at rtems.org
>>>> *Subject: *Re: Re: Has anyone tried to port Mono to RTEMS
>>>>
>>>> Yes, I am trying to build it from source according to Russell.
>>>>
>>>> As to .net core, I may not have a deep understanding of it. I think for
>>>> now, Mono may be the best choice for me, since I need to make it (porting
>>>> Mono or other VM to rtems) work in a few days.
>>>>
>>>> ------------------------------
>>>> Best wishes,
>>>> xuelin.tian at qkmtech.com
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> *From:* Joel Sherrill <joel at rtems.org>
>>>> *Date:* 2017-07-13 01:08
>>>> *To:* Russell Haley <russ.haley at gmail.com>
>>>> *CC:* xuelin.tian at qkmtech.com; users at rtems.org
>>>> *Subject:* Re: Re: Has anyone tried to port Mono to RTEMS
>>>> The reply from Russell is very good advice. Look forward when porting
>>>> and
>>>> make sure you are porting something with a future.
>>>>
>>>> For Mono, I did exactly what he outlined. I built native. I recall it
>>>> using a
>>>> fairly normal configure script and I just added --target=XXX-rtems. I
>>>> might
>>>> have added some CFLAGS but don't recall.
>>>>
>>>> I focused on the run-time interpreter and ignored the JIT. The run-time
>>>> translated Mono calls into C library and POSIX calls. If there was a
>>>> compilation issue, I tried to fix it where ever it had to be fixed.
>>>> Always being
>>>> open to adding something to either RTEMS or newlib if possible
>>>> and needed.
>>>>
>>>> --joel
>>>>
>>>> On Wed, Jul 12, 2017 at 11:03 AM, Russell Haley <russ.haley at gmail.com>
>>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> On Tue, Jul 11, 2017 at 9:31 PM, xuelin.tian at qkmtech.com
>>>>> <xuelin.tian at qkmtech.com> wrote:
>>>>> > Dear Joel,
>>>>> > Recently, I continue to port Mono to RTEMS.
>>>>> > Porting consists of two parts, according to the Mono documents
>>>>> online, JIT
>>>>> > engine and OS support.
>>>>> > JIT part is already done, since I use ARM platform.
>>>>> > And I am confuesd about OS part and how to build Mono on RTEMS.
>>>>> > Could you recall any details about how to build Mono on RTEMS? Thank
>>>>> you.
>>>>>
>>>>> I'm not sure that's quite right. There are really 3 parts: The
>>>>> application framework, the 'JIT' (Mono Runtime, or Common Language
>>>>> Runtime in Microsoft .Net) and the OS specific layer. The application
>>>>> framework and the JIT are common to all platforms. The OS specific
>>>>> parts are in the Mono Runtime where it translates the Interediate
>>>>> Language (IL) to machine specific code at ... er ... runtime. The Mono
>>>>> Runtime is being slowly replaced by the Roslyn compiler, which is open
>>>>> source from Microsoft (very very cool stuff).
>>>>>
>>>>> Building Mono requires a number of parts, including boot strapping the
>>>>> build and downloading binaries from nuget (last time I did it,
>>>>> anyway). I've never attempted to cross compile Mono. I would assume
>>>>> you would change the make file to point to a cross compiler such as
>>>>> arm-unknown-gcc (not sure about the RTEMS specifics).
>>>>>
>>>>> In my opinion the best bet is to pull the mono repository from GitHub
>>>>> and build it for your host platform first. Then you could look at
>>>>> modifying it to build on arm.
>>>>>
>>>>> That said, Mono is a dead/dying platform. Microsoft has bought
>>>>> Xamarian (Mono sponsor company). Now the Mono Dev Team is slowly
>>>>> porting everything over to the Microsoft .Net Core code. Once the
>>>>> majority of libraries are converted, they can then write Mono specific
>>>>> modules for legacy applications and then shuffle everyone over to
>>>>> DotNet Core. It might be wise to look at using the DotNet Core instead
>>>>> of Mono. There are a number of reasons to prefer the DotNet Core:
>>>>>
>>>>> - Designed to be small and use a package manager to import required
>>>>> external libraries. This was done with embedded systems in mind.
>>>>> - Better interpreter: the new interpreters (Rosylin and the other that
>>>>> I don't remember the name of) are very efficient compared to the Mono
>>>>> mc.
>>>>> - More efficient runtime. The Mono Runtime is known to be slow.
>>>>>
>>>>> Here would be a good place to start with the DotNet Core as they have
>>>>> nightly arm builds.
>>>>>
>>>>> https://stevedesmond.ca/blog/net-core-on-arm
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> HTH,
>>>>>
>>>>> Russ
>>>>>
>>>>> > ________________________________
>>>>> > Best wishes,
>>>>> > xuelin.tian at qkmtech.com
>>>>> >
>>>>> >
>>>>> > From: Joel Sherrill
>>>>> > Date: 2017-05-24 20:19
>>>>> > To: xuelin.tian
>>>>> > CC: rtems-users at rtems.org
>>>>> > Subject: Re: Has anyone tried to port Mono to RTEMS
>>>>> >
>>>>> >
>>>>> > On May 23, 2017 8:58 PM, "xuelin.tian at qkmtech.com" <
>>>>> xuelin.tian at qkmtech.com>
>>>>> > wrote:
>>>>> >
>>>>> > Dear all,
>>>>> > Is that possible to port Mono to RTEMS? Has anyone tried this before?
>>>>> > As I notice that there is an open project in RTEMS projects.
>>>>> >
>>>>> >
>>>>> > Sometime ago, I was asked to provide an estimate for this. It had to
>>>>> be
>>>>> > between five and ten years ago because we were at the old office but
>>>>> after
>>>>> > we had done a few years of GSoC. I did enough work preparing the
>>>>> estimate
>>>>> > where I had the code building without too much effort. I saw the
>>>>> challenge
>>>>> > as getting the test suite running since you would have to create a
>>>>> test
>>>>> > harness and build/assembly helper that packaged the interpreted code
>>>>> with
>>>>> > the interpreter in order to run it. At that time, I envisioned
>>>>> having to
>>>>> > create a base image and a filesystem image per test.
>>>>> >
>>>>> > Our POSIX was good enough then to avoid much trouble. It should only
>>>>> be
>>>>> > easier now since the POSIX support has improved.
>>>>> >
>>>>> > There were a lot of Mono tests and I expected most to pass quickly.
>>>>> But
>>>>> > there was no way to know how many issues would be encountered and
>>>>> how many
>>>>> > root causes there would be. I expected to fix one or two things and
>>>>> then run
>>>>> > all the tests. That was where I expected time to be consumed.
>>>>> >
>>>>> > FWIW I recall the GSoC date part because they thought we could
>>>>> magically get
>>>>> > students to do testing for free on a schedule. :)
>>>>> >
>>>>> > I hope that helps. It is feasible but the key is testing.
>>>>> >
>>>>> > --joel
>>>>> >
>>>>> >
>>>>> > ________________________________
>>>>> > Best wishes,
>>>>> > xuelin.tian at qkmtech.com
>>>>> >
>>>>> > _______________________________________________
>>>>> > users mailing list
>>>>> > users at rtems.org
>>>>> > http://lists.rtems.org/mailman/listinfo/users
>>>>> >
>>>>> >
>>>>> >
>>>>> > _______________________________________________
>>>>> > users mailing list
>>>>> > users at rtems.org
>>>>> > http://lists.rtems.org/mailman/listinfo/users
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
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>>
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