MinGW cross compiling environment 1.4 (Default branch)


 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Special Forums News, Links, Events and Announcements Software Releases - RSS News MinGW cross compiling environment 1.4 (Default branch)
# 1  
Old 01-11-2008
MinGW cross compiling environment 1.4 (Default branch)

MinGW cross compiling environment is a script that compiles a MinGW cross compiler and cross compiles many free libraries such as GD and SDL. Thus, it provides a nice MinGW cross compiling environment. All necessary source packages are downloaded automatically. License: MIT/X Consortium License Changes:
This release includes a tutorial by Hans Bezemer and has improved compile options for FLTK. As usual, it supports some newer versions of the libraries. At the request of its author, libowfat is no longer supported from this release on. The script now uses a specific SourceForge mirror instead of randomly chosen ones, because the download phase often stumbled on some very slow mirrors.Image

More...
Login or Register to Ask a Question

Previous Thread | Next Thread

5 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX and Linux Applications

Cross Compiling Issue of udev-151 for MIPS Little Endain Architecture

Hi All, I am trying to cross compile udev-151 for MIPS little endian architecture. I am configuring like this: ./configure --prefix=$PWD/sree --host=mips-linux-gnu configure: WARNING: If you wanted to set the --build type, don't use --host. If a cross compiler is detected then... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: bsreeram
3 Replies

2. Programming

MinGW - Trouble Compiling Guile

This question is not about programming but compiling with GNU GCC/Make. I am not on a UNIX machine but am using the UNIX-like environment MSYS with MinGW for compiling. The problem that I am having is that I cannot get guile to compile. For some reason it cannot find libltdl which is part of... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Deluge
3 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Cross-compiling libiconv for uclinux

Hi everyone, I want to cross-compile libiconv for uclinux to create a static library. I use the following command : ./configure --enable-static --disable-shared --build=i686-pc-linux-gnu --host=nios2-unknown-linux-gnu --prefix=/home/captain/Programs/nios2-linux/uClinux-dist/staging/usr... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: moganesh
2 Replies

4. Linux

Help Cross compiling a kernel for an HP Jornada 728

Hello, I just bought an old Jornada 728 and, as you may know, it comes with Windows CE 3.0. I do not use Windows, so i wanted to create my own linux system for the Jornada. I know there are projects like Jlime, Familiar Linux, 720 Degrees, etc. But i want something based on the distribution i... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: semash!
1 Replies

5. Programming

Cross compiling under Windows for Linux

I have two headless servers I am writing code for, and a Windows box networked with them. I want to compile my code within an IDE on the Windows box (eclipse most likely) and run the compiled binarys on the Linux boxes. Will this work? Using Cygwin (or MinGW)? Thoughts? Cheers, Ian (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: IanVaughan
8 Replies
Login or Register to Ask a Question
PERLRISCOS(1)						 Perl Programmers Reference Guide					     PERLRISCOS(1)

NAME
perlriscos - Perl version 5 for RISC OS DESCRIPTION
This document gives instructions for building Perl for RISC OS. It is complicated by the need to cross compile. There is a binary version of perl available from <http://www.cp15.org/perl/> which you may wish to use instead of trying to compile it yourself. BUILD
You need an installed and working gccsdk cross compiler <http://gccsdk.riscos.info/> and REXEN <http://www.cp15.org/programming/> Firstly, copy the source and build a native copy of perl for your host system. Then, in the source to be cross compiled: 1. $ ./Configure 2. Select the riscos hint file. The default answers for the rest of the questions are usually sufficient. Note that, if you wish to run Configure non-interactively (see the INSTALL document for details), to have it select the correct hint file, you'll need to provide the argument -Dhintfile=riscos on the Configure command-line. 3. $ make miniperl 4. This should build miniperl and then fail when it tries to run it. 5. Copy the miniperl executable from the native build done earlier to replace the cross compiled miniperl. 6. $ make 7. This will use miniperl to complete the rest of the build. AUTHOR
Alex Waugh <alex@alexwaugh.com> perl v5.18.2 2013-11-04 PERLRISCOS(1)