On 24-Feb-2001 ±èÀç¿ë wrote: > Please help me.. > I don't even know concept of porting, but I have to port ecos in EDB7209-2C > ARM7 board of Cirrus.. > I have followed instruction in redhat Web Site and downloaded ecos-1.3.1 > and > extracted... > And compiled, installed binutils, gcc, gdb in arm target, following > instruction > of > http://sources.redhat.com/ecos/install-linux.html and > http://sources.redhat.com/ecos/tools/linux-arm-elf.html > executable comes arm-elf-gcc etc. > > and I don't know what I should do next to port ecos. > I guess I have to cross-compile kernel, but I don't know how to do that. > Neither document in redhat Web site nor document in ecos package told me > what > to do next. and seems to skip.. > Please tell me what I should do next in detail, including command with > option > and argument. Sorry, I am beginner in ecos and porting > I have not much time and urgent. > And another question..is ecos included in Embedded Linux? > Please answer.. > I will wait for your answer. Firstly, for the Cirrus Logic board you mention, no porting is required at all as this is one of the platforms we support. Secondly, you would be much better off by using the eCos sources from anonymous CVS. See http://sources.redhat.com/ecos/anoncvs.html Once you've obstained the latest sources and installed both the sources and the tools on your system (I assume that you are using Linux for your development host, based on your references above) then you can create an eCos kernel for your board. Once you have a kernel, then you build and run applications on the board by downloading them using GDB. This whole process is rather fully explained in the eCos "Getting Started Guide" and hardware installation notes. The full text is available from our web site at: http://sources.redhat.com/ecos/docs.html If you have additional problems or questions, just send them to this same eCos discussion list.