Subject: Re: Duo 230 and MacBSD, same here
To: Markus Hitter <M.Hitter@trier.fh-rpl.de>
From: Richard Ervin <rervin@oasis.novia.net>
List: port-mac68k
Date: 03/02/1996 16:31:24
> > Subject: Re: Duo 230 and MacBSD, same here
> > Bill Studenmund wrote:
> > DUH!! I don't know what's the matter with me! I have a 486 right here
> > on my desk. How about a cross-compiler for my 486? That would be the
> > ideal!
>
> It's not hard to build a cross-compiler on any machine supported by GNU gcc. I
> won't bore all with the description, so drop me a line if you're interested.
I'd prefer to get a complete working setup so that I could have a high
degree of confidence that it was done correctly. I'd hate to spend a long
time debugging a kernel only to discover that the cross-compiler I spent 60
hours configuring was done incorrectly.
> > Does NetBSD have a utility for non-destructively splitting a drive?
>
> Probably not, but I've heard some MacOS disk partitioner can do that job.
Actuall,y I was referring to the 386 where I was thinking about doing the
cross-compiles.
>
> > How much space do I need for minimum NetBSD + cross-compiler?
>
> Around 19megs for the sources and one kernel, if you remove the stuff for the
> other architectures. 3.5megs for the binaries on a RS6000, for a i386 machine 2
> megs should be sufficient.
>
> > Does anyone have an ALREADY working version of this that is know to
> > work for kernels?
>
> Yes, for RS6000
I have access to an RS6000. Is there any way that you could package up and
transmit the entire cross-compiler environment ( I would like to avoid the
need to build the cross-compilers for the obvious reasons.) I would really
appreciate it, and so would many Duo users. Even if I can't get it working,
MAYBE I can at least identify what the stumbling block is.
Ideally, I would like to have a known-good build tree and header files, but
if that is a great inconvenienec, I can dowload those myself. The main
thing is to get a set of tools in binary form.