- 2020-02-13: default target for djgpp has changed to
i386-pc-msdosdjgpp
.
If you require compatibility with distributions that usei586
, you can either:- run
sudo i386-pc-msdosdjgpp-link-i586
after installing, or - build with
./build-djgpp.sh --target=i586-pc-msdosdjgpp
.
- run
- 2020-02-07: setenv script is now installed to
$PREFIX/bin/$TARGET-setenv
. - 2019-06-06:
master
is now the default branch again.
- gcc 14.2.0
- binutils 2.43.1
- gdb 15.1
- djgpp 2.05 / cvs
- watt-32 git
- newlib 4.3.0.20230120
- avr-libc 2.1.0
- avrdude 7.0
- avarice 2.14
- simulavr git
- i386-pc-msdosdjgpp
- ia16
- arm-eabi
- avr
See the Actions tab on Github for a detailed status of individual targets.
Before running this script, you need to install these programs first:
- g++
- gcc
- unzip
- tar
- bzip2
- gzip
- xz
- bison
- flex
- make (or gmake for FreeBSD)
- makeinfo
- patch
- zlib header/library
- curl or wget
- bash (for FreeBSD)
- python2 headers (for gdb)
- python3 headers (for gdb >= 9.0)
- m4
- dos2unix
- nasm
Depending on your system, installation procedure maybe different.
On Debian/Ubuntu, you can install these programs by :
$ sudo apt-get update
$ sudo apt-get install bison flex curl gcc g++ make texinfo zlib1g-dev tar bzip2 gzip xz-utils unzip python{2,3}-dev m4 dos2unix nasm
Fedora :
$ sudo yum install gcc-c++ which bison flex texinfo patch zlib-devel tar bzip2 gzip xz unzip python-devel m4 dos2unix nasm
mingw-w64 (msys2) :
$ pacman -Syuu base-devel mingw-w64-x86_64-{toolchain,curl,zlib,python{2,3}} compression m4 dos2unix nasm
The following command line options are recognized:
--prefix=... # Install location (default: /usr/local/cross)
--target=... # Target name
--enable-languages=... # Comma-separated list of languages to build compilers for (default: c,c++)
--no-download # Do not download any files
--only-download # Download source files, then exit
--ignore-dependencies # Do not check package dependencies
--batch # Run in batch mode (will not prompt or delay to confirm settings)
Several environment variables also control the build process:
GCC_CONFIGURE_OPTIONS= # Extra options to pass to gcc's ./configure
BINUTILS_CONFIGURE_OPTIONS= # Same, for binutils
GDB_CONFIGURE_OPTIONS= # Same, for gdb
NEWLIB_CONFIGURE_OPTIONS= # Same, for newlib
AVRLIBC_CONFIGURE_OPTIONS= # Same, for avr-libc
GLOBAL_CONFIGURE_OPTIONS= # Extra options added to all variables listed above
MAKE_JOBS= # Number of parallel build threads (auto-detected)
CFLAGS_FOR_TARGET= # CFLAGS used to build target libraries
HOST= # The platform you are building for, when building a cross-cross compiler
BUILD= # The platform you are building on (auto-detected)
MAKE_CHECK= # Run test suites on built programs.
MAKE_CHECK_GCC= # Run gcc test suites.
Pick the script you want to use:
build-djgpp.sh # builds a toolchain targeting djgpp (default TARGET: i386-pc-msdosdjgpp)
build-newlib.sh # builds a toolchain with the newlib C library
build-ia16.sh # builds a toolchain targeting 8086 processors, with the newlib C library (fixed TARGET: ia16-elf)
build-avr.sh # builds a toolchain targeting AVR microcontrollers (fixed TARGET: avr)
To build DJGPP, just run:
$ ./build-djgpp.sh [options...] [packages...]
Run with no arguments to see a list of supported packages and versions.
For example, to build gcc 9.2.0 with the latest djgpp C library from CVS and latest binutils:
$ ./build-djgpp.sh --prefix=/usr/local djgpp-cvs binutils gcc-9.2.0
To install or upgrade all packages:
$ ./build-djgpp.sh --prefix=/usr/local all
It will download all necessary files, build DJGPP compiler, binutils, and gdb, and install it.
(In the following examples, it is assumed that you built the toolchain with
options --prefix=/home/me/.local
and --target=i386-pc-msdosdjgpp
.
Substitute as necessary for your configuration.)
To use your new compiler, you must add its bin
directory to your PATH
.
You can then access the toolchain through its target-prefixed name:
$ PATH="/home/me/.local/bin:$PATH"
$ i386-pc-msdosdjgpp-g++ hello.cpp
A setenv
script will also be installed. This sets up environment variables
so that you can use the toolchain as if you were working on the target machine.
The toolchain utilities are then accessible through their short names (gcc
,
ld
, etc), and you can access target-specific documentation and locate target
libraries (via man
/info
and pkg-config
, respectively).
This script can be used either with no arguments, to start a new shell:
$ i386-pc-msdosdjgpp-setenv
Entering new shell for target environment: i386-pc-msdosdjgpp
$ which gcc
/home/me/.local/i386-pc-msdosdjgpp/bin//gcc
$ gcc -v 2>&1 | grep 'Target'
Target: i386-pc-msdosdjgpp
With a single command:
$ i386-pc-msdosdjgpp-setenv info libc
# (shows documentation for djgpp's C library)
Or source
d into the current shell: (Bash only)
$ which gcc
/usr/bin/gcc
$ source i386-pc-msdosdjgpp-setenv
Environment variables set up for target: i386-pc-msdosdjgpp
$ which gcc
/home/me/.local/i386-pc-msdosdjgpp/bin/gcc
- dxe3gen
- dxe3res
- dxegen
- exe2coff
- stubedit
- stubify
- djasm
- avrdude
- avarice
- simulavr
These scripts are based on Andrew Wu's build-djgpp script:
https://github.com/andrewwutw/build-djgpp
Which in turn is based on spec file from DJGPP source rpm files by Andris Pavenis:
http://ap1.pp.fi/djgpp/index.html