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c906108c
SS
1
2 PSIM - model the PowerPC environment
3
4 Copyright (C) 1994-1996, Andrew Cagney <cagney@highland.com.au>.
5
6 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
7
8 Running PSIM
9
10 This file describes how to run the program PSIM.
11
12 o Walk through a number of examples from the
13 pre-built tar archive psim-test.
14
15 o Looks at the device tree used by PSIM.
16
17 o Notes on building a programmer environment to
18 use with PSIM (BSD/UEA and BUG/OEA)
19
20
21 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
22
23
24RUNNING PSIM:
25
26
27The compressed tar archive psim-test available from:
28
29 ftp://ftp.ci.com.au/pub/psim/psim-test-1.0.1.tar.gz
30or ftp://cambridge.cygnus.com/pub/psim/psim-test-1.0.1.tar.gz
31
32contains a number of pre-built programs for running under PSIM. Each
33pre-built binary is built both big and little endian. The suffixes
34.be/.le (executables) .bo/.lo (object files) and .ba/.la (libraries)
35are used.
36
37
38To run one of these programs, use:
39
40 powerpc-unknown-eabi-run <image>
41
42for instance:
43
44 powerpc-unknown-eabi-run psim-test/uea/envp
45
46The program envp prints out your shells environment - very useful!
47More generally psim is run as (this is part of the output from the -h
48option):
49
50 psim [ <psim-option> ... ] <image> [ <image-arg> ... ]
51
52Where
53
54 <image> Name of the PowerPC program to run.
55 This can either be a PowerPC binary or
56 a text file containing a device tree
57 specification.
58 PSIM will attempt to determine from the
59 specified <image> the intended emulation
60 environment.
61 If PSIM gets it wrong, the emulation
62 environment can be specified using the
63 `-e' option (described below).
64
65 <image-arg> Argument to be passed to <image>
66 These arguments will be passed to
67 <image> (as standard C argv, argc)
68 when <image> is started.
69
70 <psim-option> See below
71
72The following are valid <psim-option>s:
73
74 -m <model> Specify the processor to model (604)
75 Selects the processor to use when
76 modeling execution units. Includes:
77 604, 603 and 603e
78
79 -e <os-emul> specify an OS or platform to model
80 Can be any of the following:
81 bug - OEA + MOTO BUG ROM calls
82 netbsd - UEA + NetBSD system calls
83 chirp - OEA + a few OpenBoot calls
84
85 -i Print instruction counting statistics
86
87 -I Print execution unit statistics
88
89 -r <size> Set RAM size in bytes (OEA environments)
90
91 -t [!]<trace> Enable (disable) <trace> option
92
93 -o <spec> add device <spec> to the device tree
94
95 -h -? -H give more detailed usage
96
97
98The `-H' option gives a long usage output. This includes a complete
99list of all the pre-configured devices.
100
101
102 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
103
104
105RUNNING GDB:
106
107
108If you built PSIM with gdb then the following is a quick start
109tutorial.
110
111At present GDB, if configured big-endian (say) unlike PSIM, does not
112support the debugging of little endian binaries. If you find that
113your program won't run at all, make certain that GDB and your
114program's endianness match.
115
116
117The most important thing is that before you can run the simulator you
118must enable it. For the simulator, gdb is started like any program:
119
120 $ powerpc-unknown-eabi-gdb psim-test/uea/envp.be
121
122Next the simulator is enabled. The command `target sim' accepts the
123same options as can be specified on the PSIM command line.
124
125 (gdb) target sim
126
127To trace the communication between psim and gdb specify `target sim -t
128gdb'. Once enabled, the binary needs to be loaded, any breakpoints of
129interest set, and the program run:
130
131 (gdb) load
132 (gdb) break main
133 (gdb) run
134 .
135 .
136 .
137
138In addition, if you are wanting to run a program described by a device
139tree you can `attach' to the simulation using (I assume that you have
140applied the attach patch):
141
142 $ cd psim-test/tree
143 $ powerpc-unknown-eabi-gdb
144 (gdb) target sim
145 (gdb) attach device-tree
146 (gdb) run
147
148Here GDB takes the programs initial state from the attached
149device-tree instead of forcing initialisation.
150
151
152 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
153
154
155PROFILING:
156
157
158PSIM includes a number of performance monitoring (profiling)
159facilities:
160
161 o instruction frequency counting
162
163 o execution unit modeling (records
164 effective usage of units).
165
166 o instruction cache performance
167
168As discussed in the file INSTALL, each can be configured to individual
169requirements.
170
171
172 -i Enable instruction counting.
173
174 The frequency of all instructions is tabulated. In
175 addition (f configured) the hit/miss rate of the
176 instruction cache is output.
177
178
179 -I Enable execution unit analysis.
180
181 In addition to counting basic instructions also model
182 the performance of the processors execution units
183
184
185 -m <processor>
186
187 Select the processor to be modelled.
188
189 For execution unit analysis specify the processor that
190 is to be analysed. By default the 604 is modelled
191 however, support for other processors such as the
192 603 and 603e is included.
193
194The output from a performance run (on a P90) for the program
195psim-test/profile/bench is below. In this run psim was fairly
196agressively configured (see the file INSTALL for compile time
197configuration).
198
199 CPU #1 executed 41,994 AND instructions.
200 CPU #1 executed 519,785 AND Immediate instructions.
201 CPU #1 executed 680,058 Add instructions.
202 CPU #1 executed 41,994 Add Extended instructions.
203 CPU #1 executed 921,916 Add Immediate instructions.
204 CPU #1 executed 221,199 Add Immediate Carrying instructions.
205 CPU #1 executed 943,823 Add Immediate Shifted instructions.
206 CPU #1 executed 471,909 Add to Zero Extended instructions.
207 CPU #1 executed 571,915 Branch instructions.
208 CPU #1 executed 1,992,403 Branch Conditional instructions.
209 CPU #1 executed 571,910 Branch Conditional to Link Register instructions.
210 CPU #1 executed 320,431 Compare instructions.
211 CPU #1 executed 471,911 Compare Immediate instructions.
212 CPU #1 executed 145,867 Compare Logical instructions.
213 CPU #1 executed 442,414 Compare Logical Immediate instructions.
214 CPU #1 executed 1 Condition Register XOR instruction.
215 CPU #1 executed 103,873 Divide Word instructions.
216 CPU #1 executed 104,275 Divide Word Unsigned instructions.
217 CPU #1 executed 132,510 Extend Sign Byte instructions.
218 CPU #1 executed 178,895 Extend Sign Half Word instructions.
219 CPU #1 executed 871,920 Load Word and Zero instructions.
220 CPU #1 executed 41,994 Move From Condition Register instructions.
221 CPU #1 executed 100,005 Move from Special Purpose Register instructions.
222 CPU #1 executed 100,002 Move to Special Purpose Register instructions.
223 CPU #1 executed 804,619 Multiply Low Word instructions.
224 CPU #1 executed 421,201 OR instructions.
225 CPU #1 executed 471,910 OR Immediate instructions.
226 CPU #1 executed 1,292,020 Rotate Left Word Immediate then AND with Mask instructions.
227 CPU #1 executed 663,613 Shift Left Word instructions.
228 CPU #1 executed 1,151,564 Shift Right Algebraic Word Immediate instructions.
229 CPU #1 executed 871,922 Store Word instructions.
230 CPU #1 executed 100,004 Store Word with Update instructions.
231 CPU #1 executed 887,804 Subtract From instructions.
232 CPU #1 executed 83,988 Subtract From Immediate Carrying instructions.
233 CPU #1 executed 1 System Call instruction.
234 CPU #1 executed 207,746 XOR instructions.
235
236 CPU #1 executed 23,740,856 cycles.
237 CPU #1 executed 10,242,780 stalls waiting for data.
238 CPU #1 executed 1 stall waiting for a function unit.
239 CPU #1 executed 1 stall waiting for serialization.
240 CPU #1 executed 1,757,900 times a write-back slot was unavailable.
241 CPU #1 executed 1,088,135 branches.
242 CPU #1 executed 2,048,093 conditional branches fell through.
243 CPU #1 executed 1,088,135 successful branch predictions.
244 CPU #1 executed 904,268 unsuccessful branch predictions.
245 CPU #1 executed 742,557 branch if the condition is FALSE conditional branches.
246 CPU #1 executed 1,249,846 branch if the condition is TRUE conditional branches.
247 CPU #1 executed 571,910 branch always conditional branches.
248 CPU #1 executed 9,493,653 1st single cycle integer functional unit instructions.
249 CPU #1 executed 1,220,900 2nd single cycle integer functional unit instructions.
250 CPU #1 executed 1,254,768 multiple cycle integer functional unit instructions.
251 CPU #1 executed 1,843,846 load/store functional unit instructions.
252 CPU #1 executed 3,136,229 branch functional unit instructions.
253 CPU #1 executed 16,949,396 instructions that were accounted for in timing info.
254 CPU #1 executed 871,920 data reads.
255 CPU #1 executed 971,926 data writes.
256 CPU #1 executed 221 icache misses.
257 CPU #1 executed 16,949,396 instructions in total.
258
259 Simulator speed was 250,731 instructions/second
260
261
262 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
263
264
265PSIM CONFIGURATION - THE DEVICE TREE
266
267
268Internally PSIM's configuration is controlled by a tree data
269structure. This structure, created at run-time, intentionally
270resembles the device tree used by OpenBoot firmware to describe a
271machines hardware configuration.
272
273PSIM can either create its device tree using a builtin emulation or
274from one read in from a file.
275
276During startup, the device tree is created using the following steps:
277
278 o Initial empty tree is created
279
280 o Any tree entry options specified on the
281 command line are merged in (the -o <entry>
282 option is used).
283
284 It should be pointed out that most of the
285 command line options (eg -r, -e, -m, -t
286 are all just short hand for corresponding
287 -o options).
288
289 o If the specified program is a device tree spec, that
290 is loaded.
291
292 If the specified program is a text file it is assumed
293 that that file contains a further specification of the
294 simulators device tree. That tree is loaded and
295 merged with the current tree options.
296
297 o The selected emulation fills out any remaining details.
298
299 By this stage the emulation environment that the program
300 needs will either be specified in the device tree
301 (through the -e option) or determined from the
302 characteristics of the binary.
303
304 The selected emulation will then fill out any missing
305 nodes in the device tree.
306
307Most importantly earlier additions to the tree are not overridden by
308later additions. Thus, command line options override information
309found in the program file and both override any builtin emulation
310entries.
311
312The following is a summary of the most useful runtime configuration
313options:
314
315 -e <os-emul>
316 -o '/openprom/options/os-emul <os-emul>'
317
318 Run program using the <emulation> run-time
319 environment.
320
321 -r <ram-size>
322 -o '/openprom/options/oea-memory-size <ram-size>'
323
324 Set the size of the first bank of memory
325 (RAM from address 0 up).
326
327 -t print-device-tree
328 -o '/openprom/trace/print-device-tree 1'
329
330 -t dump-device-tree
331 -o '/openprom/trace/dump-device-tree 1'
332
333 Print out the device tree once it has been fully
334 populated. For dump-device-tree, exit simulator after
335 dumping the tree.
336
337 PSIM is able to reload the dumped device tree.
338
339 The format of the dumped tree is under development.
340
341 -o '/openprom/options/smp <N>'
342
343 Enable <N> processors for the simulation run.
344 See the directory psim-test/oea for an example.
345
346 -o '/openprom/options/alignment <N>'
347
348 Where <N> is 1 - nonstrict or 2 - strict.
349 Specify if the missaligned access are allowed
350 (non-strict) or result in an alignment exception
351 (strict).
352
353Devices (if included in the file device_table.c) can also be specified
354in a similar way. For instance, to add a second serial port, a
355command like:
356
357 -o '/iobus@0x400000/console@0x000010'
358
359would create a `console' device at offset 0x10 within the `iobus' at
360memory address 0x400000.
361
362For more detailed information on device specifiers see the notes on
363the function dump_device_tree in the file device.c (found in the
364source code).
365
366
367 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
368
369
370BUILDING A BUG/OEA DEVELOPMENT ENVIRONMENT
371
372
373Background:
374
375
376Included in many PowerPC systems is Motorola's BUG monitor. This
377monitor includes, for client programs, a set of services that allow
378that program to interact with hardware devices such as the console using
379a simple system call interface.
380
381PSIM is able to emulate a number of the services (including the
382console IO calls). If additional services are needed they can easily
383be added.
384
385Cygnus support's newlib library includes includes an interface to the
386MOTO BUG services. The notes below discuss how I both built and run
387programs compiled using this library on PSIM.
388
389The only confusing part about building a development environment based
390around newlib/binutils/gcc is a chicken/egg problem with include
391files:
392
393 For GCC to build, a fairly complete set of include
394 files must be installed but newlib won't install its
395 include files until it has been built with gcc ...
396
397I get around this by installing the problematic include files by hand.
398
399
400Preparation:
401
402
403The following files are needed:
404
405From your favorite FTP site, the sources to gas/ld and gcc - mine
406happens to be archie.au :
407
408 ftp://archie.au/gnu/binutils-2.6.tar.gz
409 ftp://archie.au/gnu/gcc-2.7.2.tar.gz
410
411From ftp://ftp.cygnus.com/pub/newlib the source code to a library:
412
413 ftp://ftp.cygnus.com/pub/newlib/newlib-1.7.0.tar.gz
414
415From ftp://ftp.ci.com.au/pub/psim some minor patches and updates to
416the above library:
417
418 ftp://ftp.ci.com.au/pub/psim/newlib-1.7.0+float+ppc-asm.tar.gz
419 ftp://ftp.ci.com.au/pub/psim/newlib-1.7.0+ppc-fix.diff.gz
420 ftp://ftp.ci.com.au/pub/psim/binutils-2.6+note.diff.gz
421
422In addition you'll need to decide where you will be installing the
423development environment. You will notice that in the below I install
424things well away /usr/local instead installing everything under its
425own directory in /applications.
426
427
428Method:
429
430
431These notes are based on an installation performed on a Sun-OS-4/SPARC
432host. For other hosts and other configurations, the below should be
433considered as a guideline only.
434
435
436 o Sanity check
437
438 $ cd .../scratch # your scratch directory
439 $ ls -1
440 binutils-2.6.tar.gz
441 binutils-2.6+note.diff.gz
442 gcc-2.7.2,tar.gz
443 newlib-1.7.0+float+ppc-asm.tar.gz
444 newlib-1.7.0+ppc-fix.diff.gz
445 newlib-1.7.0.tar.gz
446
447
448 o Unpack/build/install binutils
449
450 This is done first so that there is a gas/ld ready
451 for the building of GCC and NEWLIB.
452
453 $ cd .../scratch
454 $ gunzip < binutils-2.6.tar.gz | tar xf -
455 $ cd binutils-2.6
456
457 Optionally apply the note patch
458
459 $ gunzip ../binutils-2.6+note.diff.gz | patch
460
461 Then continue with the build
462
463 $ ./configure --target=powerpc-unknown-eabi \
464 --prefix=/applications/psim
465 $ make
466 $ make install
467 $ cd ..
468 $ rm -rf binutils-2.6
469
470 This also creates much of the installation directory
471 tree.
472
473
474 o Unpack newlib, install the include files so that they
475 are ready for GCC's build.
476
477 $ cd .../scratch
478 $ gunzip < newlib-1.7.0.tar.gz | tar xf -
479
480 New lib-1.7.0 had a few minor bugs (fixed in current):
481 the header files float.h and ppc-asm.h were missing;
482 the configure and Makefile's for the rs6000 (ppc) directory
483 contained typos:
484
485 $ cd .../scratch
486 $ cd newlib-1.7.0
487 $ gunzip < ../newlib-1.7.0+float+ppc-asm.tar.gz | tar xvf -
488 $ gunzip < ../newlib-1.7.0+ppc-fix.diff.gz | patch -p1
489
490 Finally copy the include files to where GCC will see them:
491
492 $ cd .../scratch
493 $ cd newlib-1.7.0/newlib/libc
494 $ tar cf - include | \
495 ( cd /applications/psim/powerpc-unknown-eabi && tar xf - )
496
497
498 o Unpack/build gcc
499
500 $ cd .../scratch
501 $ gunzip < gcc-2.7.2,tar.gz | tar xf -
502 $ cd gcc-2.7.2
503 $ ./configure --target=powerpc-unknown-eabi \
504 --prefix=/applications/psim
505 $ make
506 $ make install
507 $ cd ..
508 $ rm -rf gcc-2.7.2
509
510 Gcc likes to install its own dummy version of float that
511 just returns an error.
512
513 $ more /applications/psim/lib/gcc-lib/powerpc-unknown-eabi/2.7.2/include/float.h
514 $ rm /applications/psim/lib/gcc-lib/powerpc-unknown-eabi/2.7.2/include/float.h
515
516
517 o Finish building/installing newlib
518
519 $ cd .../scratch
520 $ cd newlib-1.7.0
521 $ ./configure --target=powerpc-unknown-eabi \
522 --prefix=/applications/psim
523
524 Your path will need to include the recently installed
525 gas/gcc when building. Either add it to your path or
526 use:
527
528 $ PATH=/applications/psim/bin:$PATH make
529 $ PATH=/applications/psim/bin:$PATH make install
530
531
532 o Finally, test out the build
533
534 $ cat hello.c
535 main()
536 {
537 printf("hello world\n");
538 }
539
540 The binary is linked with an entry point less than 0x100000
541 (1mb) so that psim will recognize the binary as needing
542 the BUG/OEA instead of the BSD/UEA runtime environment.
543
544 $ powerpc-unknown-eabi-gcc -v -o hello \
545 -Wl,-Ttext,0x4000,-Tdata,0x10000 \
546 /applications/psim/powerpc-unknown-eabi/lib/mvme-crt0.o \
547 hello.c \
548 -lc -lmvme
549 $ powerpc-unknown-eabi-objdump -h hello
550 $ powerpc-unknown-eabi-run hello
551
552 It is also possible to force psim to use a specific
553 run-time environment using the -e option vis:
554
555 $ powerpc-unknown-eabi-run -e bug hello
556
557
558
559
560 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
561
562
563BUILDING A BSD/UEA DEVELOPMENT ENVIRONMENT
564
565
566Background:
567
568
569For a UEA to be useful it needs a supporting run-time environment.
570PSIM implements a runtime environment based on the NetBSD system call
571interface.
572
573More than any thing, this user level emulation was the first
574implemented because I happened to have the NetBSD source code lying
575around.
576
577
578Preparation:
579
580
581This requires the NetBSD-1.1 source tree online. It can either be
582obtained vi ftp:
583
584 try http://www.netbsd.org or ftp://ftp.netbsd.org
585
586Alternatively obtain one of the NetBSD cdrom's. Patches to this source
587tree that fill out much of the PowerPC code are available in:
588
589 ftp://ftp.ci.com.au/pub/clayton
590
591Fetch everything in that directory - diffs, tar archives and scripts.
592In addition patches to the bintuils and gcc are in:
593
594 ftp://ftp.ci.com.au/pub/psim/binutils-2.6+note.diff.gz
595 ftp://ftp.ci.com.au/pub/psim/gcc-2.7.2+sys-types.diff.gz
596
597while the compiler (gcc) and assember (binutils) can be found at your
598favorite gnu ftp site. I used versions:
599
600 gcc-2.7.2.tar.gz
601 binutils-2.6.tar.gz
602
603
604
605
606Method:
607
608
609These notes are based on an installation performed on a Solaris2/x86
610host. For other hosts and other configurations, the below should be
611considered as a guideline only.
612
613
614 o Sanity check
615
616 I assume that you have already obtained the NetBSD-1.1 source
617 code and unpacked it into the directory bsd-src. While the
618 full NetBSD source tree may not be needed, things are easier
619 if it is all online.
620
621 $ cd .../scratch
622 $ ls -1
623 binutils-2.6.tar.gz
624 binutils-2.6+note.diff.gz
625 clayton-include-960203.diff.gz
626 clayton-lib-960203.diff.gz
627 clayton-lib-960203.tar.gz
628 clayton-sys-960203.diff.gz
629 clayton-sys-960203.tar.gz
630 clayton.chown.sh
631 clayton.install.sh
632 clayton.lorder.sh
633 clayton.make.sh
634 gcc-2.7.2.tar.gz
635 gcc-2.7.2+sys-types.diff.gz
636 make.tar.gz
637 make.diff.gz
638
639
640 o Prepare the destination directory ready for installation.
641
642 Firstly create many of the needed directories (some are
643 created automatically later):
644
645 $ for d in \
646 /applications/psim \
647 /applications/psim/bsd-root \
648 /applications/psim/bsd-root/usr \
649 /applications/psim/bsd-root/usr/share \
650 /applications/psim/bsd-root/usr/share/doc \
651 /applications/psim/bsd-root/usr/share/doc/psd \
652 /applications/psim/bsd-root/usr/share/doc/psd/19.curses \
653 /applications/psim/bsd-root/usr/include \
654 /applications/psim/bsd-root/usr/lib \
655 /applications/psim/powerpc-unknown-eabi \
656 /applications/psim/powerpc-unknown-eabi/bin \
657 ; \
658 do test -d $d || mkdir $d ; done
659
660 Next, link the BSD and GNU include directories together.
661 GCC expects include files to be in one location while the
662 bsd install expects them in a second. The link is in
663 the direction below because bsd's install also insists on
664 a directory (not a link) for its install destination.
665
666 $ rm -rf /applications/psim/powerpc-unknown-eabi/include
667 $ ln -s /applications/psim/bsd-root/usr/include \
668 /applications/psim/powerpc-unknown-eabi/include
669
670 $ ls -l /applications/psim/powerpc-unknown-eabi/include
671 lrwxr-xr-x 1 cagney wheel 39 Mar 21 18:09
672 /applications/psim/powerpc-unknown-eabi/include
673 -> /applications/psim/bsd-root/usr/include
674
675
676 o Build/install Berkeley make
677
678 The tar archive make.tar.gz contains a recent snapshot
679 of bmake from the NetBSD source tree. The notes below
680 describe how to build/install it. If you have access
681 to an even more recent version of bmake, use that.
682
683 Unpack the source code:
684
685 $ cd .../scratch
686 $ gunzip < make.tar.gz | tar xf -
687 $ cd make
688
689 Apply the patch in make.diff.gz that fixes a minor
690 problem with a build under Solaris (by now it should
691 be fixed in the NetBSD-current source tree).
692
693 $ gunzip < ../make.diff.gz | more
694 $ gunzip < ../make.diff.gz | patch
695
696 Build it
697
698 $ make -f Makefile.boot 'CC=gcc -g -DPOSIX'
699
700 With bmake built, install it into the target specific bin
701 directory:
702
703 $ cp bmake /applications/psim/powerpc-unknown-eabi/bin/make
704 $ cd ..
705 $ rm -rf make
706
707
708 o Set up a number of wrapper scripts for bmake so that it works.
709
710 In addition to needing BSD make the build process assumes
711 a number of BSD specific commands. To get around this
712 several wrapper scripts are available.
713
714 powerpc-unknown-eabi-make (clayton.make.sh)
715
716 Front end to Berkeley make setting it up for a
717 cross compilation
718
719 $ cp clayton.make.sh \
720 /applications/psim/bin/powerpc-unknown-eabi-make
721 $ chmod a+x \
722 /applications/psim/bin/powerpc-unknown-eabi-make
723
724 chown (clayton.chown.sh)
725
726 Wrapper that does not do any thing.
727 Avoids the need to be root when installing.
728
729 $ cp clayton.chown.sh \
730 /applications/psim/powerpc-unknown-eabi/bin/chown
731 $ chmod a+x \
732 /applications/psim/powerpc-unknown-eabi/bin/chown
733
734 install (clayton.install.sh)
735
736 Wrapper to strip away a number of bsd specific install
737 arguments.
738
739 $ cp clayton.install.sh \
740 /applications/psim/powerpc-unknown-eabi/bin/install
741 $ chmod a+x \
742 /applications/psim/powerpc-unknown-eabi/bin/install
743
744 lorder (clayton.lorder.sh)
745
746 Tweaked lorder script that will use nm etc from
747 binutils.
748
749 $ cp clayton.lorder.sh \
750 /applications/psim/powerpc-unknown-eabi/bin/lorder
751 $ chmod a+x \
752 /applications/psim/powerpc-unknown-eabi/bin/lorder
753
754
755 printf (?)
756
757 Some operating systems don't include the program
758 printf. If you host doesn't have one, then a
759 good source is the gnu sh-utils version.
760
761 Again, if that program is missing, then I suggest
762 installing it onto the powerpc specific program
763 directory:
764
765 /applications/psim/powerpc-unknown-eabi/bin
766
767
768 o Unpack the bsd source code (if you haven't already)
769
770 If you're short on disk space (like me) just unpack:
771
772 sys, lib, share/mk, include, usr.sbin/config,
773 usr.sbin/dbsym, gnu/lib/libg++/g++-include,
774 usr.bin/lex
775
776 Otherwize, assuming you have a CD-DRIVE:
777
778 $ cd .../scratch
779 $ mkdir bsd-src
780 $ cd bsd-src
781 $ for d in /cdrom/bsdisc_12_95_disc2/NetBSD-1.1/source/*11
782 do
783 echo $d
784 cat $d/*.?? | gunzip | tar xf -
785 done
786
787 Flatten the directory structure a little.
788
789 $ mv usr/src/* .
790 $ rmdir usr/src usr
791 $ cd ..
792
793
794 o Apply the clayton (PowerPC) patches to your constructed
795 tree.
796
797 $ cd .../scratch
798 $ cd bsd-src
799
800 Diffs are applied using something like:
801
802 $ gunzip < ../clayton-include-960312.diff.gz | patch -p1
803 $ gunzip < ../clayton-lib-960203.diff.gz | patch -p1
804 $ gunzip < ../clayton-sys-960203.diff.gz | patch -p1
805
806 The patch to sys/dev/pci/ncr.c.rej might fail.
807
808 The tar archives have a different problem, you need
809 to remove the `src' prefix. I used
810
811 $ ln -s . src
812 $ gunzip < ../clayton-lib-960203.tar.gz | tar xvf -
813 $ gunzip < ../clayton-sys-960203.tar.gz | tar xvf -
814
815 So that src/xxx unpacked into ./xxx
816
817 $ cd ..
818
819
820 o install Berkeley make's include (mk) files.
821
822 $ cd .../scrath
823 $ cd bsd-src/share
824 $ tar cf - mk | ( cd /applications/psim/bsd-root/usr/share \
825 && tar xvf - )
826 $ cd ../..
827
828
829 o Install the include files
830
831 $ cd .../scratch
832 $ cd bsd-src/include
833 $ powerpc-unknown-eabi-make install
834 $ cd ../..
835
836
837 o Install a few other include files.
838
839 As discussed above in the section on building libnew,
840 the build process can have chicken/egg problems. In the
841 case of BSD's libc, it wants to use several include files
842 (from the installed include directory) before they are
843 installed. Just copy them in as seen below:
844
845 $ cd .../scratch
846 $ cd bsd-src
847 $ cp gnu/lib/libg++/g++-include/values.h \
848 /applications/psim/powerpc-unknown-eabi/include
849 $ cp lib/libcurses/curses.h \
850 /applications/psim/powerpc-unknown-eabi/include
851 $ cd ..
852
853
854 o Unpack/patch/build/install BINUTILS
855
856 $ cd .../scratch
857 $ gunzip < binutils-2.6.tar.gz | tar xf -
858
859 gas (bfd) 2.6 didn't support the reading and writing of
860 note sections. The patch binutils-2.6+note.diff.gz
861 adds support for this. PowerPC/ELF boot files being loaded
862 by OpenBoot ROM's should contain a PowerPC note section.
863
864 $ cd .../scratch
865 $ cd binutils-2.6/bfd
866 $ gunzip < ../../binutils-2.6+note.diff.gz | more
867 $ gunzip < ../../binutils-2.6+note.diff.gz | patch
868 $ cd ../..
869
870 Then continue with the build
871
872 $ cd .../scratch
873 $ cd binutils-2.6
874 $ ./configure --target=powerpc-unknown-eabi \
875 --prefix=/applications/psim
876 $ make
877 $ make install
878 $ cd ..
879 $ rm -rf binutils-2.6
880
881 This has the intended side effect of partially populating
882 the psim directory tree which makes follow on steps easier.
883
884
885 o Unpack/patch/build/install GCC
886
887 $ cd .../scratch
888 $ gunzip < gcc-2.7.2.tar.gz | tar xf -
889 $ cd gcc-2.7.2
890
891 GCC-2.7.2 and the BSD include files have a conflicting type
892 declaration. The patch below gets around this problem
893 (it may still be applicable to more recent versions of
894 GCC):
895
896 $ gunzip < ../gcc-2.7.2+sys-types.diff.gz | more
897 $ gunzip < ../gcc-2.7.2+sys-types.diff.gz | patch
898
899 If your version of GCC includes the file ginclude/ppc-asm.h
900 then you should install that header file into the directory:
901 /applications/psim/powerpc-unknown-eabi/include. More
902 recent versions of GCC expect this file to be installed:
903
904 $ test -r ginclude/ppc-asm.h \
905 && cp ginclude/ppc-asm.h \
906 /applications/psim/powerpc-unknown-eabi/include
907
908 Other than that, assuming the include files installed
909 okay, the rest should be fine ....
910
911 $ ./configure --target=powerpc-unknown-eabi \
912 --prefix=/applications/psim
913 $ make CC=gcc
914 $ make CC=gcc install
915 $ cd ..
916 $ rm -rf gcc-2.7.2
917
918
919 o Build/install the Berkeley library:
920
921 $ cd .../scratch
922 $ cd bsd-src/lib
923 $ powerpc-unknown-eabi-make
924 $ powerpc-unknown-eabi-make install
925 $ cd ../..
926
927 If you encounter problems check the following (each
928 discussed above):
929
930 o GCC and BSD have a common include
931 directory
932
933 o all the missing include files installed
934
935 o all the wrapper programs installed
936
937
938 o Build/run a simple BSD program
939
940 $ cd .../scratch
941 $ cd bsd-src/usr.bin/printenv
942 $ powerpc-unknown-eabi-make
943 $ powerpc-unknown-eabi-run printenv
944 .
945 .
946 .
947
948
949 ----------------------------------------------------------------------