commit | 6363bfe52b27ecc404d79185b84e1cd9bf00ed29 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Samuel Mendoza-Jonas <sam@mendozajonas.com> | Mon Jun 24 12:02:49 2019 +1000 |
committer | Klaus Heinrich Kiwi <klaus@linux.vnet.ibm.com> | Sun Mar 01 23:37:50 2020 -0300 |
tree | 5f1d5c3da479fcc0d03e4606be02d0c32bf47377 | |
parent | 3ef800c8f7903a588fe9ac793cd7759de5c31e27 [diff] |
petitboot: Bump to v1.10.4 Bump to Petitboot 1.10.4. Changes since 1.10.3: Javier Martinez Canillas (2): discover/grub2: Allow using title for default even if id was defined discover/grub2: Allow to separate the --id argument using a space char Samuel Mendoza-Jonas (6): Various fixups and checks to make scan-build happy utils: Quote plugin name and vendor variables utils: Optionally run utilities as root Remove outdated TODO file doc: Start writing some in-tree documentation travis: Publish sphinx docs to Github pages Signed-off-by: Samuel Mendoza-Jonas <sam@mendozajonas.com> (cherry picked from commit fd52bf9454bc0d057a6409688218247b7e8e7752) Signed-off-by: Klaus Heinrich Kiwi <klaus@linux.vnet.ibm.com> (added changelog since 1.10.3 to commit message)
The OpenPOWER firmware build process uses Buildroot to create a toolchain and build the various components of the PNOR firmware, including Hostboot, Skiboot, OCC, Petitboot etc.
https://open-power.github.io/op-build/
See the doc/ directory for documentation source. Contributions are VERY welcome!
Issues, Milestones, pull requests and code hosting is on GitHub: https://github.com/open-power/op-build
See CONTRIBUTING.md for howto contribute code.
To build an image for a Palmetto system:
git clone --recursive git@github.com:open-power/op-build.git cd op-build ./op-build palmetto_defconfig && ./op-build
There are also default configurations for other platforms in openpower/configs/
. Current POWER8 platforms include Habanero, Firestone, and Garrison. Current POWER9 platforms include Witherspoon, Boston (p9dsu), Romulus, and Zaius.
Buildroot/op-build supports both native and cross-compilation - it will automatically download and build an appropriate toolchain as part of the build process, so you don't need to worry about setting up a cross-compiler. Cross-compiling from a x86-64 host is officially supported.
The machine your building on will need Python 2.7, GCC 6.2 (or later), and a handful of other packages (see below).
Install Ubuntu (>= 18.04) or Debian (>= 9) 64-bit.
Enable Universe (Ubuntu only):
sudo apt-get install software-properties-common sudo add-apt-repository universe
Install the packages necessary for the build:
sudo apt-get install cscope ctags libz-dev libexpat-dev \ python language-pack-en texinfo \ build-essential g++ git bison flex unzip \ libssl-dev libxml-simple-perl libxml-sax-perl libxml-parser-perl libxml2-dev libxml2-utils xsltproc \ wget bc rsync
Install Fedora (>= 25) 64-bit.
Install the packages necessary for the build:
sudo dnf install gcc-c++ flex bison git ctags cscope expat-devel patch \ zlib-devel zlib-static texinfo perl-bignum "perl(XML::Simple)" \ "perl(YAML)" "perl(XML::SAX)" "perl(Fatal)" "perl(Thread::Queue)" \ "perl(Env)" "perl(XML::LibXML)" "perl(Digest::SHA1)" libxml2-devel \ which wget unzip tar cpio python bzip2 bc findutils ncurses-devel