// -*- mode:doc; -*- Embedded system basics ---------------------- When developing an embedded system, there are a number of choices to address: * the cross-toolchain: target architecture/C library/... * the bootloader * kernel options * the device management * the init system * the package selection (busybox vs. "real" programs, ...) * ... Some of these may be influenced by the target hardware. Some of the choices may also add some constraints when you develop the final application for which your target is designed (e.g. some functions may be provided by some C libraries and missing in some others, ...). So, these choices should be carefully made. Buildroot allows you to set most of these options to fit your needs. Moreover, Buildroot provides an infrastructure for reproducing the build process of your kernel, cross-toolchain, and embedded root filesystem. Being able to reproduce the build process will be useful when a component needs to be patched or updated or when another person is supposed to take over the project. [[cross-compilation-and-cross-toolchain]] Cross-compilation & cross-toolchain ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A compilation toolchain is the set of tools that allows you to compile code for your system. It consists of a compiler (in our case, +gcc+), binary utils like assembler and linker (in our case, +binutils+) and a C standard library (for example http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/libc.html[GNU Libc], http://www.uclibc.org/[uClibc] or http://www.fefe.de/dietlibc/[dietlibc]). The system installed on your development station certainly already has a compilation toolchain that you can use to compile an application that runs on your system. If you're using a PC, your compilation toolchain runs on an x86 processor and generates code for an x86 processor. Under most Linux systems, the compilation toolchain uses the GNU libc (glibc) as the C standard library. This compilation toolchain is called the "host compilation toolchain". The machine on which it is running, and on which you're working, is called the "host system" footnote:[This terminology differs from what is used by GNU configure, where the host is the machine on which the application will run (which is usually the same as target)]. The compilation toolchain is provided by your distribution, and Buildroot has nothing to do with it (other than using it to build a cross-compilation toolchain and other tools that are run on the development host). As said above, the compilation toolchain that comes with your system runs on and generates code for the processor in your host system. As your embedded system has a different processor, you need a cross-compilation toolchain - a compilation toolchain that runs on your _host system_ but generates code for your _target system_ (and target processor). For example, if your host system uses x86 and your target system uses ARM, the regular compilation toolchain on your host runs on x86 and generates code for x86, while the cross-compilation toolchain runs on x86 and generates code for ARM. Even if your embedded system uses an x86 processor, you might be interested in Buildroot for two reasons: * The compilation toolchain on your host certainly uses the GNU Libc which is a complete but huge C standard library. Instead of using GNU Libc on your target system, you can use uClibc which is a tiny C standard library. If you want to use this C library, then you need a compilation toolchain to generate binaries linked with it. Buildroot can do that for you. * Buildroot automates the building of a root filesystem with all needed tools like busybox. That makes it much easier than doing it by hand. You might wonder why such a tool is needed when you can compile +gcc+, +binutils+, +uClibc+ and all the other tools by hand. Of course doing so is possible, but dealing with all of the configure options and problems of every +gcc+ or +binutils+ version is very time-consuming and uninteresting. Buildroot automates this process through the use of Makefiles and has a collection of patches for each +gcc+ and +binutils+ version to make them work on most architectures. Buildroot offers a number of options and settings that can be tuned when defining the cross-toolchain (refer to xref:toolchain-custom[]). [[bootloader]] Bootloader ~~~~~~~~~~ TODO [[device-management]] Device management ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ TODO [[init-system]] Init system ~~~~~~~~~~~ TODO