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- #
- # config.mak.dist - sample musl-cross-make configuration
- #
- # Copy to config.mak and edit as desired.
- #
- # There is no default TARGET; you must select one here or on the make
- # command line. Some examples:
- # TARGET = i486-linux-musl
- # TARGET = x86_64-linux-musl
- # TARGET = arm-linux-musleabi
- # TARGET = arm-linux-musleabihf
- # TARGET = sh2eb-linux-muslfdpic
- # ...
- # By default, cross compilers are installed to ./output under the top-level
- # musl-cross-make directory and can later be moved wherever you want them.
- # To install directly to a specific location, set it here. Multiple targets
- # can safely be installed in the same location. Some examples:
- # OUTPUT = /opt/cross
- # OUTPUT = /usr/local
- # By default, latest supported release versions of musl and the toolchain
- # components are used. You can override those here, but the version selected
- # must be supported (under hashes/ and patches/) to work. For musl, you
- # can use "git-refname" (e.g. git-master) instead of a release. Setting a
- # blank version for gmp, mpc, mpfr and isl will suppress download and
- # in-tree build of these libraries and instead depend on pre-installed
- # libraries when available (isl is optional and not set by default).
- # Setting a blank version for linux will suppress installation of kernel
- # headers, which are not needed unless compiling programs that use them.
- # BINUTILS_VER = 2.25.1
- # GCC_VER = 5.2.0
- # MUSL_VER = git-master
- # GMP_VER =
- # MPC_VER =
- # MPFR_VER =
- # ISL_VER =
- # LINUX_VER =
- # By default source archives are downloaded with wget. curl is also an option.
- # DL_CMD = wget -c -O
- # DL_CMD = curl -C - -L -o
- # Check sha-1 hashes of downloaded source archives. On gnu systems this is
- # usually done with sha1sum.
- # SHA1_CMD = sha1sum -c
- # SHA1_CMD = sha1 -c
- # SHA1_CMD = shasum -a 1 -c
- # Something like the following can be used to produce a static-linked
- # toolchain that's deployable to any system with matching arch, using
- # an existing musl-targeted cross compiler. This only works if the
- # system you build on can natively (or via binfmt_misc and qemu) run
- # binaries produced by the existing toolchain (in this example, i486).
- # COMMON_CONFIG += CC="i486-linux-musl-gcc -static --static" CXX="i486-linux-musl-g++ -static --static"
- # Recommended options for smaller build for deploying binaries:
- # COMMON_CONFIG += CFLAGS="-g0 -Os" CXXFLAGS="-g0 -Os" LDFLAGS="-s"
- # Options you can add for faster/simpler build at the expense of features:
- # COMMON_CONFIG += --disable-nls
- # GCC_CONFIG += --disable-libquadmath --disable-decimal-float
- # GCC_CONFIG += --disable-libitm
- # GCC_CONFIG += --disable-fixed-point
- # GCC_CONFIG += --disable-lto
- # By default C and C++ are the only languages enabled, and these are
- # the only ones tested and known to be supported. You can uncomment the
- # following and add other languages if you want to try getting them to
- # work too.
- # GCC_CONFIG += --enable-languages=c,c++
- # You can keep the local build path out of your toolchain binaries and
- # target libraries with the following, but then gdb needs to be told
- # where to look for source files.
- # COMMON_CONFIG += --with-debug-prefix-map=$(CURDIR)=
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