Difference between revisions of "Haiku specific Release Engineering"

From Lazarus wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Line 1: Line 1:
 
Haiku is unix like enough to use the Freepascal's unix scripts to generate a binary distribution.
 
Haiku is unix like enough to use the Freepascal's unix scripts to generate a binary distribution.
  
==== Getting binaries for integrated debugging support in the IDE ====
+
==== Getting binaries for debugging support in the IDE ====
  
 
While you can compile gdb on your own, the easiest way (by far) under Haiku is to build an Haiku yourself.
 
While you can compile gdb on your own, the easiest way (by far) under Haiku is to build an Haiku yourself.

Revision as of 01:35, 10 December 2009

Haiku is unix like enough to use the Freepascal's unix scripts to generate a binary distribution.

Getting binaries for debugging support in the IDE

While you can compile gdb on your own, the easiest way (by far) under Haiku is to build an Haiku yourself.

Then, you can collect all the needed files in the build tree :

  • libgdb.a in generated/objects/haiku/x86/release/bin/gdb/gdb
  • libbfd.a in generated/objects/haiku/x86/release/bin/gdb/bfd
  • libiberty.a in generated/objects/haiku/x86/release/bin/gdb/libiberty
  • libopcodes.a in generated/objects/haiku/x86/release/bin/gdb/opcodes
  • libreadline.a in generated/objects/haiku/x86/release/bin/gdb/readline
  • libintl.a in generated/objects/haiku/x86/release/bin/gawk/intl/
  • libgcc.a in /boot/develop/abi/x86/gcc2/tools/gcc-2.95.3-haiku-081024/lib/gcc-lib/i586-pc-haiku/2.95.3-haiku-081024 (you may have to adapt the path to the installed gcc version on your machine).