Difference between revisions of "WebOS Internals PDK"
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PATH=/srv/preware/cross-compile/toolchain/arm-2007q3/bin:${PATH} sb2-init -c /usr/bin/qemu-arm armv6 arm-none-linux-gnueabi-gcc | PATH=/srv/preware/cross-compile/toolchain/arm-2007q3/bin:${PATH} sb2-init -c /usr/bin/qemu-arm armv6 arm-none-linux-gnueabi-gcc | ||
cd /srv/preware/cross-compile | cd /srv/preware/cross-compile | ||
+ | |||
+ | On some distributions such as recent Debian and Ubuntu, you'll have compiler problems with these values - use sb2-qemu-arm instead of qemu-arm in the sb2-init command lines above. | ||
Then: | Then: |
Revision as of 23:43, 31 August 2011
Palm's binary sdk the "Plugin Developer Kit" became available to all developers in March 2010.
When the widk was developed, the Palm PDK didn't exist, and until Dec 2010, it was not possible to run the PDK in Linux. If you would like to run the official Palm PDK, see PDK on Linux for directions.
In addition to the PDK, webOS Internals has released a full "WIDK" (webOS Internals Development Kit) for you using Scratchbox2.
Less than 10% of developers in the webOS developer community use Linux variants. Among those 10% there are dozens of different linux distributions that people use. Palm, therefore has chosen to support only Mac and Windows platforms for their PDK. Palm recommends that Linux based developers use the webOS-internals WIDK instead.
We strongly urge the open-source homebrew community to standardize on this WIDK. It uses the same underlying technologies, and is entirely open.
Scratchbox 2 is a cross-compilation engine, it can be used to create a highly flexible SDK.
As installed below, the install process uses a script which extracts the required Palm provided files from a copy of webOS doctor, and downloads from other sources, and builds a complete compilation environment automatically which can compile SDL and openGLES apps for webOS.
SB2 itself is totally distribution neutral but the webOS cross-compile environment is designed and tested on Ubuntu 11.04 32 bit. See WebOS_Internals_PDK_on_Mandriva if you want to run it on Mandriva. If you want to run the WIDK on other distributions and are willing to support that yourself and not ask webOS Internals any questions about it then please enjoy and if you succeed come back here and make a new article on how you did it. Otherwise, use the recommended OS.
The webOS Internals team strongly suggest apt-get install into the Ubuntu environment only for this purpose. The same installation of Sun Virtualbox which hosts the Palm SDK emulator can host an Ubuntu 11.04 server with very little effort on any operating system.
Developers wanting to work in a Gentoo environment 'without' SB2 can consider using the PuffTheMagic NDK.
SB2 Homepage
http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/sbox2pdk
License
Scratchbox 2 is distributed under LGPL version 2.1, portions are under GPL version 2. Some minor stuff is under MIT style license.
Installation on Ubuntu for webOS PDK cross compiling
If setting up in a Virtual Box instance, it is recommended that you first complete the openSSH config as described in the VirtualBox tips for Windows users to the right. This is helpful even with a Linux host, as SSH into the PDK Virtual Machine will allow copy and paste of the commands listed below and reduce errors.
VirtualBox tips for Windows users
If you are running your Ubuntu server in a VirtualBox client on a Windows desktop host, there are a few tricks you should know. If you run the various commands below from the ubuntu console in VirtualBox, you can not cut and paste into and out of the console. It is to your benefit then, to use PUTTY to control the VirtualBox console instead of running in it directly. To reach your VirtualBox Ubuntu with Putty, you will need to do some set up steps.
Now, restart your ubuntu server and log into it from the regular console. At prompt after logging in, type ifconfig eth0 . The server will reply with the ip address of the virtualbox server. Now, go to putty, and create a new login to your ubuntu server with that IP address, type ssh port 22. Now, you can log into your server, and cut and paste commands and output, you can scroll back and see things that have scrolled off the screen etc. etc. This is strongly advised. |
Toolchain
Prerequisites
Your Ubuntu installation will need the following installed. If you do not have them, run the command after the package name. You can test if they are found by just typing the command name. If it says command not found, you need to install it.
git | sudo apt-get install git-core |
gcc | sudo apt-get install build-essential |
curl | sudo apt-get install curl |
unzip | sudo apt-get install unzip |
7zip * | sudo apt-get install p7zip-full |
autoconf | sudo apt-get install autoconf |
subversion | sudo apt-get install subversion |
libtool | sudo apt-get install libtool |
wget | sudo apt-get install wget |
pkg-config | sudo apt-get install pkg-config |
gettext | sudo apt-get install gettext |
fakeroot | sudo apt-get install fakeroot |
javac * | sudo apt-get install sun-java6-jdk |
ant | sudo apt-get install ant |
cmake | sudo apt-get install cmake |
xsltproc | sudo apt-get install xsltproc |
intltool | sudo apt-get install intltool |
mkimage | sudo apt-get install uboot-mkimage |
lsdiff | sudo apt-get install patchutils |
flex | sudo apt-get install flex |
bison | sudo apt-get install bison |
libssl-dev | sudo apt-get install libssl-dev |
zlib1g-dev | sudo apt-get install zlib1g-dev |
libbz2-dev | sudo apt-get install libbz2-dev |
xar * | sudo apt-get install xar |
help2man | sudo apt-get install help2man |
texinfo | sudo apt-get install texinfo |
automake 1.10 | sudo apt-get install automake1.10 |
autopoint | sudo apt-get install autopoint |
xutils-dev | sudo apt-get install xutils-dev |
- 7-Zip version 4.59 or greater is needed
- it has been reported that sun-java6-jdk isn't necessary
- On Ubuntu 11.04 xar might not install using
sudo apt-get install xar
See Note 2 Below
If you're uncertain at all, and you're using Ubuntu 11.04, just cut and paste the following. If they are already installed, they'll be skipped. xar is not included in the code below.
sudo apt-get install git-core build-essential curl unzip p7zip-full autoconf subversion libtool wget pkg-config gettext fakeroot ant xsltproc intltool uboot-mkimage patchutils flex bison libssl-dev zlib1g-dev libbz2-dev help2man texinfo automake1.10 autopoint xutils-dev cmake
Note: If you are a beginner with Ubuntu Linux Distribution, you should update all the packages on your system to avoid problems when you will compile.
Note 2: If xar
cannot be installed with sudo apt-get install xar
, then you have to download two .deb
-files manually and install them (in the order they are listed):
- If you're using Ubuntu 11.04:
- If you're using Debian 6.0.2 (Squeeze):
After that execute the above command again.
Use these 2 command line :
Update repositories :
sudo aptitude update
And next, update the packages :
sudo aptitude safe-upgrade
If you're on a 64-bit system, you will also need to install the ia32-libs package.
Note: The make toolchain command and later steps will download approximately a half-gig of tools and sources from various locations. Do not start this if you do not have time for a large download. Additionally, if you already have downloaded a copy of the correct version of the WebOS doctor, you can reduce the download time by copying the doctor file into cross-compile/doctors/ with the correct name. This will cause the appropriate command to skip that download. Note that codesourcery rate limts downloads and at a minimum this process will take 10 to 15 minutes irrespective of your connection speed.
Start setup
Create a preware folder, copy the cross-compile tools into it (if you have not installed git, apt-get install git-core), and use a make script to begin the set up of the compilation toolchain.
sudo mkdir -p /srv/preware cd /srv/preware sudo chmod 777 . git clone git://git.webos-internals.org/preware/cross-compile.git cd cross-compile make toolchain
If errors occur, browse the repository online and checkout earlier commits until you get something that gets through "make toolchain" and the later "make stage" commands like so:
git checkout <commit-ish>
Verify sh shell
On Ubuntu /bin/sh is a symbolic link to dash. This will cause errors with the make stage command below, as some of the scripts assume bash. Run the following command to see what shell sh is linked to.
ls -l /bin/sh
If the result is a link to dash:
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 4 2010-07-06 23:55 /bin/sh -> dash
You will want to correct it with the following:
sudo dpkg-reconfigure dash
You will be asked if you want to "Install dash as /bin/sh?". Select "<No>" and bash will be used. Rerun the command to verify:
ls -l /bin/sh
You should now see:
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 4 2010-07-09 21:12 /bin/sh -> bash
Setup Scratchbox
Now, use apt-get to setup scratchbox...
sudo apt-get install scratchbox2 qemu-kvm-extras (in Debian install qemu-user and qemu-system instead of qemu-kvm-extras)
...and set it up for compiling for webOS.
cd /srv/preware/cross-compile/toolchain/arm-2007q3/arm-none-linux-gnueabi/libc PATH=/srv/preware/cross-compile/toolchain/arm-2007q3/bin:${PATH} sb2-init -c /usr/bin/qemu-arm armv7 arm-none-linux-gnueabi-gcc PATH=/srv/preware/cross-compile/toolchain/arm-2007q3/bin:${PATH} sb2-init -c /usr/bin/qemu-arm armv6 arm-none-linux-gnueabi-gcc cd /srv/preware/cross-compile
On some distributions such as recent Debian and Ubuntu, you'll have compiler problems with these values - use sb2-qemu-arm instead of qemu-arm in the sb2-init command lines above.
Then:
make setup
Once this setup is complete, compiling sdl apps for webOS is very simple. Note that the set up for i686 is not yet determined.
Verified installed clean list
If you have successfully built the WIDK from scratch, with NO problems, feel free to add your information to this list. This will help us assess what distributions and versions it is fully compatible with.
IRC name | Linux Distribution | Version | Date | Comments |
Scoutcamper | Ubuntu | 9.04,9.10,10.04,10.10 | 10-18-10 | Works Great! |
elpollodiablo1 | Ubuntu | 11.04 | 7-13-11 | Works With updated Wiki Info |
Errors during make stage
automake1.10
If you see the error below, you need the latest automake (1.10)
/usr/share/automake-1.9/am/depend2.am: am__fastdepOBJC does not appear in AM_CONDITIONAL configure.in:88: installing `./config.guess' configure.in:88: installing `./config.sub' Makefile.am: installing `./INSTALL' autoreconf2.50: automake failed with exit status: 1
Install automake1.10 and it should work (according to this page)
Fix mmap errors
The following commands appear redundant. They are not. The install this fixes your mmap config to fix an mmap: permission denied error, but we don't need the package itself. (Do each command separately with cut and paste).
sudo apt-get install qemu-arm-static sudo apt-get remove qemu-arm-static
It appears that this package has been renamed qemu-kvm-extras-static in Ubuntu 11.04.
- OR As a workaround, if this package is not available,
- the following commands can be executed in a root shell (sudo -s) to fix the mmap configuration to enable qemu-arm to work.
echo "vm.mmap_min_addr = 4096" > /etc/sysctl.d/mmap_min_addr.conf /etc/init.d/procps restart
(note that the value should not be "0". 4096 is chosen to avoid null pointer attacks.)
Libtool
make[5]: Entering directory `/srv/preware/cross-compile/packages/common/libdotconf/build/armv6/src' /bin/sh ../libtool --tag=CC --mode=compile gcc -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I. -I.. -Wall -g -O2 -MT libdotconf_la-dotconf.lo -MD -MP -MF .deps/libdotconf_la-dotconf.Tpo -c -o libdotconf_la-dotconf.lo `test -f 'dotconf.c' || echo './'`dotconf.c libtool: Version mismatch error. This is libtool 2.2.6b, but the libtool: definition of this LT_INIT comes from libtool 2.2.6. libtool: You should recreate aclocal.m4 with macros from libtool 2.2.6b libtool: and run autoconf again. make[5]: *** [libdotconf_la-dotconf.lo] Error 63 make[5]: Leaving directory `/srv/preware/cross-compile/packages/common/libdotconf/build/armv6/src' make[4]: *** [install-recursive] Error 1 make[4]: Leaving directory `/srv/preware/cross-compile/packages/common/libdotconf/build/armv6' make[3]: *** [build/armv6.built] Error 2 make[3]: Leaving directory `/srv/preware/cross-compile/packages/common/libdotconf' make[2]: *** [build_common/libdotconf] Error 2 make[2]: Leaving directory `/srv/preware/cross-compile' make[1]: *** [staging-armv6] Error 2 make[1]: Leaving directory `/srv/preware/cross-compile' make: *** [stage] Error 2
Confirmed by 3 people. Fix this by either (your choice)
- upgrading to Ubuntu 10.04 or newer (the WIDK now relies on a slightly newer version of libtool that's not in 9.10 or earlier)
- updating libtool to 2.2.6b-2 (backported to 9.10, see available downloads on http://linuxappfinder.com/package/libtool#ubuntu_karmicpartner)
If you're getting an error where sb2-init gives you the following output:
checking for gcc... gcc checking for C compiler default output file name... a.out checking whether the C compiler works... configure: error: cannot run C compiled programs. If you meant to cross compile, use `--host'. See `config.log' for more details. Running /usr/bin/sb2-build-libtool failed You can run this manually later, otherwise your sb2 environment is correctly setup and ready to use
You need to upgrade qemu. Alternatively, if your sb2-init output fails with a different output, like this:
checking for gcc... gcc checking for C compiler default output file name... a.out checking whether the C compiler works... configure: error: cannot run C compiled programs. If you meant to cross compile, use `--host'. See `config.log' for more details. sb2-init completed successfully, have fun!
Then you need to upgrade scratchbox, too (install 2.0 instead of 1.99).
ecore
- TRUE and FALSE are not defined:
Manually add the definition:
#ifndef TRUE # define TRUE 1 #endif
#ifndef FALSE # define FALSE 0 #endif
$po_makefile_in
could not be found:- Open the file
/srv/preware/cross-compile/packages/dev-e/ecore/build/src/configure.ac
and search for the line with:$po_makefile_in
(in my case line 1437) and replace it withpo/Makefile.in
- Open the file
/bin/sh errors
If you are getting a "bad fd number" or other /bin/sh error, make sure your /bin/sh points to bash, not another shell (such as dash.)
Go back through the Verify sh shell section above to correct.
further download errors
rwhitby's suggestion:
If you don't need that package which is failing for you, just move it to the nonworking directory and try again.
14 July 2011=Using Rod's approach: So far I had to move fuse, unionfs-fuse, dev-gl, voip and x (pango and pixman failed). Using Ubuntu 11.04.
X--tag=CC: command not found
While running make stage on Ubuntu 10.10, I got the following error during compilation of sdl-gfx:
/bin/sh ./libtool --tag=CC --mode=compile gcc -DPACKAGE_NAME=\"\" -DPACKAGE_TARNAME=\"\" -DPACKAGE_VERSION=\"\" -DPACKAGE_STRING=\"\" -DPACKAGE_BUGREPORT=\"\" -DPACKAGE_URL=\"\" -DPACKAGE=\"SDL_gfx\" -DVERSION=\"2.0.20\" -DSTDC_HEADERS=1 -DHAVE_SYS_TYPES_H=1 -DHAVE_SYS_STAT_H=1 -DHAVE_STDLIB_H=1 -DHAVE_STRING_H=1 -DHAVE_MEMORY_H=1 -DHAVE_STRINGS_H=1 -DHAVE_INTTYPES_H=1 -DHAVE_STDINT_H=1 -DHAVE_UNISTD_H=1 -DHAVE_DLFCN_H=1 -DLT_OBJDIR=\".libs/\" -DX_DISPLAY_MISSING=1 -DBUILD_DLL -I. -g -O2 -I/usr/local/include/SDL -D_GNU_SOURCE=1 -D_REENTRANT -MT SDL_gfxPrimitives.lo -MD -MP -MF .deps/SDL_gfxPrimitives.Tpo -c -o SDL_gfxPrimitives.lo SDL_gfxPrimitives.c ./libtool: line 847: X--tag=CC: command not found ./libtool: line 880: libtool: ignoring unknown tag : command not found ./libtool: line 847: X--mode=compile: command not found ./libtool: line 1014: *** Warning: inferring the mode of operation is deprecated.: command not found ./libtool: line 1015: *** Future versions of Libtool will require --mode=MODE be specified.: command not found ./libtool: line 1158: Xgcc: command not found ./libtool: line 1158: X-DPACKAGE_NAME="": command not found ./libtool: line 1158: X-DPACKAGE_TARNAME="": command not found
In order to fix this problem, I had to run this command to set $echo
(which gets used in line 847 of the libtool script):
export echo=echo
and re-run make stage
in the same shell session.
missing macro AM_PATH_SDL in making libsdl-gfx
In Ubuntu Server 11.04 amd64 I had to install the package libsdl1.2-dev to get past this. I also needed the X--tag=CC fix above. Also for Ubuntu 11.04 i386 install the package libsdl1.2-dev.
Sample build of Application:Doom
Now, go to Building DOOM with scratchbox2 and follow the simple directions.