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eCos Cross-platform Configuration Tool
2
Copyright (c) Red Hat Inc., 2001-2002
3
======================================
4
 
5
Version 2
6
=========
7
 
8
Contents
9
 
10
  * Introduction
11
  * What's in this release?
12
  * Installing the Configuration Tool
13
  * Running the Configuration Tool
14
  * Frequently Asked Questions
15
  * Building the Configuration Tool under Linux
16
  * Building the Configuration Tool under Windows
17
 
18
 
19
Introduction
20
============
21
 
22
  Welcome to the eCos Configuration Tool, a graphical tool to
23
  help a user configure and build a custom version of the
24
  eCos operating system.
25
 
26
  This is a cross-platform version built using the wxWindows
27
  toolkit. The tool uses the GTK+ widget set on Linux, and the
28
  WIN32 API on Windows 9x, Windows NT and Windows 2000. It is
29
  similar to the MFC, Windows-only version but at present lacks
30
  a few of its features, such as the Memory Layout Tool and the
31
  ability to run tests from within the tool.
32
 
33
  Please note that this is alpha-level code. However, all feedback to
34
  the eCos team is appreciated, via ecos-discuss@sources.redhat.com or the
35
  bug reporting form at http://sources.redhat.com/ecos/problemreport.html.
36
 
37
  These are the instructions for running and building the eCos
38
  Configuration Tool for Linux and Windows.
39
 
40
 
41
What's in this release?
42
=======================
43
 
44
  This version allows you to edit, load, save and build eCos
45
  configurations much as the original Windows Configuration Tool.
46
  However the following features are missing with respect to the
47
  original tool:
48
 
49
  - Memory Layout Tool
50
  - Administration functionality (initial code present but untested)
51
  - Gauge indicating time left to build library and tests
52
 
53
  The following features are present in the new tool but not in the
54
  original tool:
55
 
56
  - Repository Information dialog (available from the Help menu)
57
  - Most dialogs are resizeable
58
 
59
Documentation works a little differently. Instead of using a
60
precompiled HTML Help file, this version compiles a documentation
61
index on the fly for use with its own internal HTML help viewer. The
62
cached indexes are placed in the .eCosDocs directory under the
63
user's home directory (Linux) or in the installed repository
64
(Windows). The internal viewer cannot cope with all of the eCos
65
and GNUPro documentation, so for these occasions please use an
66
external browser (see the Settings dialog).
67
 
68
The documentation for the Configuration Tool is supplied in its
69
install directory as HTML only, and is a modified version of the
70
eCos User's Guide. Invoke the tool help from the
71
"Help|Configuration Tool Help" menu item, or from the internal
72
help viewer's index, under "Linux Configuration Tool Guide".
73
 
74
Known bugs:
75
 
76
  - The documentation index only lists the packages in the
77
    configuration active when the documentation was indexed
78
    (normally when the repository is first seen by the
79
    Configuration Tool).
80
 
81
Version History
82
---------------
83
 
84
See CHANGES.txt.
85
 
86
Installing the Configuration Tool
87
=================================
88
 
89
  The Configuration Tool can be used with existing eCos
90
  installations and CVS source hierarchies. You can get the
91
  binaries from ftp://sources.redhat.com/pub/ecos/ct2/.
92
 
93
  See also mirror sites at:
94
 
95
        http://sources.redhat.com/ecos/mirror.html
96
        http://sources.redhat.com/mirrors.html
97
 
98
  Please try to use a mirror site close to you, as it will be
99
  faster.
100
 
101
  *** Under Linux:
102
 
103
  Download:
104
  ftp://sources.redhat.com/pub/ecos/ct2/configtool-2.0-i386.tar.gz
105
  (or similar name).
106
 
107
  Unarchive the tar file into a suitable directory and add the
108
  directory to your path. You do not have to install it as root.
109
  For example:
110
 
111
  % mkdir -p /opt/ecos/configtool/bin
112
  % cd /opt/ecos/configtool/bin
113
  % tar xvfz /cdrom/configtool-2.0.tar.gz
114
  % export PATH=/opt/ecos/configtool/bin:$PATH
115
 
116
  The following files will be extracted to the installation directory:
117
 
118
  configtool
119
  configtool.bin
120
  README.txt
121
  license.txt
122
  ecosplatforms.tar.gz
123
  manual/
124
 
125
  Optionally, untar the contents of ecosplatforms.tar.gz into your
126
  home directory, where it will create a directory called
127
  .eCosPlatforms. The information in these files isn't yet used
128
  by the Configuration Tool, but will keep the tool from
129
  generating some warnings.
130
 
131
  The executable is statically linked to the wxWindows library,
132
  but does require the GTK+ 1.2, GDK 1.2 and Tcl 8.x libraries
133
  to be installed.
134
 
135
  *** Under Windows:
136
 
137
  Download configtool-2.0-setup.exe (or similar name).
138
 
139
  Run the installer provided, preferably having installed eCos
140
  for Windows on your PC previously so the tool can pick up the
141
  relevant registry information added by the eCos installer.
142
  A new eCos Configuration Tool group will be added to your
143
  Start menu and a shortcut to the Configuration Tool will
144
  appear on your desktop.
145
 
146
 
147
Running the Configuration Tool
148
==============================
149
 
150
  Run the configtool executable and (on Linux) ignore any
151
  initial console messages, which may be suppressed by
152
  unarchiving ecosplatforms.tar.gz as per the installation
153
  instructions above.
154
 
155
  You can invoke the tool with zero, one, or two parameters. The
156
  two parameters can be the location of the repository and/or
157
  the location of a save file (extension .ecc). If no parameters
158
  are passed, the tool will look in the current directory for a
159
  save file and also (on Linux) in the /opt/ecos directory for a
160
  suitable repository. Failing that, the tool will use the last
161
  loaded repository or ask the user for a suitable location.
162
 
163
  For detailed information about the Configuration Tool, please
164
  refer to the HTML manual which may be invoked from the Help
165
  menu or by clicking on the "Linux Configuration Tool Guide" in
166
  the internal help system's contents. This is similar to but
167
  different from "The eCos Configuration Tool" section in the
168
  eCos User Guide, which refers to the original Windows version
169
  of the configuration tool (as opposed to the new
170
  cross-platform Linux and Windows version).
171
 
172
 
173
Frequently Asked Questions
174
==========================
175
 
176
Q:  On Linux, invoking HTML documentation for a configuration item
177
    doesn't seem to work.
178
 
179
A:  You need to have a .mailcap entry similar to the following:
180
 
181
    text/html; netscape -no-about-splash %s
182
 
183
    and in .mime.types:
184
 
185
    type=text/html \
186
    desc="HTML document" \
187
    exts="htm,html"
188
 
189
    Also, be aware that the browser can sometimes end up behind the
190
    configuration tool so it may have run even if you think it didn't.
191
 
192
 
193
Q:  On Linux, right-clicking in the configuration pane and choosing
194
    'What's This?' causes an information window to pop up and
195
    then quickly disappear.
196
 
197
A:  If the window manager options are set to raise a window when it gains
198
    the focus, the information window can get sent behind the
199
    application window when the popup menu loses focus. Either
200
    adjust your window manager settings, or use an alternate way
201
    of invoking help for the item: click on the arrow/question
202
    mark toolbar button, then on the item you are interested in.
203
 
204
 
205
Q:  The internal HTML help viewer doesn't display HTML correctly.
206
 
207
A:  The internal HTML help viewer cannot display some of the more complex
208
    HTML correctly, such as the GNUPro reference. We hope to
209
    provide the documentation in a suitable form in future, but
210
    for now, please use an external browser to view this
211
    documentation. You can use the Settings dialog, Viewers tab,
212
    to choose to view using an external browser.
213
 
214
 
215
Q:  Why does the Configuration Tool use wxWindows?
216
 
217
A:  wxWindows is an open source, mature multi-platform GUI
218
    toolkit for C++. It makes platform-independence relatively
219
    easy to achieve, whilst remaining compatibility with the
220
    look and feel of GTK+ and WIN32 on the respective platforms.
221
    wxWindows was chosen on its own merits but, by sheer
222
    coincidence, the author of the new Configuration Tool is
223
    also the original author of wxWindows. Using a
224
    platform-independent API will make it easier to port the
225
    Configuration Tool to other platforms if needed.
226
 
227
 
228
Q:  Where can I get more information about wxWindows?
229
 
230
A:  The wxWindows web site is at http://www.wxwindows.org.
231
    wxWindows distributions come with documentation in a
232
    variety of formats.
233
 
234
 
235
Q:  Does the new Configuration Tool make the old one obsolete?
236
 
237
A:  Not yet. The new tool doesn't yet support some features, such
238
    as the Memory Layout Tool. When these have been implemented,
239
    and the tool has been subject to the required quality assurance
240
    procedure, then we can retire the old tool.
241
 
242
 
243
Q:  How can I help improve the Configuration Tool?
244
 
245
A:  All help is very welcome: please see
246
    http://sources.redhat.com/ecos/faq.html for how to
247
    contribute.
248
 
249
 
250
Q:  Who do I contact when things go wrong?
251
 
252
A:  Please discuss problems on the ecos-discuss mailing list:
253
    see http://sources.redhat.com/ecos/intouch.html.
254
 
255
 
256
Q:  The compiler fails to compile dcclient.cpp. What do I do?
257
 
258
A:  It may be that you have a non-standard GTK+ 1.2.6 which has changes
259
    backported from 1.2.7. Use the makefile target 'wxgtkfix' to
260
    fix this after the error has happened (i.e. after configure
261
    has produced the setup.h and makefiles):
262
 
263
    % make -f $CONFIGTOOLDIR/Makefile WXDIR=$WXDIR ECOSDIR=$ECOSDIR LEVEL=release wxgtkfix
264
 
265
    or
266
 
267
    % make -f $CONFIGTOOLDIR/Makefile WXDIR=$WXDIR ECOSDIR=$ECOSDIR LEVEL=debug wxgtkfix
268
 
269
    Now use the 'wx ecc ct' targets (not 'full') to continue
270
    building.
271
 
272
 
273
Building the Configuration Tool under Linux
274
===========================================
275
 
276
This build system is subject to change.
277
 
278
You will need:
279
 
280
  o gcc 2.95.2 or later
281
 
282
  o GTK+ and glib 1.2.6 or above. Please remove any 1.3 development RPMs
283
    from your setup, using for example:
284
 
285
    rpm -e gtk+-gtkbeta-devel-1.3.1b-2
286
 
287
    You can get GTK+ and glib for Red Hat 6.2 and above from:
288
 
289
    ftp://ftp.gtk.org/pub/gtk/v1.2/binary/RPMS/RedHat-6.2/RPMS/i386/gtk+-1.2.8-1.i386.rpm
290
    ftp://ftp.gtk.org/pub/gtk/v1.2/binary/RPMS/RedHat-6.2/RPMS/i386/glib-1.2.8-1.i386.rpm
291
 
292
  o a suitable version of wxWindows for GTK+, available from
293
    from ftp://sources.redhat.com/pub/ecos/ct2/.
294
 
295
    Unarchive the file wxGTK-x.y.z.tgz into a suitable directory, e.g.
296
 
297
    % mkdir /home/julians/wxWindows
298
    % cd /home/julians/wxWindows
299
    % tar xvfz /tmp/wxGTK-x.y.z.tgz
300
 
301
    You may also wish to download and unarchive wxWindows
302
    documentation, which is supplied in zip form. Unarchive
303
    using e.g.:
304
 
305
    % cd /home/julians/wxWindows
306
    % unzip -a wxWindows-x.y.z-HTML.zip
307
 
308
  o an eCos source hierarchy. See http://sources.redhat.com/ecos/anoncvs.html
309
    for how to download this from the CVS repository. For example:
310
 
311
    cvs -d :pserver:anoncvs@sources.redhat.com:/cvs/ecos co ecos/host
312
 
313
  o other tools:
314
 
315
    - Tcl/Tk 8.2 or above. See http://www.tcl.tk/
316
 
317
Summary:
318
 
319
  There is no 'configure' step for the eCos Configuration Tool
320
  as a whole, although the host tool libraries and wxWindows
321
  have configure scripts which are invoked by the makefile.
322
 
323
  You work in a build directory of your choosing, and the
324
  makefile will create the following directories underneath it:
325
 
326
  ct-build-debug/               ; Configtool debug build
327
  ecc-build-debug/              ; eCos libraries debug build
328
  wxwin-build-debug/            ; wxWindows debug build
329
 
330
  ct-build-release/             ; Configtool release build
331
  ecc-build-release/            ; eCos libraries release build
332
  wxwin-build-release/          ; wxWindows release build
333
 
334
  You need to pass the wxWindows source directory (WXDIR) and
335
  eCos hierarchy directory (ECOSDIR) to the makefile, along with
336
  the build LEVEL (debug or release). Please see makect.sh in
337
  the source directory, which is a useful helper script for
338
  making it easier to invoke the makefile.
339
 
340
  You also supply a target to build, such as full (everything),
341
  ct (just the Configuration Tool), wx (wxWindows only) or ecc
342
  (eCos libraries only). It is important to supply the target as
343
  the _last_ command(s) on the command line.
344
 
345
  The makefile builds and uses wxWindows as a static library,
346
  which minimizes problems with shared libraries and still
347
  results in a reasonable size of executable (4.5 MB
348
  uncompressed, or under 2 MB when compressed with UPX).
349
  Switching off unnecessary wxWindows features may result in
350
  smaller executables.
351
 
352
  IMPORTANT NOTE: currently, there are inadequate dependencies
353
  in the makefiles, so please make sure you start with a clean
354
  directory before building (use the cleanct target if
355
  necessary).
356
 
357
Examples:
358
 
359
  1. This builds the eCos libraries, wxWindows, and the Configuration Tool,
360
     in debug mode.
361
 
362
     % export ECOSDIR=/home/julians/cvs/eCos # The dir above 'host'
363
     % export CONFIGTOOLDIR=$ECOSDIR/host/tools/configtool/standalone/wxwin
364
     % export WXDIR=/home/julians/wxWindows
365
     %
366
     % mkdir /tmp/ecos-build
367
     % cd /tmp/ecos-build
368
     % make -f $CONFIGTOOLDIR/Makefile WXDIR=$WXDIR ECOSDIR=$ECOSDIR LEVEL=debug full
369
 
370
  2. This builds just the Configuration Tool, say after a file was edited,
371
     in release mode.
372
 
373
     % export ECOSDIR=/home/julians/cvs/eCos
374
     % export CONFIGTOOLDIR=$ECOSDIR/host/tools/configtool/standalone/wxwin
375
     % export WXDIR=/home/julians/wxWindows
376
     %
377
     % cd /tmp/ecos-build
378
     % make -f $CONFIGTOOLDIR/Makefile WXDIR=$WXDIR ECOSDIR=$ECOSDIR LEVEL=release ct
379
 
380
  *** Troubleshooting
381
 
382
  Please see the FAQ for what to do if the wxWindows file
383
  dcclient.cpp fails to compile.
384
 
385
  For more recent versions of wxWindows, you have to pass --static to wx-config.
386
  If you get a lot of GTK+-related link errors, check the beginning of the makefile
387
  and make sure WXCONFIGFLAGS=--static.
388
 
389
 
390
Building the Configuration Tool under Windows
391
=============================================
392
 
393
You will need:
394
 
395
  o Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 or later
396
 
397
  o a suitable version of wxWindows for MS Windows, available
398
    from ftp://sources.redhat.com/pub/ecos/ct2/. To install the
399
    sources in 'setup' form, just run the executable and follow
400
    the instructions. If you have downloaded the sources in zip
401
    format, you will need to unarchive the file wxMSW-x.y.z.zip
402
    into a suitable directory, e.g.
403
 
404
    > mkdir c:\wxWindows
405
    > c:
406
    > cd \wxWindows
407
    > unzip c:\temp\wxMSW-x.y.z.zip
408
 
409
    Alternatively, you can use WinZip or similar utility to
410
    unarchive the files.
411
 
412
    Documentation in Windows HTML Help format is supplied in
413
    the setup or zipped distribution and does not have to be
414
    downloaded separately.
415
 
416
  o an eCos source hierarchy. See http://sources.redhat.com/ecos/anoncvs.html
417
    for how to download this from the CVS repository. For example:
418
 
419
    cvs -d :pserver:anoncvs@sources.redhat.com:/cvs/ecos co ecos/host
420
 
421
  o other tools:
422
 
423
    - Cygwin (sometimes called GNUPro). See http://sources.redhat.com/cygwin/
424
    - Tcl/Tk 8.2 or above. See http://www.tcl.tk/
425
 
426
Summary:
427
 
428
  There are two main steps: building wxWindows, and building the Configuration Tool.
429
  The Configuration Tool project file also builds the required eCos libraries.
430
  Note that unlike compilation under Linux, the wxWindows objects and libraries end up in
431
  the wxWindows source tree.
432
 
433
  Before routinely building the Configuration Tool, you will need to set up
434
  Visual C++ with the correct paths (see below).
435
 
436
Steps:
437
 
438
  1. Execute in a DOS box:
439
 
440
     subst v: d:\tmp
441
 
442
     where d:\tmp is a suitable temporary directory where the Configuration Tool
443
     binaries and objects will end up.
444
 
445
  2. Set the TCLHOME environment variable to where Tcl is installed. On Windows 9x,
446
     edit autoexec.bat. On Windows NT or W2K, use the System control panel applet.
447
 
448
  3. Build wxWindows. To do this, run VC++ and open src/msvc.dsw in the wxWindows
449
     project hierarchy. Select Build | Batch Build and check
450
     wxvc - WIN32 Debug and wxvc - WIN32 Release. Click on Build.
451
 
452
  4. Open the eCos/ecc/host/tools/configtool/standalone/wxwin/ConfigtoolVC.dsw
453
     workspace. Choose Tools | Options and click on the Directories tab.
454
     Select Show directories for: Include files.
455
 
456
     You need to add paths such as these:
457
 
458
     c:\Program Files\Tcl\include
459
     d:\wxWindows-010212\include
460
 
461
     Select Show directories for: Library files. Add these paths, changing
462
     as necessary:
463
 
464
     c:\Program Files\Tcl\lib
465
     d:\wxWindows-010212\lib
466
 
467
  5. Click on Select Active Configuration... and select the one you wish to
468
     build, such as WIN32 Ansi Debug (note that Unicode configurations are
469
     not yet available). Choose Build | Rebuild All to build the project.
470
     The configtool.exe executable should end up in v:\Configtool\AnsiDebug.
471
 
472
When compiled, configtool.exe depends on the following DLLs found
473
in your system32 directory that should be supplied with the executable:
474
 
475
  TCL82.DLL (or other name if you used a different version of TCL)
476
  MSVCIRT.DLL
477
  MSVCP60.DLL
478
  MSVCRT.DLL
479
 

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