CompilingFirmware » History » Revision 5
Revision 4 (jaap, 2013-10-27 11:38) → Revision 5/25 (jaap, 2013-10-27 11:40)
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h1. Compiling from source
h2. With gcc4mbed
It is possible to compile the software from source and make a binary image that runs on the mbed.
# MBED online compiler (at http://mbed.org): You need an account on mbed.org and a Internet connection.
# GCC4MBED offline compiler, using GCC. Download at (https://github.com/adamgreen/gcc4mbed)
You can use GCC4MBED on your platform, or use a linux virtual machine to compile the sources. See:
http://jeelabs.net/projects/tosca/wiki/ARM_toolchain_setup_GCC4ARM
Installation of gcc4mbed on linux:
<pre>
wget https://github.com/adamgreen/gcc4mbed/zipball/master
mv master adamgreen-gcc4mbed.zip
unzip adamgreen-gcc4mbed.zip
mv adamgreen-gcc4mbed-* gcc4mbed
cd gcc4mbed
./linux_install</pre>
Check the "Github gcc4mbed page":https://github.com/adamgreen/gcc4mbed when you run into problems.
Then download / clone the firmware
<pre>git clone https://github.com/LaosLaser/Firmware.git</pre>
Place laser folder in gcc4mbed folder
Run the following command in that folder
<pre>make</pre>
And copy the resulting bin file to your MBED or LPC.
The compiler (currently) creates two .bin files. (laos.bin and laos-lpc.bin) laos-LPC is (experimental) for the lpcexpresso (not mbed).
h2. with open source MBED from GitHub
Download the firmware from github:
<pre>git clone --recursive https://github.com/LaosLaser/Firmware.git</pre>
Optional, maybe not necessary: update mbed libs
<pre>cd Firmware/mbed</pre>
<pre>git pull origin master</pre>
or from elsewhere
<pre>git pull https://github.com/pbrier/mbed master</pre>
Now, compile the libraries
<pre>python workspace_tools/build.py -m LPC1768 -t GCC_ARM -r -e -u -c</pre>
Compiling the firmware
<pre>...</pre>