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185 lines
8.3 KiB
Markdown
185 lines
8.3 KiB
Markdown
# Generic Linux development tools
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## Overview
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This article endeavours to provide a generic guide for compiling INAV on Linux for INAV 2.6 and later.
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INAV requires a reasonably modern `gcc-arm-none-eabi` cross-compiler. Different Linux distros will provide different versions of the cross-compiler. This will range from obsolete versions (e.g. Debian, Ubuntu LTS) to the latest stable release (Arch Linux).
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In order to provide a uniform and reasonably modern cross compiler, INAV provides for the installation of a "known good / working" cross compiler, as well as a mechanism to override this if your distro provides a more modern option (e.g Arch Linux). In general, from a security perspective, Linux distros discourage the installation of software from sources other than the official distribution repositories and 'approved' sources (Ubuntu PPA, Arch AUR). The INAV approach of providing a recommended compiler is however both sound and justified:
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* The cross-compiler is installed from a reputable source (ARM, the company that makes the CPUs used in our flight controllers)
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* Disto cross-compilers are often older than the recommended INAV compiler
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* The installed cross-compiler is only used to build INAV and it not obviously / generally available outside of the INAV build environment.
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There are a however some specific cases for using the distro cross-compiler in preference to that installed by INAV:
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* You are using a distro that installs a more modern compiler (Arch)
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* You are using a host platform for which ARM does not provide a compiler (e.g. Linux ia32).
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## Prerequisites
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In addition to a cross-compiler, it is necessary to install some other tools:
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* `git` : clone and manage the INAV code repository
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* `cmake` : generate the build environment
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* `make` : run the firmware compilation
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* `ruby` : build some generated source files from JSON definitions
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* `gcc` : native compiler used to generate settings and run tests
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Note that INAV requires `cmake` version 3.13 or later; any distro that provides `cmake` 3.13 will also provide adequate versions of the other tools.
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Note also that Ubuntu 18.04 LTS does NOT provide a modern enough `cmake`; it is recommended that you upgrade to Ubuntu 20.04 LTS which does.
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Note that you may prefer to use `ninja` rather than `make` as the build manager. This is described [below](#building-with-ninja).
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### Ubuntu / Debian
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```
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# make sure the system is updated first
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sudo apt update && sudo apt upgrade
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sudo apt install git make ruby cmake gcc
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```
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### Fedora
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```
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# make sure the system is updated first
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sudo dnf -y update
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sudo dnf install git make ruby cmake gcc
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```
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### Arch
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```
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# make sure the system is updated first
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sudo pacman -Syu
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sudo pacman -S git make ruby cmake gcc
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```
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Once these prerequisites are installed, we can clone the repository to provide a local instance of the INAV source code.
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## Cloning the repository
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```
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git clone https://github.com/iNavFlight/inav.git
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```
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Note: If you have a Github account with registered ssh key you can replace the `git clone` command with `git clone git@github.com:iNavFlight/inav.git` instead of the https link.
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The `git clone` creates an `inav` directory; we can enter this directory, configure the build environment and build firmware.
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## Build tooling
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For 2.6 and later, INAV uses `cmake` as its primary build tool. `cmake` simplifies various platform and hardware dependencies required to cross compile multiple targets. `cmake` still uses GNU `make` to invoke the actual compiler. It is necessary to configure the build environment with `cmake` before we can build any firmware.
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## Using `cmake`
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The canonical method of using `cmake` is to create a `build` directory and run the `cmake` and `make` commands from within the `build` directory. So, assuming we've cloned the firmware repository into an `inav` directory, we can issue the following commands to set up the build environment.
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```
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cd inav
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# first time only, create the build directory
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mkdir build
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cd build
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cmake ..
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# note the "..", this is required as it tells cmake where to find its ruleset
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```
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`cmake` will check for the presence of an INAV-embedded cross-compiler; if this cross-compiler is not found it will attempt to download the vendor (ARM) GCC cross-compiler.
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Note. If you want to use your own cross-compiler, either because you're running a distro (e.g. Arch Linux) that ships a more recent cross-compiler, or you're on a platform for which ARM doesn't provide a cross-compiler (e.g. 32bit Linux), the you should run the `cmake` command as:
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```
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cmake -DCOMPILER_VERSION_CHECK=OFF ..
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```
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`cmake` will generate a number of files in your `build` directory, including a cache of generated build settings `CMakeCache.txt` and a `Makefile`.
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## Bulding the firmware
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Once `cmake` has generated the `build/Makefile`, this `Makfile` (with `make`) is used to build the firmware, again from the `build` directory. It is not necessary to re-run `cmake` unless the INAV cmake configuration is changed (i.e. a new release) or you wish to swap between the ARM SDK compiler and a distro or other external compiler.
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The generated `Makefile` uses different a target selection mechanism from the older (pre 2.6) top level `Makefile`; you can generate a list of targets with `make help` (or, as the list is extremely long), pipe this into a pager, e.g. `make help | less`.
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Typically, to build a single target, just pass the target name to `make`; note that unlike earlier releases, `make` without a target specified will build **all** targets.
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```
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# Build the MATEKF405 firmware
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make MATEKF405
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```
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One can also build multiple targets from a single `make` command:
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```
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# parallel build using all but 1 CPU core
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make -j $(($(nproc)-1)) MATEKF405 MATEKF722
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```
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The resultant hex file are in the `build` directory.
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You can then use the INAV Configurator to flash the local `build/inav_x.y.z_TARGET.hex` file, or use `stm32flash` or `dfu-util` directly from the command line.
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[msp-tool](https://github.com/fiam/msp-tool) and [flash.sh](https://github.com/stronnag/mwptools/blob/master/docs/MiscTools.asciidoc#flashsh) provide / describe 3rd party helper tools for command line flashing.
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### Cleaning
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You can clean out the built files, either for all targets or selectively; a selective clean target is simply defined by prefixing the target name with `clean_`:
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```
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# clean out every thing
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make clean
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# clean out single target
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make clean_MATEKF405
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# or multiple targets
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make clean_MATEKF405 clean_MATEKF722
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```
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### `cmake` cache maintenance
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`cmake` caches the build environment, so you don't need to rerun `cmake` each time you build a target. Two `make` options are provided to maintain the `cmake` cache.
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* `make edit_cache`
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* `make rebuild_cache`
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It is unlikely that the typical user will need to employ these options, other than perhaps to change between the embedded ARM and distro compilers.
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## Building with ninja
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`cmake` is not a build system, rather it generates build files for a build manager. The examples above use `make` as the build manager; this has been the legacy way of building INAV. It is also possible to use other build systems; one popular cross-platform tool is [ninja](https://ninja-build.org/) which is both lightweight and executes parallel builds by default.
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* Install `ninja` from the distro tool (apt, dnf, pacman as appropriate)
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* Configure `cmake` to use `ninja` as the build system
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```
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cd build
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# add other cmake options as required.
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cmake -GNinja ..
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```
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* Then use `ninja` in place of `make` to perform the build
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```
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ninja MATEKF405 MATEKF722
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```
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## Updating and rebuilding
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In order to update your local firmware build:
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* Navigate to the local INAV repository
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* Use the following steps to pull the latest changes and rebuild your local version of INAV firmware from the `build` directory:
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```
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$ cd inav
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$ git pull
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$ cd build
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$ ninja <TARGET>
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$ ## or make <TARGET>
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```
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## Advanced Usage
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For more advanced development information and `git` usage, please refer to the [development guide](https://github.com/iNavFlight/inav/blob/master/docs/development/Development.md).
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## Unsupported platforms
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If you're using a host platform for which Arm does not supply a cross-compiler (Arm32, IA32), and the distro either does not package a suitable compiler or it's too old, then you can usually find a suitable compiler in the [xpack devtools collection](https://github.com/xpack-dev-tools/arm-none-eabi-gcc-xpack).
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You will need to configure `cmake` to use the external compiler.
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