Copyright (C) 2001-2003, SnapGear (www.snapgear.com) David McCullough ucdevel@gmail.com Greg Ungerer gerg@uclinux.org
This is Free Software, under the GNU Public License v2 or greater. See LICENSE.TXT for more details.
Elf2flt with PIC, ZFLAT and full reloc support. Currently supported targets include: m68k/ColdFire, ARM, Sparc, NEC v850, MicroBlaze, h8300, SuperH, and Blackfin.
You need an appropriate libbfd.a and libiberty.a for your target to build this tool. They are normally part of the binutils package.
To compile elf2flt do:
./configure --target=<ARCH> --with-libbfd=<libbfd.a> --with-libiberty=<libiberty.a>
make
make install
The argument to configure specifies what the target architecture is.
This should be the same target as you used to build the binutils and gcc
cross development tools. The --with-libbfd
and --with-libiberty
arguments
specify where the libbfd.a and libiberty.a library files are to use.
- README.md - this file
- configure - autoconf configuration shell script
- configure.ac - original autoconf file
- config.* - autoconf support scripts
- Makefile.in - Makefile template used by configure
- elf2flt.c - the source
- flthdr.c - flat header manipulation program
- flat.h - header from uClinux kernel sources
- elf2flt.ld - an example linker script that works for C/C++ and uClinux
- ld-elf2flt - A linker replacement that implements a
-elf2flt
option for the linker and runs elf2flt automatically for you. It auto detects PIC/non-PIC code and adjusts its option accordingly. It uses the environment variableFLTFLAGS
when running elf2flt. It runs /.../-ld.real to do the actual linking. - stubs.c - Support for various functions that your OS might be missing.
The ld-elf2flt produces 2 files as output. The binary flat file X, and X.gdb which is used for debugging and PIC purposes.
The -p
option requires an elf executable linked at address 0. The
elf2flt.ld provided will generate the correct format binary when linked
with the real linker with no -r
option for the linker.
The -r
flag can be added to PIC builds to get contiguous code/data. This
is good for loading application symbols into gdb (add-symbol-file XXX.gdb).
You can use the github site to file issues and send pull requests, and the uclinux-dev@uclinux.org mailing list to contact the developers.