The Aboriginal Linux build scripts are the source code for the Aboriginal Linux project. If you would like to build your own cross compiler or target system image from source, use these build scripts. They're written in bash and should be fairly easy to read. If you want to download prebuilt binary cross compilers or system images, see the downloads/binaries directory (which has its own README). The rest of this README describes the contents of the current source tarball. These scripts include the following stages: build.sh ARCH Top level wrapper script, calls the others scripts in sequence: download.sh, host-tools.sh, simple-cross-compiler.sh, native-compiler.sh, root-filesystem.sh, and system-image.sh. It requires one argument, which is the target platform to build for. When run without arguments, build.sh lists available architectures. Several environment variables can be set to control its behavior, see the file "configure" for details. You can invoke the other scripts in sequence if you like, but this is generally the one you use to do everything else. download.sh Uses wget to download the source code required by the later build stages, saving it in the "packages" directory. It compares the sha1 checksum of any existing tarballs to an expected value, only downloading new source tarballs when it needs to. If the primary site is down, it checks a series of fallback mirrors. The environment variable PREFERRED_MIRROR can insert a new mirror at the start of the list, which is checked before even the official website. This script is not target-specific, and only needs to be called once when building multiple architectures. host-tools.sh Sanitizes the host environment by building known versions of needed tools from source code, then restricting the $PATH to just those tools. This is an optional step which can be skipped, but without it the build process is very brittle. This "airlock" step serves a similar purpose to the temporary system built by Linux From Scratch's chapter 5, isolating the new system from variations in the host. It also acts as an early check that the resulting system images offer a sufficient development environment to rebuild themselves from source, because the host tool versions used to build them in the first place are the same ones the scripts install into the target root filesystem. This script populates the "build/host" directory, which is automatically used by later stages if it exists. It is not target specific, and only needs to be run once when building multiple architectures. simple-cross-compiler.sh ARCH Creates a cross compiler for the selected target architecture, built from gcc, binutils, uClibc, and the Linux kernel headers. The resulting compiler is assembled in build/simple-cross-compiler-ARCH and then packaged as an adjacent tarball of the same name. (This compiler is sufficient to build a system image for the target, but isn't as powerful as the compilers created by native-compiler.sh. It doesn't include thread support, uClibc++, or the shared version of libgcc.) native-compiler.sh ARCH This (optional) step creates a compiler for the selected target, using one or more of the existing simple cross compilers. It can create a purely native compiler, which runs on the target to produce target code. By default this compiler is statically linked so you can add it to an existing target root filesystem. Use BUILD_STATIC=none to disable this. This script can also create a portable cross compiler (statically linked against uClibc on the host) by using two simple cross compilers (one for the host, one for the target) to implement a build technique called "canadian cross". This can be extracted an run on an arbitrary (x86 or x86-64) host. See build.sh and the config options STATIC_CC_HOST and NO_NATIVE_COMPILER for details. root-filesystem.sh ARCH Creates a root filesystem for the target, built from busybox and uClibc. This step uses the cross compiler built in the previous step. It assembles the new filesystem in the build/root-filesystem-ARCH directory, then packages it as an adjacent tarball of the same name. system-image.sh ARCH Package up the root filesystem into a filesystem image (ext2, squashfs, or initramfs), build a Linux kernel configured for the target, and generate a wrapper script capable of invoking an appropriate emulator (generally qemu). The system images are generated in build/system-image-ARCH directory, and packaged as a tarball of the same name. Note: the native-compiler and root-filesystem stages are built and tarred up separately, but build.sh will install native-compiler into the root-filesystem before calling system-image.sh. run-from-build.sh ARCH Boot up a system image under its emulator, with full native development environment options (a 2 gigabyte /dev/hdb mounted on /home and distcc calling out to the appropriate cross compiler). Note that targets with the hw- prefix are aimed at actual hardware, and do not have an emulator configured. Hardware targets are derived from an existing architecture, repackaging the other architecture's root filesystem with a different Linux kernel configuration. The equivalent of "make clean" is "rm -rf build". The equivalent of "make distclean" is "rm -rf build packages". The sources/more directory contains additional scripts providing additonal functionality not called from build.sh. For example, sources/more/buildall.sh runs build.sh for every available target, with extra configure options to produce additional optional stages such as statically linked cross compilers and static native binaries for dropbear and strace.