On Fri, Apr 22, 2011 at 3:16 PM, Andrew Bradford <[email protected]> wrote: > On Fri, Apr 22, 2011 at 12:42 PM, boedosoy <[email protected]> wrote: >> 1) AT91RM9200 (ARM920) > > ARM920 is armv4t > >> 2) i.MX28 (ARM926) > > i.MX28 is a ARM926EJ-S core, which is armv5te
Sorry, upon review, I may not have completely answered your question. For both processors, I'd recommend little endian, arm mode, and the EABI (aapcs-linux). armv4t most likely does not have hard floating point built in. I'd recommend using soft floating point. armv5te may have a hard floating point unit, but I'm not that familiar with Freescale's parts. I believe hard floating point was an option for armv5 cores. You're safe doing a soft floating point build but if you can find out from Freescale documentation if they included hard floating point, use which ever version they have. Pick your target triplets to be based on your other choices. Use the examples in the book as a reference, the examples are definitely not a complete list of all available options. -Andrew _______________________________________________ Clfs-support mailing list [email protected] http://lists.cross-lfs.org/listinfo.cgi/clfs-support-cross-lfs.org
