Am 22.12.2011 um 00:35 schrieb Marc Coevoet:

> I was thinking about this one:
> http://www.netbsd.org/docs/guide/en/chap-build.html
> 
> Make the whole stuff, then chroot in its base dir.

Yes, that would be useful. It would save a GCC installation in NetBSD. Although 
I would chroot first to build the foreign stuff... (and keep my host system 
clean and running)

How do you enable the Mac OS X GCC to produce output for the NetBSD target? On 
Mac OS X you can't make a NetBSD binary run. On Mac OS X only native binaries 
execute. The link you provided describes a scenario for a NetBSD on (powerful) 
hardware A which produces code for a NetBSD on (embedded) hardware B. To 
perform this on Mac OS X you first have to port build.sh and its infrastructure 
to Mac OS X. On Mac OS X, say Lion, with a 64-bit intel processor you might 
succeed, in case you manage to install for example Xcode 3.2.6, to 
cross-compile applications for a 32-bit G3 processor and Tiger (Mac OS X 10.4.8 
– I think that was the last one for the G3/PPC 750). But cross-compiling for a 
different OS?

--
Greetings

  Pete

One cannot live by television, video games, top ten CDs, and dumb movies alone.
                                – Amiri Baraka, 1999


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