In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> you wrote: > > I want to learn the way of building a GNU Automake project and adding > it into ELDK. This could be needed because the current version of an > ELDK component is old to meet the requirements or a library which is > not an ELDK component is to be used in our ppc system.
In principle, this is a pretty straightforward procedure: you download the source RPM (for example, from the Fedora 7 distribution), and use the "rpmbuild" command on the native syustem (running with root file system mounted over NFS or on a local harddisk) to build the stuff. For example: $ rpmbuild --rebuild automake17-1.7.9-8.src.rpm That's in proinciple. In reality, you will soon learn that the package has a lot of build dependencies, which are not exactly trivial to resolve, as some of them are circular. You can try and find what's really needed (and not included with the ELDK) by running $ rpmbuild --rebuild --nodeps automake17-1.7.9-8.src.rpm but this is just tof ind out how many othe rpackages youw ill need to build before... > As now, I need to upgrade an ELDK component. Namely, I need version > 0.9.8 of OpenSSL, where latest ELDK release has OpenSSL with version > 0.9.7f. I want to learn if it is necessary for me to follow the same You don't need a native version of automake for this, as builing is done in the cross environment, and we assume you have automake installed on your build host. > procedure stated in documentation in section "3.7. Rebuilding ELDK > Components". If this is the case, could anyone point me to resources > about how to prepare source rpms from an Automake project to prepare I don't understand why you mention automake here. It is completely unrelated. > the source rpm of version 0.9.8 of OpenSSL? Of course building the new > version of the component and placing everything by hand is always a > solution, but I want to understand the clean way of doing this. The clean way is to adjust the ELDK buld system for the new version. This is usually a non-trivial job. By doing it you will start to admire what ELDK gives you and understand at least a bit of how much effort is built into it - and you get it all completely for free... Alternatively, you can just wait for ELDK 4.2, which will include openssl-0.9.8b-12 Best regards, Wolfgang Denk -- DENX Software Engineering GmbH, MD: Wolfgang Denk & Detlev Zundel HRB 165235 Munich, Office: Kirchenstr.5, D-82194 Groebenzell, Germany Phone: (+49)-8142-66989-10 Fax: (+49)-8142-66989-80 Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] That Microsoft, the Trabant of the operating system world, may be glancing over the Berlin Wall at the Audis and BMWs and Mercedes. In their own universe Trabants and Ladas were mainstream too... -- Evan Leibovitch _______________________________________________ Linuxppc-embedded mailing list Linuxppc-embedded@ozlabs.org https://ozlabs.org/mailman/listinfo/linuxppc-embedded