In the past I have also installed full versions of Linux on a DOC.  I
personally used buildroot to create a cross compiler, then used that
compiler with gentoo's emerge tools to create a directory structure, kernel
etc.  I then used docboot to create an image to put on the DOC.  This has
worked well for me.

Christian MICHON <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 
>On 6/12/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> I could use a pre-compiled development system which will give me a
>native
>> compiler. But I want to compile it myself from the source(and hopefully
>> learn something along the way :D). How do I compile gcc such that it is
>> linked to the uclibc libraries on the diskonchip and not the glibc on
>the
>> knoppix CD.
>
>for example, you would need a statically compiled toolchain:
>gcc, binutils, make, bash, bison, flex, od, tail. You also need
>to modify manually the specs file to target ld-uClibc.so.0
>
>then you need to install kernel headers, compile uclibc,
>recompile busybox and all the tools mentionned above.
>
>the real trick is to modify the ld-linux.so.2 into ld-uClibc.so.0
>
>is this diskonchip x86 compatible ? if so, I'm building a
>uclibc distro with squashfs loadable modules (like slax).
>
>version 0.3 will be released soon, and will have all the
>goodies you need. the link for the distro is inside my
>signature...
>
>-- 
>Christian
>--
>http://detaolb.sourceforge.net/, a linux distribution for Qemu
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>


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