Results 1 to 4 of 4
Hello.....
I am currently doing an installation of MIPS SDE 5.03 for one of my project and am using fedora 12 x86_64 version of linux....
When i run "sh ./bin/sdesetup.sh" ...
- 06-17-2010 #1Just Joined!
- Join Date
- Dec 2008
- Posts
- 10
MIPS SDE 5.03 Installation
Hello.....
I am currently doing an installation of MIPS SDE 5.03 for one of my project and am using fedora 12 x86_64 version of linux....
When i run "sh ./bin/sdesetup.sh" command for installing SDE for MIPS i am encountering the following error...
Unable to guess system type for:
x86_64:Linux:2.6.32.14-127.fc12.x86_64:#1 SMP Fri May 28 04:30:39 UTC 2010
I am not able to trace out the error as i am new to the domain..plz help me guys at the soonest....
Thanks in Advance,,,
waiting for heavy stream of replies........
- 06-17-2010 #2Linux Guru
- Join Date
- Apr 2009
- Location
- I can be found either 40 miles west of Chicago, or in a galaxy far, far away.
- Posts
- 8,974
This is a cross-compilation tool for building MIPS binaries on an x86 system?
Sometimes, real fast is almost as good as real time.
Just remember, Semper Gumbi - always be flexible!
- 06-18-2010 #3Just Joined!
- Join Date
- Dec 2008
- Posts
- 10
- 06-18-2010 #4Linux Guru
- Join Date
- Apr 2009
- Location
- I can be found either 40 miles west of Chicago, or in a galaxy far, far away.
- Posts
- 8,974
Well, I would suggest you look into the vendor documentation regarding installing the cross-compilation tools. I use ARM systems from Technologic Systems PC/104 Single Board Computers and Peripherals and they have extensive documentation about that which enabled me to install and build ARM target code on my CentOS/RHEL 5 system without difficulty. There were a bunch of steps involved, including modification of make files, etc. However, following the instructions carefully enabled me to get a working build system going in a short while. In any case, without the documentation in hand, access to the vendor web site, and the tool-chain in hand, there isn't much more I can tell you.
Sometimes, real fast is almost as good as real time.
Just remember, Semper Gumbi - always be flexible!


Reply With Quote
