<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
<html><head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">
<meta name="generator" content="Osso Notes">
<title></title></head>
<body>
<p>George,
<br>Apologies for top posting but easier with this pocket computer.
<br>
<br>A bit of coincidence I was going to email Daniel Drake this evening regarding a few XS related items as a follow up to the last olpc-sf meeting discussion of XS and vagaries of the git tree..
<br>
<br>I have been working on porting XS to arm for a while.
<br>The main problem in the past was the earlier versions of fedora for arm did not have sufficient packages to fully support the XS. it did provide me with opportunity to prove that arm was capable of running the important components. Fortunately f17 will provide all the bits needed to make progress.with this.
<br>
<br>Fedora 17 in of itself is quite different from centos as centos is based on f13.
<br>F17 for arm has not yet reached beta and is a moving target.
<br>
<br>I am not quite sure what you mean by Trimslice native compiler as that is not a meaningful architecture description for a compiler.
<br>Use fed pkg means just that typically.
<br>
<br>I need to get back to work. Watch for my follow up email.
<br>
<br>Regards,
<br>
<br>Robert
<br>
<br>p.s.rememeber to come to olpc-sf community summit 2012
<br>
<br>
<br>----- Original message -----
<br>> Hi all,
<br>>
<br>> I've finally got my arm compiler verified, and booted my first ARM kernel
<br>> on an XO (using a Trimslice native compiler and fedora 17).
<br>>
<br>> So now I'm trying to repackage all the XS packages for ARM. I don't know
<br>> enough to interpret the cryptic comment in the changelog of the xs-otp
<br>> git repository at <a href="https://dev.laptop.org/git/users/martin/xs-otp/">https://dev.laptop.org/git/users/martin/xs-otp/</a> "- use
<br>> fedpkg". I've googled for a fedora package with "xs-otp" unsuccessfully.
<br>> When git only includes the spec file, is there a conventional place to
<br>> look for the source tarball?
<br>>
<br>> For most of the packages, I've taken the easy way out, and used DDrake's
<br>> source rpms at
<br>> <a href="http://xs-dev.laptop.org/xsrepos/stable/olpc/xs-0.7/source/as">http://xs-dev.laptop.org/xsrepos/stable/olpc/xs-0.7/source/as</a> a basis
<br>> for my arm rebuilds.
<br>>
<br>> But I'm wondering what diff's there might be with the git directories,
<br>> and/or if I should be trying to reconcile his builds with what's at
<br>> <a href="https://dev.laptop.org/git/">https://dev.laptop.org/git/</a>.
<br>>
<br>> George
<br><br></p>
</body>
</html>