mcuboot/samples/zephyr
David Brown b681028b60 samples: zephyr: Fix URL in test compilation
This reference to the old Juul URL got missed.  Fix it as well.

Signed-off-by: David Brown <david.brown@linaro.org>
2020-11-10 17:04:20 -07:00
..
bad-keys zephyr: Move testplan into sample Makefile 2017-09-14 16:10:50 -06:00
hello-world cmake: scripts: now using ZEPHYR_BASE as local variable 2020-06-15 15:27:48 +02:00
mcutests doc: fix github urls to use the new org 2020-11-10 14:19:19 -03:00
.gitignore samples: zephyr: Add separate compilation 2020-09-17 16:49:09 -06:00
Makefile cmake: scripts: now using ZEPHYR_BASE as local variable 2020-06-15 15:27:48 +02:00
README.md Use Ninja instead of Makefiles for Zephyr 2019-07-29 11:29:21 -05:00
build-boot.sh zephyr: port build system to CMake 2017-11-20 18:10:29 -07:00
build-hello.sh zephyr: port build system to CMake 2017-11-20 18:10:29 -07:00
overlay-ecdsa-p256.conf samples/zephyr: Build ECDSA tests with ECDSA key 2019-01-22 16:08:46 -07:00
overlay-rsa.conf zephyr: migrate signature type to Kconfig 2018-04-25 18:44:03 -03:00
overlay-skip-primary-slot-validate.conf Replace flash partitioning terminology 2019-03-13 15:40:21 -06:00
overlay-upgrade-only.conf zephyr: migrate upgrade-only to Kconfig 2018-04-25 18:44:03 -03:00
run-tests.go doc: fix github urls to use the new org 2020-11-10 14:19:19 -03:00
run-tests.sh docs: samples: Update pyocd calls to unified tool subcommands 2019-02-19 14:09:36 -03:00
test-compile.go samples: zephyr: Fix URL in test compilation 2020-11-10 17:04:20 -07:00

README.md

Zephyr sample application.

In order to successfully deploy an application using mcuboot, it is necessary to build at least one other binary: the application itself. It is beyond the scope of this documentation to describe what an application is able to do, however a working example is certainly useful.

Please see the comments in the Makefile in this directory for more details on how to build and test this application.

Note that this sample uses the "ninja" build tool, which can be installed on most systems using the system package manager, e.g., for a Debian-based distro:

$ sudo apt-get install ninja

or in Fedora:

$ sudo dnf install ninja