Introducing CMake is an important step in a larger effort to make
Zephyr easy to use for application developers working on different
platforms with different development environment needs.
Simplified, this change retains Kconfig as-is, and replaces all
Makefiles with CMakeLists.txt. The DSL-like Make language that KBuild
offers is replaced by a set of CMake extentions. These extentions have
either provided simple one-to-one translations of KBuild features or
introduced new concepts that replace KBuild concepts.
This is a breaking change for existing test infrastructure and build
scripts that are maintained out-of-tree. But for FW itself, no porting
should be necessary.
For users that just want to continue their work with minimal
disruption the following should suffice:
Install CMake 3.8.2+
Port any out-of-tree Makefiles to CMake.
Learn the absolute minimum about the new command line interface:
$ cd samples/hello_world
$ mkdir build && cd build
$ cmake -DBOARD=nrf52_pca10040 ..
$ cd build
$ make
PR: zephyrproject-rtos#4692
docs: http://docs.zephyrproject.org/getting_started/getting_started.html
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Boe <sebastian.boe@nordicsemi.no>
Keep the flash shell up to date with the latest flash driver updates.
- Get the driver name from soc.h
- Add a write_block_size command
- Implement flash_shell_page_layout() using flash_page_foreach()
Signed-off-by: Marti Bolivar <marti.bolivar@linaro.org>
This is a simple shell module that allows arbitrary boards with flash
driver support to explore the flash device.
- Reading, erasing, and writing by device offsets are supported in all
cases.
- If the flash page layout is available, it can be printed, and I/O
can also be done to a specified page as well.
One known issue is that writing to flash on targets that require
doubleword-sized writes (e.g STM32L4) will fail since the number of
arguments required exceeds ARGC_MAX in shell.c. Addressing that is
left to future work.
Signed-off-by: Marti Bolivar <marti.bolivar@linaro.org>