Project

General

Profile

Cross-compiling NDN projects for Raspberry Pi » History » Revision 47

Revision 46 (Wentao Shang, 10/31/2014 03:48 PM) → Revision 47/48 (Junxiao Shi, 10/08/2019 08:45 AM)

# NDN Packages for Raspberry Pi 

 For Raspberry Pi 2 and newer, install [Ubuntu](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ARM/RaspberryPi) and then install from [named-data PPA](https://launchpad.net/~named-data/+archive/ubuntu/ppa). 
 Original content of this page is retained for historical purpose. 

 --- 


 Cross-compiling NDN projects for Raspberry Pi 
 ============================================= 

 Note: before reading this document, you should already be familiar with the basic concepts of compiling and linking (especially the linking part). If not, you may be interested in reading this great book: [Linkers and Loaders](http://www.amazon.com/Linkers-Kaufmann-Software-Engineering-Programming/dp/1558604960/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1394130356&sr=8-1&keywords=linker+and+loader) 

 Basic idea 
 ---------- 

 Remember to compile a C/C++ project, we need the source code for the project, the header files for the included libraries, the binary objects of the libraries, and the compiler tools (gcc, as, ld, etc.). The combination of the last three things together is referred to as a _building environment_. Cross-compiling is no different. To cross compile a project, we first need to setup the building environment and then build the source code in that environment. 

 Difference between "native compiling" and "cross compiling" 
 -------- 

 The biggest difference is that for native compiling, you build the binaries that will run on the same platform where you build them. For cross compiling, however, you build the binaries on one platform (called _build_ platform) and run them on another platform (called _host_ or _target_ platform). The platforms may differ in the operating systems (Windows vs. Linux) and/or the CPU architectures (x86_64 vs. arm32). 

 Raspberry Pi platform information 
 -------- 

 Raspberry Pi runs on *ARMv6* CPU, which is a 32bit chip with hardware float-point support (abbreviated as *armhf*). There are many operating systems available. The one we are going to use is called *Raspbian*, which is a port of the Debian "wheezy" Linux distribution. 

 

 Creating compiling toolchain for Raspberry Pi 
 -------- 

 To prepare a building environment, we need to get the gcc/g++ compiler toolchain that will generate binaries for the armhf platform. Raspbian already provided a set of compiling tools on their official [github](https://github.com/raspberrypi/tools), which works for both 32bit and 64bit Linux. If you decide to use the official toolchain, you may skip the rest of this section. 

 The tool we are going to use to build our gcc is [ct-ng](http://crosstool-ng.org/). It is designed to run on Linux but can be adjusted via some hacks to run on MacOSX. It is pretty easy to use and you may find this [article](http://www.kitware.com/blog/home/post/426) very helpful when building your own toolchain. 

 Tip: you may use the configuration file from Raspbian [github](https://github.com/raspberrypi/tools/blob/master/configs/bcm2708hardfp-ct-ng.config), which will load the "official" configurations for the platform. 

 We have a toolchain package available for download. It is compiled on Ubuntu 12.04 64bit platform and should also work for later versions of Ubuntu 64bit. The download link is http://irl.cs.ucla.edu/~wentao/pi/pi-tools.tar.gz 

 

 Getting libraries ready 
 -------- 

 After we have the toolchain, the next step is to gather the libraries, including the header files (_.h_ files) and the binaries (_.a, .so_ files). The libraries used by the NDN projects include *openssl, Boost, sqlite3, crypto++*. Those libraries may recursively depend on other libraries and it will be a big headache to compile all of them from source code and resolve the dependencies manually. Fortunately, Raspbian has a public package repo containing the binaries for most packages available on Debian. So the easy walk-around is to _install_ those libraries directly on Raspberry Pi using _apt-get_ and then copy the relevant files down to our build machine. 

 On Raspbian, all the header files are in the */usr/include* folder, while the binary objects for the libraries are scattered in many places, such as */usr/lib, /lib*, etc. A simple way to find the path of a library is to run the following command: 

     ldconfig -p | grep _library_name_ 

 *ldconfig -p* will show all the dynamic linking libraries currently available on the system and their locations in the file system. 

 You may copy all the binaries into the same folder. For example, on the build machine you may have the folder _~/pi/_ and inside that folder there are two sub-folders _./include_ and _./lib_. You can copy all the header files into the include folder and the binaries into the lib folder. 

 Here is the list of library files that you need to get in order to compile the NDN projects. You MAY need other library files for your own project. 

     . 
     ├── include 
     │   ├── boost/ 
     │   ├── cryptopp/ 
     │   ├── expat_config.h 
     │   ├── expat_external.h 
     │   ├── expat.h 
     │   ├── openssl/ 
     │   ├── pcap/ 
     │   ├── pcap-bpf.h 
     │   ├── pcap.h 
     │   ├── pcap-namedb.h 
     │   ├── sqlite3ext.h 
     │   └── sqlite3.h 
     └── lib 
         ├── ld-linux-armhf.so.3 
         ├── libboost_chrono.so 
         ├── libboost_date_time.so 
         ├── libboost_filesystem.so 
         ├── libboost_iostreams.so 
         ├── libboost_program_options.so 
         ├── libboost_random.so 
         ├── libboost_regex.so 
         ├── libboost_system.so 
         ├── libbz2.so.1.0 
         ├── libcryptopp.so -> libcrypto++.so 
         ├── libcrypto.so 
         ├── libcrypto++.so 
         ├── libexpat.so 
         ├── libicudata.so.48 
         ├── libicui18n.so.48 
         ├── libicuuc.so.48 
         ├── libpcap.so 
         ├── libsqlite3.so 
         ├── libssl.so 
         ├── libz.so.1 
         └── pkgconfig 

 We have packaged the minimum library files into a package and made it available for download. Note that the Boost library contained in this package is not complete: it only includes the minimum required libs for ndn-cxx and NFD project. The download link is http://irl.cs.ucla.edu/~wentao/pi/pi-env.tar.gz 

 Note: later versions of ndn-cxx also added dependency on libboost\_random, which is not included in the pi-env package. The .so file can be downloaded at http://irl.cs.ucla.edu/~wentao/pi/libboost_random.so 

 

 Building the source code 
 -------- 

 The final step is to compile the projects using the environment we created. The basic idea is to call the cross toolchain and link against the cross-compiled libraries. To do that, we need to export a set of shell variables that are used by the *make* command. For example, we can export the following variables in the shell: 

     export AS=/path/to/your/toolchain/as 
     export LD=/path/to/your/toolchain/ld 
     export CC=/path/to/your/toolchain/cc 
     export CXX=/path/to/your/toolchain/c++ 

 This will tell *make* to use the toolchain we specify instead of the default toolchain. 

 In order to point the toolchain to the correct location to search libraries, we also need to export *CFLAGS/CPPFLAGS* and *LDFLAGS* variables, which will be provided to *gcc* as options: 

     export CFLAGS="-I/path/to/your/include/folder -L/path/to/your/lib/folder -Wl,-rpath=/path/to/your/lib/folder" 
     export LDFLAGS="-L/path/to/your/lib/folder -Wl,-rpath=/path/to/your/lib/folder" 

 Note that we repeat the *LDFLAGS* in the *CFLAGS*. This is because some Makefile script may combine the compiling and linking steps together and use only *CFLAGS*. (This actually happens when building the NDNx project.) 

 Another important option is the _rpath_ option. This specifies where the linker will search for recursive dependencies. 

 Here is a sample script for configuring & compiling NFD. It can be ported to compile other *waf* based projects as well. 

     #!/bin/bash 

     export PATH=/home/wentao/tools/arm-bcm2708/arm-bcm2708hardfp-linux-gnueabi/bin:$PATH 

     arch="arm-bcm2708hardfp-linux-gnueabi" 

     export AR="${arch}-ar" 
     export AS="${arch}-as" 
     export LD="${arch}-ld" 
     export CC="${arch}-cc" 
     export CXX="${arch}-c++" 
     export RANLIB="${arch}-ranlib" 

     export CFLAGS="-O2 -std=gnu99 -I/home/wentao/pi/include -L/home/wentao/pi/lib" 
     export CXXFLAGS="-O2 -g -std=c++11 -I/home/wentao/pi/include -L/home/wentao/pi/lib" 
     export LDFLAGS="-Wl,-rpath=/home/wentao/pi/lib -L/home/wentao/pi/lib" 
     export PKG_CONFIG_PATH=~/pi/lib/pkgconfig 

     ./waf configure --prefix=/home/wentao/pi --boost-includes=/home/wentao/pi/include --boost-libs=/home/wentao/pi/lib 

     if [ $? = 0 ] 
     then 
         ./waf clean 
         ./waf 
     fi 

 After running this script, you may run *./waf install* to copy all the generated binaries into the folder you specified in *--prefix* option at *./waf configure* step. In our case, it will be */home/wentao/pi*. This is helpful if you are cross-compiling your own libraries (e.g., ndn-cxx) that you want to use to further compile other projects. 

 Another sample script for configuring and compiling ndn-cxx: 

     #!/bin/bash 

     export PATH=/home/wentao/tools/arm-bcm2708/arm-bcm2708hardfp-linux-gnueabi/bin:$PATH 

     arch="arm-bcm2708hardfp-linux-gnueabi" 

     export AR="${arch}-ar" 
     export AS="${arch}-as" 
     export LD="${arch}-ld" 
     export CC="${arch}-cc" 
     export CXX="${arch}-c++" 
     export RANLIB="${arch}-ranlib" 

     export CFLAGS="-O2 -std=gnu99 -I/home/wentao/pi/include -L/home/wentao/pi/lib" 
     export CXXFLAGS="-O2 -g -std=c++11" 
     export LDFLAGS="-Wl,-rpath=/home/wentao/pi/lib" 
     export PKG_CONFIG_PATH=~/pi/lib/pkgconfig 

     ./waf configure --prefix=/home/wentao/pi --boost-includes=/home/wentao/pi/include --boost-libs=/home/wentao/pi/lib --with-openssl=/home/wentao/pi --with-cryptopp=/home/wentao/pi 

     if [ $? = 0 ] 
     then 
         ./waf clean 
         ./waf 
     fi 

 Note: starting from Oct. 30, 2014, ndn-cxx and NFD have switched to adopt C++11 standard. As a result, you need to feed "-std=c++11" flag to gcc during cross-compiling. 

 Here is the sample script for configuring & compiling NDNx. It can be ported to compile other *automake* based projects as well. 

     #!/bin/bash 

     export PATH=/home/wentao/tools/arm-bcm2708/arm-bcm2708hardfp-linux-gnueabi/bin:$PATH 

     arch="arm-bcm2708hardfp-linux-gnueabi" 

     export AR="${arch}-ar" 
     export AS="${arch}-as" 
     export LD="${arch}-ld" 
     export CC="${arch}-cc" 
     export CXX="${arch}-c++" 
     export RANLIB="${arch}-ranlib" 

     export CFLAGS="-O2 -std=gnu99 -I/home/wentao/pi/include -L/home/wentao/pi/lib -Wl,-rpath=/home/wentao/pi/lib" 
     export LDFLAGS="-L/home/wentao/pi/lib -Wl,-rpath=/home/wentao/pi/lib" 

     ./configure --build="x86_64-linux-gnu" --host="${arch}" --prefix="/home/wentao/pi" 

     make