From 0dba959cedf1129579809c769929713e3ad93099 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Mystery Man Date: Mon, 17 Feb 2003 13:58:09 +0000 Subject: This commit was manufactured by cvs2svn to create tag 'V9_1_0_34mdk'. --- mdk-stage1/dietlibc/README | 43 ------------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 43 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 mdk-stage1/dietlibc/README (limited to 'mdk-stage1/dietlibc/README') diff --git a/mdk-stage1/dietlibc/README b/mdk-stage1/dietlibc/README deleted file mode 100644 index ce9838832..000000000 --- a/mdk-stage1/dietlibc/README +++ /dev/null @@ -1,43 +0,0 @@ -diet libc to statically link programs that don't need all the bloat -from glibc. - -malloc, printf and scanf contributed from Olaf Dreesen. - -To compile: - - $ make - -make should compile the diet libc itself without warnings. In addition -to the diet libc, the default make target includes t, which is a test -program and probably contains code which produces warnings. You can -safely ignore them. - -When make is done, it will have created dietlibc.a in bin-i386 (or -bin-ppc, bin-alpha, bin-sparc, bin-ppc or bin-arm, depending on your -architecture). In that directory you will also find a program called -"diet", which you need to copy in a directory in your $PATH: - - # install bin-i386/diet /usr/local/bin - -Then you can compile programs by prepending diet to the command line, -i.e. - - $ diet gcc -s -Os -pipe -o t t.c - -diet is cross-compiler friendly and can also be used like this: - - $ diet sparc-linux-gcc -o t t.c - -diet will then link against dietlibc.a from bin-sparc, of course. -diet comes with a man page (diet.1), which you can copy to an -appropriate location, too: - - # cp diet.1 /usr/local/man/man1 - -After you compiled the diet libc successfully, I invite you to check out -the embedded utils (http://www.fefe.de/embutils/) and the diet libc -binary repository (ftp://foobar.math.fu-berlin.de/pub/dietlibc/), too. -The embedded utils are small replacements for common utilities like mv, -chown, ls, and even a small tar that can extract tar files. The binary -repository contains a few utilities I linked against the diet libc, for -example gzip, bzip2 and fdisk. -- cgit v1.2.1