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  4. <TITLE>uClibc -- a C library for embedded systems</TITLE>
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  12. <td bgcolor="#000000">
  13. <FONT FACE="lucida, helvetica" COLOR="#ccccc0">
  14. <B>µ&nbsp;C&nbsp;l&nbsp;i&nbsp;b&nbsp;c</B>
  15. </FONT>
  16. </TD>
  17. </TR>
  18. </TABLE>
  19. <p>
  20. <!-- Begin Introduction section -->
  21. <TABLE WIDTH=95% CELLSPACING=1 CELLPADDING=4 BORDER=1>
  22. <TR><TD BGCOLOR="#ccccc0" ALIGN=center>
  23. <A NAME="intro"> <BIG><B>
  24. uClibc -- a C library for embedded systems
  25. </font>
  26. </A></B></BIG>
  27. </TD></TR>
  28. <TR><TD BGCOLOR="#eeeee0">
  29. <a href="http://www.uclibc.org">uClibc</a> (aka µClibc/pronounced
  30. yew-see-lib-see) is a C library for developing embedded Linux systems.
  31. It is much smaller than the
  32. <a href="http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/libc.html">GNU C Library</a>,
  33. but nearly all applications supported by glibc also work perfectly with
  34. uClibc. Porting applications from glibc to uClibc typically involves
  35. just recompiling the source code. uClibc even supports shared libraries
  36. and threading. It currently runs on <a href="http://kernel.org/">standard Linux</a>
  37. and <a href="http://www.uclinux.org">MMU-less (also known as µClinux)</a>
  38. systems with support for alpha, ARM, i386, i960, h8300, m68k, mips/mipsel,
  39. PowerPC, SH, SPARC, and v850 processors.
  40. <p>
  41. If you are building an embedded Linux system and you find that glibc is
  42. eating up too much space, you should consider using uClibc. If you are
  43. building a huge fileserver with 12 Terabytes of storage, than using
  44. glibc may be a better choice...
  45. <p>
  46. uClibc is maintained by
  47. <a href="http://www.codepoet.org/andersen/erik/erik.html">Erik Andersen</a>
  48. and is licensed under the
  49. <a href="http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/lgpl.html">GNU LIBRARY GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE</a>
  50. . This license allows you to make closed source commercial applications using
  51. uClibc (Please consider sharing some of the money you make ;-). You do not need
  52. to give away all your source code just because you use uClibc and/or run on Linux.
  53. <p>
  54. <h3>Mailing List Information</h3>
  55. uClibc has a <a href="/lists/uclibc/">mailing list</a>.<br>
  56. To subscribe, go and visit
  57. <a href="http://www.uclibc.org/mailman/listinfo/uclibc">this page</a>.
  58. <p>
  59. <h3>Frequently Asked Questions</h3>
  60. Before asking questions on the uClibc mailing list,
  61. you might want to take a look at the
  62. <a href="FAQ.html">list of Frequently Asked Questions</a>
  63. or
  64. you might want to search the mailing list archives...
  65. <form method="GET" action="http://www.google.com/custom">
  66. <input type="hidden" name="domains" value="uclibc.org">
  67. <input type="hidden" name="sitesearch" value="uclibc.org">
  68. <a href="http://www.google.com"><img src="http://www.google.com/logos/Logo_25wht.gif" border="0" alt="Google" height="32" width="75" align="middle"></a>&nbsp;<input type="text" name="q" size="31" maxlength="255" value="">&nbsp;<input type="submit" name="sa" value="search the mailing list archives">...
  69. </form>
  70. <h3>Working Applications List</h3>
  71. These days, pretty much everything compiles with uClibc. This
  72. is a <a href="uClibc-apps.html">list of applications</a> that are known
  73. to work just fine with uClibc. Since most applications work just
  74. fine with uClibc, we are especially interested in knowing about any
  75. applications that either <em>do not compile</em> or <em>do not work</em>
  76. properly with uClibc. Submissions are welcome!
  77. <!-- Begin Latest News section -->
  78. <TR><TD BGCOLOR="#ccccc0" ALIGN=center>
  79. <A NAME="news">
  80. <BIG><B>
  81. Latest News</A>
  82. </B></BIG>
  83. </A>
  84. </TD></TR>
  85. <TR><TD BGCOLOR="#eeeee0">
  86. <ul>
  87. <p>
  88. <li> <b>25 January 2003, uClibc 0.9.17 Released</b>
  89. <br>
  90. CodePoet Consulting is pleased to announce the immediate availability of
  91. uClibc 0.9.17. The biggest piece of news with this release, thanks to
  92. Manuel Novoa's continuing hard work, is that we now have fully standards
  93. compliant locale support (optional of course). The support works nicely,
  94. (though configuring the locales you wish to support is still manual -- a
  95. task for the next release). Full locale data for over 300 locales adds
  96. approximately 250k. The collation data for all supported locales is
  97. roughly 180k. This may seem rather large to some -- but it is much smaller
  98. than the approximately 40 MB needed by Glibc to provide the same data. And
  99. if you don't need it, you can either disable locale support entirely, or
  100. enable a smaller set of locales.
  101. <p>
  102. This release also fixes <em>lots and lots</em> of bugs. The arm
  103. architecture support (I am embarrassed to note) was totally broken in the
  104. last release, but is now working as expected. A security problem (a
  105. buffer overflow in getlogin_r) was fixed. And there were architecture
  106. updates across the board (x86, arm, powerpc, cris, h8300, sparc, and mips).
  107. And of course, this release includes the usual pile of bug fixes. Many
  108. thanks for the large number of patches and fixes that were contributed!
  109. <p>
  110. Unfortunately, this release is not binary compatible with earlier uClibc
  111. releases. As noted as item 3 in <a
  112. href="downloads/Glibc_vs_uClibc_Differences.txt">
  113. Glibc_vs_uClibc_Differences.txt</a>, uClibc does not (yet) attempt to
  114. ensure binary compatibility across releases. We will eventually do that
  115. (once we reach the "1.0" release) but not yet. A few bugs turned up that
  116. needed to be fixed, and the only good way to fix them was to change some
  117. fundamental data structure sizes. As a result, this release is _NOT_
  118. binary compatible with earlier releases -- you will need to recompile your
  119. applications. The x86, arm, powerpc, and mips architectures (i.e. the
  120. systems Erik has available in his office for testing) have been tested and
  121. are known to work following this change. Other architectures <em>may</em>
  122. need additional updates. Sorry about that, but it had to be done.
  123. <p>
  124. As usual, the
  125. <a href="http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/uclibc/Changelog">Changelog</a>
  126. and <a href="http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/uclibc/uClibc-0.9.17.tar.bz2">source code</a>
  127. for this release are available <a href="http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/uclibc/">here</a>.
  128. You might want to download uClibc from the closest
  129. <a href="http://kernel.org/mirrors/">kernel.org mirror site</a>.
  130. Just pick the closest mirror site, and then go to
  131. <a href="http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/uclibc/">
  132. http://www.XX.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/uclibc/</a>
  133. to download uClibc, where XX is your two letter country code.
  134. <p>
  135. <p>
  136. <li> <b>25 January 2003, dev system updates, arm image released</b>
  137. <br>
  138. A number of additional problems have been fixed and the arm build
  139. is now, finally, compiling and working as expected. As such,
  140. I have updated the <a href="ftp://ftp.uclibc.org/uClibc/root_fs_0.9.17-i386.bz2">
  141. i386 development system image</a>, the
  142. <a href="ftp://ftp.uclibc.org/uClibc/root_fs_0.9.17-powerpc.bz2">
  143. powerpc development system image</a>, and I am also releasing
  144. upon an unsuspecting world the brand new
  145. <a href="ftp://ftp.uclibc.org/uClibc/root_fs_0.9.17-arm.bz2">
  146. arm development system image</a>!
  147. Have fun!
  148. <p>
  149. All three development system images were compiled and built using the stock
  150. <a href="/cgi-bin/cvsweb/buildroot/">buildroot</a> system. These were also
  151. built using the (about to be announced in a couple on minutes) uClibc
  152. 0.9.17 release, so if you want to begin compiling and testing stuff with
  153. uClibc, but you don't feel like spending the _hours_ it takes to download,
  154. configure, and build your own uClibc based development system -- then you
  155. may want to download these and give them a try. They each contain a 100 MB
  156. ext2 filesystem with everything you need to begin compiling your own
  157. applications. I have (at least minimally) tested each of them and verified
  158. that the included gcc and g++ compilers produce working uClibc linked
  159. executables.
  160. <p>
  161. Oh, and I have also have updated the uClibc/gcc toolchain builders, so
  162. if you just want a simple uClibc/gcc toolchain,
  163. <a href="/cgi-bin/cvsweb/toolchain/">one of these should work for you.</a>
  164. <p>
  165. <p>
  166. <li> <b>10 January 2003, dev system updates, powerpc image released</b>
  167. <br>
  168. A few problems showed up in yesterday's development system release
  169. (adduser was broken, gdb didn't work, libstdc++ shared libs were missing,
  170. etc). So I've updated the <a href="ftp://ftp.uclibc.org/uClibc/root_fs_0.9.17-i386.bz2">
  171. i386 development system image</a> to fix these problems.
  172. Also, the <a href="ftp://ftp.uclibc.org/uClibc/root_fs_0.9.17-powerpc.bz2">
  173. powerpc development system image</a> has finally finished compiling
  174. and is now released upon an unsuspecting world. Have fun!
  175. <p>
  176. <p>
  177. <li> <b>9 January 2003, uClibc development system released</b>
  178. <br>
  179. CodePoet Consulting (i.e. Erik) has been working hard on <a
  180. href="/cgi-bin/cvsweb/buildroot/">buildroot</a> recently, and is pleased to
  181. offer a full stand-alone uClibc-only development system. This is an ext2
  182. filesystem for i386 containing all the development software you need to
  183. build your own uClibc applications. With bash, awk, make, gcc, g++,
  184. autoconf, automake, ncurses, zlib, openssl, openssh, gdb, strace, valgrind,
  185. busybox, GNU coreutils, and more, this should have pretty much everything
  186. you need to get started building your own applications linked against
  187. uClibc. By using a uClibc only system, you can avoid all the painful
  188. cross-configuration problems that have made using uClibc somewhat painful
  189. in the past. A powerpc and an arm version are in progress. Expect them
  190. to be released shortly....
  191. <p>
  192. The <a href="ftp://ftp.uclibc.org/uClibc/root_fs_0.9.17-i386.bz2">
  193. uClibc development system is an 18MB bzip2 compressed ext2 filesystem</a>,
  194. so be prepared to wait if you are on a slow link. If you wish to have more
  195. space, you can loop mount it and 'cp -a' the contents to their own
  196. partition, or do what I did... <EM>WARNING, the following can be very
  197. dangerous. Please be sure you know what you are doing before trying this.
  198. I am not responsible if you lose all your important data.</EM>I had a spare
  199. hard drive (in my case /dev/hdg but you'll want to adapt this to your own
  200. needs), so I partitioned it with a single ext2 partition filling the drive
  201. (in my case /dev/hdg1). Then I ran:<PRE>
  202. bzcat root_fs_0.9.17-i386.bz2 | dd of=/dev/hdg1
  203. e2fsck -f /dev/hdg1
  204. resize2fs -p /dev/hdg1</PRE>
  205. which overwrote everything on /dev/hdg with the new uClibc devel system,
  206. and then expanded the filesystem with the uClibc devel system till it
  207. filled the whole drive.
  208. <p>
  209. <p>
  210. <li> <b>8 November 2002, uClibc 0.9.16 Released</b>
  211. <br>
  212. CodePoet Consulting is pleased to announce the immediate availability of
  213. uClibc 0.9.16. This release adds full support (including a native shared
  214. library loader) for the CRIS architecture, contributed by Tobias Anderberg.
  215. Stefan Allius contributed a number of patches to fix the initialization
  216. order for shared library global constructors and destructors as well as a
  217. large number of SuperH fixes and cleanups. uClibc now compiles with
  218. newer versions of gcc (i.e. RedHat 8.0). Thanks to Christian Michon,
  219. uClibc no longer requires perl to compile. Steven J. Hill fixed dlopen for
  220. mips. Several problems with pty and tty handling were fixed. Manuel Novoa
  221. added new support for an /etc/TZ file to globally set the system timezone,
  222. and fixed up a number of remaining wide char issues. Manuel is still hard
  223. at work on bringing full locale support (optional of course) to uClibc.
  224. And of course, this release includes the usual pile of bug fixes. Many thanks
  225. for the large number of patches and fixes that were contributed!
  226. <p>
  227. Erik and Manuel have been working on a
  228. <a href="downloads/Glibc_vs_uClibc_Differences.txt">
  229. document describing some of the differences between uClibc and glibc.</a>
  230. It's not yet 100% complete, and it hasn't been nicely formatted yet. But
  231. it contains a lot of helpful information and is worth a look.
  232. <p>
  233. And finally, the the old uClibc configuration system has been completely
  234. removed (and there was much rejoicing). It was replaced with an entirely
  235. new system based on <a href="http://www.xs4all.nl/~zippel/lc/">LinuxKernelConf</a>,
  236. which has since been included into Linux 2.5.45, so it looks like Erik made
  237. the right choice. Of course, those who have existing build systems using uClibc
  238. will need to make a few changes... We think the change is worth it.
  239. <p>
  240. As usual, the
  241. <a href="http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/uclibc/Changelog">Changelog</a>
  242. and <a href="http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/uclibc/uClibc-0.9.16.tar.bz2">source code</a>
  243. for this release are available <a href="http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/uclibc/">here</a>.
  244. You might want to download uClibc from the closest
  245. <a href="http://kernel.org/mirrors/">kernel.org mirror site</a>.
  246. Just pick the closest mirror site, and then go to
  247. <a href="http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/uclibc/">
  248. http://www.XX.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/uclibc/</a>
  249. to download uClibc, where XX is your two letter country code.
  250. <p>
  251. Updated gcc-3.2 and gcc-2.95 toolchains will be released shortly.
  252. <p>
  253. <p>
  254. <li> <b>16 September 2002, gcc-3.2 and gcc-2.95 toolchains released</b>
  255. <br>
  256. CodePoet Consulting (i.e. Erik) has released updated gcc-3.2 and gcc-2.95
  257. uClibc toolchains. These toolchains build real gcc cross compilers (i.e.
  258. not just a wrapper) and create executables linked vs uClibc. The new
  259. gcc-3.2 provides uClibc support with the latest and greatest compiler
  260. available from the gcc team. The gcc-2.95 toolchain has been updated to
  261. the latest version of uClibc and now provides full C++ support, using the
  262. <a href="http://www.stlport.org/">STLport</a> standard C++ library.
  263. <p>
  264. This toolchain should make it easy for anyone to build uClibc based
  265. applications. <a href="http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/uclibc/toolchain/">
  266. Source code can be downloaded here</a>.
  267. Be aware that much of the needed source code will actually be downloaded on
  268. when you compile the toolchains. To build a toolchain, simply
  269. grab the source, edit the Makefile to select where you would like
  270. the toolchain installed, run 'make', and then go watch TV, eat
  271. dinner, or visit with your friends while it compiles. It takes
  272. about 15 minutes for Erik to compile the gcc-3.2 toolchain (w/C++ support)
  273. on his Athlon XP 1600 (not counting the time it takes to download
  274. source code).
  275. <p>
  276. <p> <li> <b>Old News</b>
  277. <br>
  278. <a href="old-news.html">Click here to read older news</a>.
  279. <p>
  280. </ul>
  281. <!-- Begin Sponsors section -->
  282. <TR><TD BGCOLOR="#ccccc0" ALIGN=center>
  283. <A NAME="sponsors"><BIG><B>
  284. Sponsors
  285. </A></B></BIG>
  286. </TD></TR>
  287. <tr><td bgcolor="#EEEEE0">
  288. Please visit our sponsors and thank them for their support! They have
  289. provided money, equipment, bandwidth, etc. Next time you need help with a
  290. project, consider these fine companies! Several individuals have also
  291. contributed (If you have contributed and would like your name added here,
  292. just email Erik and let him know).
  293. <ul>
  294. <li><a href="http://opensource.se/">opensource.se</a><br>
  295. Embedded open source consulting in Europe.</li>
  296. <li><a href="http://i-netinnovations.com/">http://i-netinnovations.com/</a><br>
  297. Web hosting (currently hosting busybox.net and uclibc.org)</li>
  298. <li><a href="http://www.codepoet-consulting.com">Codepoet Consulting</a><br>
  299. Custom Linux, embedded Linux, BusyBox, and uClibc development.</li>
  300. </ul>
  301. <table CELLSPACING=6 CELLPADDING=6 BORDER=0><tr>
  302. <td>
  303. Do you like uClibc? Do you need support? Do you need some feature
  304. added? Then why not help out? We are happy to accept donations
  305. (such as bandwidth, mirrors sites, and hardware for the various
  306. architectures). We can also provide support contracts, and implement
  307. funded feature requests. To contribute, you can either click on the
  308. Donate image to donate using PayPal, or you can contact Erik at
  309. <a href="http://codepoet-consulting.com/">CodePoet Consulting</a>
  310. (we have a credit card machine so you can avoid PayPal if you wish).
  311. </td>
  312. <td>
  313. <!-- Begin PayPal Logo -->
  314. <form action="https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr" method="post">
  315. <input type="hidden" name="cmd" value="_xclick">
  316. <input type="hidden" name="business" value="andersen@codepoet.org">
  317. <input type="hidden" name="item_name" value="Support uClibc">
  318. <input type="hidden" name="image_url" value="https://codepoet-consulting.com/images/codepoet.png">
  319. <input type="hidden" name="no_shipping" value="1">
  320. <input type="image" src="images/donate.png" border="0" name="submit" alt="Make donation using PayPal">
  321. </form>
  322. </td>
  323. <!-- End PayPal Logo -->
  324. </tr>
  325. </table>
  326. <!-- Begin Download section -->
  327. <TR><TD BGCOLOR="#ccccc0" ALIGN=center>
  328. <A NAME="download"><BIG><B>
  329. Download
  330. </A></B></BIG>
  331. </TD></TR>
  332. <TR><TD BGCOLOR="#eeeee0">
  333. <ul>
  334. <li> Source for the latest release can always be downloaded from
  335. <a href="downloads/">http://www.uclibc.org/downloads</a>
  336. <li> A <a href="downloads/snapshots/">daily snapshot of the source</a> is
  337. available for those wishing to follow uClibc developments, but cannot
  338. or do not wish to use CVS.
  339. <li> uClibc has a publically <a href="/cgi-bin/cvsweb/uClibc/">browsable CVS tree</a>.
  340. <li> <a href="cvs_anon.html">Anonymous CVS access</a> is available to let you track development.
  341. <li> <a href="cvs_write.html">CVS write access</a> is also available for those that are actively
  342. contributing.
  343. </ul>
  344. <!-- Begin Links section -->
  345. <TR><TD BGCOLOR="#ccccc0" ALIGN=center>
  346. <A NAME="links">
  347. <BIG><B>
  348. Other Open Source C libraries:
  349. </A>
  350. </B></BIG>
  351. </A>
  352. </TD></TR>
  353. <TR><TD BGCOLOR="#eeeee0">
  354. I am currently aware of the following open source C libraries.
  355. <ul>
  356. <li><a href="http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/libc.html">GNU C Library (aka glibc)</a>
  357. <li> <a href="http://www.k9wk.com/cdoc.html">Al's FREE C Runtime Library</a>
  358. <li><a href="http://www.fefe.de/dietlibc/">diet libc </a>
  359. <li>the <a href="http://www.cs.vu.nl/~ast/minix.html">minix</a>
  360. <a href="http://www.cs.vu.nl/cgi-bin/raw/pub/minix/2.0.0/src.tar"
  361. >C library</a>
  362. <li> <a href="http://sources.redhat.com/newlib/">newlib</a>
  363. <li>and there is a
  364. <a href="ftp://sourceware.cygnus.com/pub/ecos/">C library</a>, for
  365. <a href="http://sources.redhat.com/ecos/">eCos</a> as well.
  366. <ul>
  367. <!-- Begin Links section -->
  368. <TR><TD BGCOLOR="#ccccc0" ALIGN=center>
  369. <A NAME="links">
  370. <BIG><B>
  371. Links to other useful stuff
  372. </A>
  373. </B></BIG>
  374. </A>
  375. </TD></TR>
  376. <TR><TD BGCOLOR="#eeeee0">
  377. <ul>
  378. <li> <a href="http://www.uclibc.org/">The uClibc home page</a>
  379. <p>
  380. <li> <a href="/cgi-bin/cvsweb/uClibc/">The uClibc CVS tree</a>
  381. <p>
  382. <li> <a href="http://busybox.net/">BusyBox</a>
  383. <p>
  384. <li> <a href="http://udhcp.busybox.net/">udhcp</a>
  385. <p>
  386. <li> <a href="http://www.uclinux.org/">The uClinux home page</a>
  387. <p>
  388. <li> <a href="http://cvs.uclinux.org/">The uClinux CVS repository</a>
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