contiki/examples
oliverschmidt 1cab294517 The Contiki 2.x build system allows to define arbitrary macros for the C compiler preprocessor (in other word add -d<macro[=value]>'s to the C compiler command line) directly from the gnumake command line by setting the gnumake variable DEFINES to a comma-seperated list of macros (and optionally values) like this:
make TARGET=mytarget DEFINES=MYLOG, MYSIZE=100, MYTRACE

The build system does however _NOT_ take care to rebuild things if the DEFINES change so most likely a 'make clean' is advisable. To ease usage the DEFINES may be saved individually per target with the goal 'savedefines' similiar to savinf the target.

The 6502-based target leverage the DEFINES mechanism by introducing so-called 'high level config macros' which allow to configure Contiki per target AND per project.

Most of the time there's exactly one reasonable set of high level config macros for every combination of target and project. Therefore it makes sense to place them into CVS.
2008-05-26 09:28:28 +00:00
..
compile-platforms Print out system and c compiler version 2007-11-28 20:05:51 +00:00
energest-demo synched with the new mac->off function parameter 2008-04-16 10:49:50 +00:00
esb Many project Makefiles build just one Contiki binary. Up to now the name of this binary was only available to the 'all' goal as prerequisite. So it was possible to create a non-project-specific rule to i.e. load that binary into the target device. 2008-05-26 07:37:24 +00:00
hello-world Many project Makefiles build just one Contiki binary. Up to now the name of this binary was only available to the 'all' goal as prerequisite. So it was possible to create a non-project-specific rule to i.e. load that binary into the target device. 2008-05-26 07:37:24 +00:00
multi-threading The Contiki 2.x build system allows to define arbitrary macros for the C compiler preprocessor (in other word add -d<macro[=value]>'s to the C compiler command line) directly from the gnumake command line by setting the gnumake variable DEFINES to a comma-seperated list of macros (and optionally values) like this: 2008-05-26 09:28:28 +00:00
rime added netsim address style support 2008-04-24 11:50:04 +00:00
sky Added simple-cc2420 include, added argument to mac->off() 2008-02-24 22:27:41 +00:00
sky-ip Many project Makefiles build just one Contiki binary. Up to now the name of this binary was only available to the 'all' goal as prerequisite. So it was possible to create a non-project-specific rule to i.e. load that binary into the target device. 2008-05-26 07:37:24 +00:00
sky-shell Many project Makefiles build just one Contiki binary. Up to now the name of this binary was only available to the 'all' goal as prerequisite. So it was possible to create a non-project-specific rule to i.e. load that binary into the target device. 2008-05-26 07:37:24 +00:00
telnet-server The Contiki 2.x build system allows to define arbitrary macros for the C compiler preprocessor (in other word add -d<macro[=value]>'s to the C compiler command line) directly from the gnumake command line by setting the gnumake variable DEFINES to a comma-seperated list of macros (and optionally values) like this: 2008-05-26 09:28:28 +00:00
test-ipv6 Many project Makefiles build just one Contiki binary. Up to now the name of this binary was only available to the 'all' goal as prerequisite. So it was possible to create a non-project-specific rule to i.e. load that binary into the target device. 2008-05-26 07:37:24 +00:00
webbrowser The Contiki 2.x build system allows to define arbitrary macros for the C compiler preprocessor (in other word add -d<macro[=value]>'s to the C compiler command line) directly from the gnumake command line by setting the gnumake variable DEFINES to a comma-seperated list of macros (and optionally values) like this: 2008-05-26 09:28:28 +00:00
webserver The Contiki 2.x build system allows to define arbitrary macros for the C compiler preprocessor (in other word add -d<macro[=value]>'s to the C compiler command line) directly from the gnumake command line by setting the gnumake variable DEFINES to a comma-seperated list of macros (and optionally values) like this: 2008-05-26 09:28:28 +00:00