Hi,

For second your question I can little bit help you. I wrote path which
replases "ln" command in link.sh with Windows links. Then both WLS and
Windows understand it fine and you will not need to create directory and
copy. But I have no idea about your first question.

-Alexander

вс, 5 апр. 2020 г., 23:12 Eduard Niesner <niesneredu...@gmail.com>:

> Hi Alexander,
>
> I debug my application using Visual Studio and when I try to step-in a
> function from Nuttx it looks for the source files in
> C:\SysGCC\arm-eabi\mnt\d\work\NuttxH7\Nuttx\arch\arm\src\
> *chip\<filename>.c. *Since the "chip" folder is a simbolic link and is not
> accessible from Windows, Visual Studio cannot access it either.
>
> Since Visual Studio looks for the files in the "chip" folder, I need to
> create it and copy the files from stm32H7 to it. This way, I am able to
> debug my application and step in Nuttx functions as well.
> I did not have the two issues from my initial email when I build Nuttx with
> Cygwin. I remember that the Nuttx/Apps repositories could not anywhere on
> my PC and also, the chip folder was always created after a successful build
> and its content was identical to the stm32H7 folder. So I did not have to
> do anything ... I was just doing a build and using the .a library in my
> application and I was able to debug just fine.
>
> Also, I dont want to go back to Cygwin because in my experience, Cygwin is
> very slow compared to Ubuntu Bash. I am looking for a solution so that I
> dont have do the two steps (copy Nuttx and Apps in the "
> C:\SysGCC\arm-eabi\mnt\d...." and copy stm32H7 content in chip folder.)
>
> Thank you,
> Edi
>
> On Sun, Apr 5, 2020 at 9:46 AM Alexander Oryshchenko <
> a.oryshche...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > Hello Eduard,
> >
> > Regarding you second question.
> > arch/arm/source/chip and board are symbolic links. They are accessible
> > under WSL (but at least for me inaccessible in Windows). But why do you
> > need to copy something here?
> >
> > -Alexander
> >
> > On Sat, Apr 4, 2020 at 11:39 PM Eduard Niesner <niesneredu...@gmail.com>
> > wrote:
> >
> > > Hi all,
> > >
> > > I am using the Nuttx build as a static library (*.a file) in my
> > application
> > > and in order to debug Nuttx I have to do some steps that I did not have
> > to
> > > do in the past:
> > >
> > >    1. Copy Nuttx and Apps folders to the following directory
> > >    C:\SysGCC\arm-eabi\mnt\d\work\NuttxH7
> > >       - I know that in the past the static library had the right debug
> > >       symbols and was always pointing to the right file location in my
> > > Nuttx/Apps
> > >       folders.
> > >       - I checked the debug symbols from the nuttx static library using
> > >       eabi-objdump and it seems like the paths do not point to my
> > > Nuttx/Apps
> > >       folders anymore - now, they all point to
> > C:\SysGCC\arm-eabi\mnt\d....
> > >       - I recently changed from using Cygwin to Ubuntu Bash under
> Windows
> > >       10 because it is a lot faster than Cygwin. Can this be the reason
> > > why the
> > >       paths in the static library have changed to
> > > C:\SysGCC\arm-eabi\mnt\d...?
> > >       - If yes, is there a option in Nuttx or in Ubuntu Bash to
> generate
> > >       the correct paths?
> > >    2. Copy the content from
> > >    C:\SysGCC\arm-eabi\mnt\d\work\NuttxH7\Nuttx\arch\arm\src\*stm32h7*
> to
> > >    C:\SysGCC\arm-eabi\mnt\d\work\NuttxH7\Nuttx\arch\arm\src\*chip*
> > >       - I noticed that after a successful build the "chip" folder is
> not
> > >       created anymore and instead there is a "chip" file.
> > >       - Now I have to delete the "chip" file, create a "chip" folder
> and
> > >       copy the source files from "stm32H7" folder.
> > >       - Can this be related to the Cygwin vs Ubuntu Bash as well?
> > >
> > > Also, in my configuration the "Suppress Optimization" and "Generate
> Debug
> > > Symbols" are checked.
> > >
> > > Any suggestions are welcome.
> > >
> > > Thanks,
> > > Edi
> > >
> >
>

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