----- Original Message ----- > On 2012-10-10, Etienne Robillard <animelo...@gmail.com> wrote: > > On Wed, 10 Oct 2012 11:59:50 +0200 (CEST) > > Jean-Michel Pichavant <jeanmic...@sequans.com> wrote: > > > >> Well, the C++ code will end up running on a MIPS on a SOC, > >> unfortunately, python is not an option here. The xml to C++ makes > >> a > >> lot of sense, because only a small part of the code is generated > >> that > >> way (everything related to log & fatal events). Everything else is > >> written directly in C++. > > > > sorry but i don't get what you mean with a "MIPS on a SOC". Is not > > Python well supported on MIPS ? > > SoC == System On a Chip. > > It's a single-chip micro-controller embedded inside something that's > not a general purpose computer (e.g. it's in a router, or piece of > industrial equipment, or whatever). It may only have a couple MB of > memory, it might have only a minimal RTOS (non-Linux/Unix, > non-Windows), or it may actually have no OS at all. It almost > certainly doesn't have a hard drive. > > Many years ago, there was a "deeply embedded Python" project that was > attempting to get Python running on such platforms, but it's been > abandoned for ages. IIRC, it was using Python 1.50 as a base > version. > > -- > Grant Edwards grant.b.edwards Yow! My vaseline > is > at RUNNING... > gmail.com
Have a look at http://code.google.com/p/python-on-a-chip/ Last news on 2011/09/26, I'm not sure the project is still alive. JM -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list