Device tree compiler for windows

dtc

Device Tree Compiler for Windows

The Device Tree Compiler (DTC) is the toolchain for building device tree
source files (.dts) into the binary format (.dtb).

libfdt is a BSD-licenses library for manipulating device tree files. Since
it is BSD licensed, it may be freely incorporated into other software such
as firmware and operating system loaders.

Home Page

http://devicetree.org/Device_Tree_Compiler

Windows Port

This is a Windows port of original Device Tree Compiler which can be built
with MinGW toolchains downloaded from http://mingw.org.

kandi X-RAY | dtc Summary

kandi X-RAY | dtc Summary

dtc is a C library. dtc has no bugs, it has no vulnerabilities and it has low support. You can download it from GitHub.

Device Tree Compiler for Windows. The Device Tree Compiler (DTC) is the toolchain for building device tree source files (.dts) into the binary format (.dtb). libfdt is a BSD-licenses library for manipulating device tree files. Since it is BSD licensed, it may be freely incorporated into other software such as firmware and operating system loaders.

kandi-support Support

    dtc has a low active ecosystem.

    It has 8 star(s) with 2 fork(s). There are 3 watchers for this library.

    OutlinedDot

    It had no major release in the last 6 months.

    dtc has no issues reported. There are no pull requests.

    It has a neutral sentiment in the developer community.

    The latest version of dtc is current.

kandi-Quality Quality

    dtc has 0 bugs and 0 code smells.

kandi-Security Security

    dtc has no vulnerabilities reported, and its dependent libraries have no vulnerabilities reported.

    dtc code analysis shows 0 unresolved vulnerabilities.

    There are 0 security hotspots that need review.

kandi-License License

    dtc does not have a standard license declared.

    Check the repository for any license declaration and review the terms closely.

    OutlinedDot

    Without a license, all rights are reserved, and you cannot use the library in your applications.

kandi-Reuse Reuse

    dtc releases are not available. You will need to build from source code and install.

    It has 1 lines of code, 0 functions and 1 files.

    It has low code complexity. Code complexity directly impacts maintainability of the code.

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dtc Key Features

No Key Features are available at this moment for

dtc

.

dtc Examples and Code Snippets

No Code Snippets are available at this moment for

dtc

.

Vulnerabilities

No vulnerabilities reported

Install dtc

You can download it from GitHub.

Support

For any new features, suggestions and bugs create an issue on GitHub.
If you have any questions check and ask questions on community page Stack Overflow .

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Hi there !

NOTE : pydk for python+webassembly is getting obsoleted by pygbag which will allow soon to load pygame/Harfang3D/Panda3d/raylib CPython wheels directly from http servers. pygbag wasm modules are compatible with WASM 1.0 (mvp) to support older browsers ( as old as Android 4.4/Chrome 81 ), unlike pyodide’s ones.

  • For those coming here to use Panda3D/CPython on android and browser, you need to clone PyDK and trigger the Github action CI
    to get the artifacts for all android architectures ( ~400 MiB download ).

Once done with that you can seek for help on #Panda3D discord.

Note : all pip modules compiled via pydk are ABI compatible with P4A from Kivy / Beeware packaging because it’s CPython out of the box too.
** But you’ll have to figure out how to load them by yourself and how to deal with API levels baseline differences. **

PyDK is for everyone and that means starting at API19 ( Android Kitkat 4.4) for me, keep and use your old tablets for education and DIY !

If you only want to support recent Android and their store then use Kivy/Beeware/Chaquopy instead.

  • Everything here is very experimental, async, unthreaded and Python centric.

  • I’m not interested in concurrency except when it leads to better handling of parallelism (subinterpreters-multicore/distributed computing).

  • Looking for collaboration on CPython for WebAssembly, or soft-realtime Python alternatives (including trasnpilation).

Come and share (French/English) !
https://gitter.im/Wasm-Python/community


Already collaborated on :

  • Light and Versatile Graphics Library Micropython simulator

Currently porting pygame to Webassembly : pygame/pygame#718

Currently porting Harfang3D to Webassembly : https://github.com/harfang3d/harfang-wasm

Admin of http://github.com/pygame-web

Creator of pygbag https://pypi.org/project/pygbag


Profile Stats

for 🍻 🍺

opencollective for long run porting effort, not only wasm but native too !

Direct support patreon if you want support for educative tools

Brave Tip shortcut if you’d like to see some Web3+python someday


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Install


All systems
curl cmd.cat/dtc.sh

Debian

Debian

apt-get install device-tree-compiler


Ubuntu
apt-get install device-tree-compiler

Alpine
apk add dtc

Arch

Arch Linux

pacman -S dtc

image/svg+xml

Kali Linux

apt-get install device-tree-compiler


CentOS
yum install dtc


Fedora
dnf install dtc


Windows (WSL2)
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install device-tree-compiler


OS X
brew install dtc


Raspbian
apt-get install device-tree-compiler


Dockerfile

dockerfile.run/dtc


Docker
docker run cmd.cat/dtc dtc
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device-tree-compiler

Device Tree Compiler for Flat Device Trees

Device Tree Compiler, dtc, takes as input a device-tree in a given format and outputs a device-tree in another format for booting kernels on embedded systems. Typically, the input format is «dts», a human readable source format, and creates a «dtb», or binary format as output.

dtc

Device Tree Compiler

device-tree-compiler-1.4.2

Device Tree Compiler for Flat Device Trees

Device Tree Compiler, dtc, takes as input a device-tree in a given format and outputs a device-tree in another format for booting kernels on embedded systems. Typically, the input format is «dts», a human readable source format, and creates a «dtb», or binary format as output.

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