Difference between revisions of "Example hello"
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== Opening, Building and Uploading the Project Files == | == Opening, Building and Uploading the Project Files == | ||
− | + | For information on opening the project from within Eclipse, please see [[Importing the EMAC OE SDK Projects with Eclipse]]. Then, follow [[Using the EMAC OE SDK Projects with Eclipse]] for information on how to build, upload and execute the example. | |
− | + | Alternatively, the <code>Makefile</code> can be used with the <code>make</code> command from the commandline to build and upload the example. For more information on this method, please see [[Using EMAC OE SDK Example Projects]]. | |
==Usage and Behavior== | ==Usage and Behavior== |
Revision as of 18:30, 3 January 2014
This is a guide to the hello
C example project included in the EMAC OE SDK.
This is a basic "hello world" project.
The hello
project builds one executable: hello
.
Contents
Opening, Building and Uploading the Project Files
For information on opening the project from within Eclipse, please see Importing the EMAC OE SDK Projects with Eclipse. Then, follow Using the EMAC OE SDK Projects with Eclipse for information on how to build, upload and execute the example.
Alternatively, the Makefile
can be used with the make
command from the commandline to build and upload the example. For more information on this method, please see Using EMAC OE SDK Example Projects.
Usage and Behavior
Hardware Requirements
The hello
C example project will run on any system for which it can be compiled.
Using hello
The hello
program is executed from the console. It takes no parameters.
./hello
The program prints a hello message to the console.
Usage Example
root@som9g20:/tmp# ./hello
Hello EMAC OE!
Summary
The hello
C example project is your basic "hello world" project.