2.2. Choose an Installation Prefix

You will see the term prefix referred to throughout this documentation and in a wide number of software packages you can download from the internet. It is also used in the GNU Coding Standard. A prefix is the path on your host computer a software package is installed under. Packages that have a prefix will place all parts under the prefix path. Packages for your host computer typically use a default prefix of /usr/local on FreeBSD and Linux.

You have to select a prefix for your installation. You will build and install the RTEMS tool suite, an RTEMS kernel for a BSP, and you may build and install third party libraries. You can build all the parts as a stack with a single prefix or you can separate various parts by providing different prefixes to each part as it is built. Using separate prefixes is for experienced RTEMS users.

Do not select a prefix that is under the top of any of the source trees. The prefix collects the install output of the various build steps you take in this guide and need to be kept separate from the sources used.

The RTEMS tool suite consists of a cross tool chain (Binutils, GCC, GDB, Newlib, etc.) for your target architecture and RTEMS tools provided by the RTEMS Project. The RTEMS Tools are a toolkit that help create the RTEMS ecosystem and help support the building of embedded real-time applications and systems.

You build and install the tool suite with the RTEMS Source Builder (RSB). By default, the RSB will start the prefix path with a host operating system specific path plus rtems, and the RTEMS version, e.g. /opt/rtems/6 on Linux, and /usr/local/rtems/6 on FreeBSD and macOS. Placing the RTEMS version number in the path lets you manage and migrate RTEMS versions as they are released.

It is strongly recommended to run the RSB as a normal user and not with root privileges (also known as super user or Administrator). You have to make sure that your normal user has sufficient privileges to create files and directories under the prefix. For example, you can create a directory /opt/rtems and give it to a developer group with read, write, and execute permissions. Alternatively, you can choose a prefix in your home directory, e.g. $HOME/rtems/6 or with a project-specific component $HOME/project-x/rtems/6. For more ideas, see the project sandboxing section. In this quick start chapter, we will choose $HOME/quick-start/rtems/6 for the RTEMS tool suite prefix.

Warning

The prefix must not contain space characters.