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| References | <CAHwd_ncfp65EhSvK87LUKXF9sn6cMFS27uoOP-Z9459YB8CQag@mail.gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| From | Devin Jeanpierre <jeanpierreda@gmail.com> |
| Date | 2012-03-04 08:40 -0500 |
| Subject | Re: Porting Python to an embedded system |
| Newsgroups | comp.lang.python |
| Message-ID | <mailman.378.1330868450.3037.python-list@python.org> (permalink) |
On Sun, Mar 4, 2012 at 5:58 AM, Justin Drake <drakefjustin@gmail.com> wrote: > I am working with an ARM Cortex M3 on which I need to port Python > (without operating system). What would be my best approach? I just > need the core Python and basic I/O. How much time are you willing to budget to this? Porting something to bare metal is not a small task. It's probably only worth it if you're doing it for academic purposes. I expect for anything real-world it'd be faster to do whatever it is you want to do using something that already runs on the bare metal. (e.g. http://armpit.sourceforge.net/ for Scheme). There used to be Flux OSKit ( http://www.cs.utah.edu/flux/oskit/ ) for porting languages to bare metal, but it doesn't support ARM and it's been dead a while. If you're really set on this, I'd try to see if there's something similar out there, somewhere. 'cause writing an OS from scratch would suck. -- Devin
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Re: Porting Python to an embedded system Devin Jeanpierre <jeanpierreda@gmail.com> - 2012-03-04 08:40 -0500
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