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6 years ago | |
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.dockerignore | 6 years ago | |
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Builder | 6 years ago | |
Dockerfile | 6 years ago | |
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README.md | 6 years ago | |
Ratinox | 6 years ago |
This is an attempt to Dockerize the Cryptech build environment.
The ten zillion Debian packages are tedious but straightforward. The tricky bit is the XiLinx toolchain:
There's not much we can do about the first two, so we assume that you've obtained a tarball and a license key file, and that you've dropped them into this directory with the filenames we expect.
The third...is fun, in a demented sort of way.
The Xilinx tools are serious disk hogs: VMs for this need at least 30-40 GB of disk space. The build process for this Dockerized environment is even worse: 60GB appears to be just barely enough.
To get a license, go to http://www.xilinx.com/products/design-tools/ise-design-suite/ise-webpack.htm and click on the Licensing Solutions link. On the resulting page, expand the section "Obtain a license for Free or Evaluation product". To download the ISE Webpack, you should have created an account, so now you can go to the Licensing Site and use that account to create a Certificate Based License.
You do not need to go through the HostID dance, just say "Do It". You will then receive a certificate in email (not an X.509 certificate) which you will be able to use.
http://www.xilinx.com/support/download/index.html/content/xilinx/en/downloadNav/design-tools.html http://www.xilinx.com/products/design-tools/ise-design-suite/ise-webpack.htm http://www.armadeus.com/wiki/index.php?title=ISE_WebPack_installation_on_Linux
Once you've downloaded the ISE installation tarball and the license file, you should place copies of them in this directory (the one with all the dockerization stuff). Since these were probably painful to obtain, you might want to store the files somewhere else (eg, the parent directory), chmod them 444, and hard link them into this directory.
After you've added those files to this directory, typing make
should, in theory, build the whole thing. It takes a ridiculously
long time to build, but we dont' expect this to happen often.
Note that the resulting Docker image contains a licensed copy of the build environment, so passing it around to your friends or installing it on more machines than the license allows is a no-no. We're not attempting to circumvent XiLinx's licensing system, just make it possible to run builds which require ISE in a reproducable Dockerized environment.
Readers familiar with Docker wiil notice that this build environment
is...kind of weird. Partly that's because of the size of some of the
files involved, but mostly it's because the Xvfb/ratpoison hack we're
using to drive ISE installation doesn't work under docker build
.
Don't know why, don't really care (so many windmills, so little time).