Version 11.2.1-1.1 is a new release; it follows the Arm release.

The xPack GNU Arm Embedded GCC is a standalone cross-platform binary distribution of GNU Arm Embedded Toolchain.

There are separate binaries for Windows (Intel 64-bit), macOS (Intel 64-bit, Apple Silicon 64-bit) and GNU/Linux (Intel 64-bit, Arm 32/64-bit).

Download

The binary files are available from GitHub Releases.

Prerequisites

  • GNU/Linux Intel 64-bit: any system with GLIBC 2.27 or higher (like Ubuntu 18 or later, Debian 10 or later, RedHat 8 later, Fedora 29 or later, etc)
  • GNU/Linux Arm 32/64-bit: any system with GLIBC 2.27 or higher (like Raspberry Pi OS, Ubuntu 18 or later, Debian 10 or later, RedHat 8 later, Fedora 29 or later, etc)
  • Intel Windows 64-bit: Windows 7 with the Universal C Runtime (UCRT), Windows 8, Windows 10
  • Intel macOS 64-bit: 10.13 or later
  • Apple Silicon macOS 64-bit: 11.6 or later

Install

The full details of installing the xPack GNU Arm Embedded GCC on various platforms are presented in the separate Install page.

Easy install

The easiest way to install Arm Embedded GCC is with xpm by using the binary xPack, available as @xpack-dev-tools/arm-none-eabi-gcc from the npmjs.com registry.

With the xpm tool available, installing the latest version of the package and adding it as a dependency for a project is quite easy:

cd my-project
xpm init # Only at first use.

xpm install @xpack-dev-tools/arm-none-eabi-gcc@latest

ls -l xpacks/.bin

To install this specific version, use:

xpm install @xpack-dev-tools/arm-none-eabi-gcc@11.2.1-1.1.1

For xPacks aware tools, like the Eclipse Embedded C/C++ plug-ins, it is also possible to install Arm Embedded GCC globally, in the user home folder.

xpm install --global @xpack-dev-tools/arm-none-eabi-gcc@latest --verbose

Eclipse will automatically identify binaries installed with xpm and provide a convenient method to manage paths.

Uninstall

To remove the links from the current project:

cd my-project

xpm uninstall @xpack-dev-tools/arm-none-eabi-gcc

To completely remove the package from the central xPacks store:

xpm uninstall --global @xpack-dev-tools/arm-none-eabi-gcc

Compliance

The xPack GNU Arm Embedded GCC generally follows the official Arm Embedded GCC releases.

The current version is based on:

  • GNU Arm Embedded Toolchain release 11.2-2022.02 from February 15, 2022 and uses the same sources. It includes:
    • GCC 11.2.1
    • binutils 2.37
    • newlib 4.1.0
    • GDB 11.2

Supported libraries

The supported libraries are:

$ arm-none-eabi-gcc -print-multi-lib
.;
arm/v5te/softfp;@marm@march=armv5te+fp@mfloat-abi=softfp
arm/v5te/hard;@marm@march=armv5te+fp@mfloat-abi=hard
thumb/nofp;@mthumb@mfloat-abi=soft
thumb/v7/nofp;@mthumb@march=armv7@mfloat-abi=soft
thumb/v7+fp/softfp;@mthumb@march=armv7+fp@mfloat-abi=softfp
thumb/v7+fp/hard;@mthumb@march=armv7+fp@mfloat-abi=hard
thumb/v7-r+fp.sp/softfp;@mthumb@march=armv7-r+fp.sp@mfloat-abi=softfp
thumb/v7-r+fp.sp/hard;@mthumb@march=armv7-r+fp.sp@mfloat-abi=hard
thumb/v7-a/nofp;@mthumb@march=armv7-a@mfloat-abi=soft
thumb/v7-a+fp/softfp;@mthumb@march=armv7-a+fp@mfloat-abi=softfp
thumb/v7-a+fp/hard;@mthumb@march=armv7-a+fp@mfloat-abi=hard
thumb/v7-a+simd/softfp;@mthumb@march=armv7-a+simd@mfloat-abi=softfp
thumb/v7-a+simd/hard;@mthumb@march=armv7-a+simd@mfloat-abi=hard
thumb/v7ve+simd/softfp;@mthumb@march=armv7ve+simd@mfloat-abi=softfp
thumb/v7ve+simd/hard;@mthumb@march=armv7ve+simd@mfloat-abi=hard
thumb/v8-a/nofp;@mthumb@march=armv8-a@mfloat-abi=soft
thumb/v8-a+simd/softfp;@mthumb@march=armv8-a+simd@mfloat-abi=softfp
thumb/v8-a+simd/hard;@mthumb@march=armv8-a+simd@mfloat-abi=hard
thumb/v6-m/nofp;@mthumb@march=armv6s-m@mfloat-abi=soft
thumb/v7-m/nofp;@mthumb@march=armv7-m@mfloat-abi=soft
thumb/v7e-m/nofp;@mthumb@march=armv7e-m@mfloat-abi=soft
thumb/v7e-m+fp/softfp;@mthumb@march=armv7e-m+fp@mfloat-abi=softfp
thumb/v7e-m+fp/hard;@mthumb@march=armv7e-m+fp@mfloat-abi=hard
thumb/v7e-m+dp/softfp;@mthumb@march=armv7e-m+fp.dp@mfloat-abi=softfp
thumb/v7e-m+dp/hard;@mthumb@march=armv7e-m+fp.dp@mfloat-abi=hard
thumb/v8-m.base/nofp;@mthumb@march=armv8-m.base@mfloat-abi=soft
thumb/v8-m.main/nofp;@mthumb@march=armv8-m.main@mfloat-abi=soft
thumb/v8-m.main+fp/softfp;@mthumb@march=armv8-m.main+fp@mfloat-abi=softfp
thumb/v8-m.main+fp/hard;@mthumb@march=armv8-m.main+fp@mfloat-abi=hard
thumb/v8-m.main+dp/softfp;@mthumb@march=armv8-m.main+fp.dp@mfloat-abi=softfp
thumb/v8-m.main+dp/hard;@mthumb@march=armv8-m.main+fp.dp@mfloat-abi=hard
thumb/v8.1-m.main+mve/hard;@mthumb@march=armv8.1-m.main+mve@mfloat-abi=hard

Changes

Compared to the Arm version, there should be no functional changes.

Python

Support for Python scripting was added to GDB. This distribution provides a separate binary, arm-none-eabi-gdb-py3 with support for Python 3.10.

The Python 3 run-time is included, so GDB does not need any version of Python to be installed, and is insensitive to the presence of other versions.

Support for Python 2 was discontinued.

Text User Interface (TUI)

Support for TUI was added to GDB. The ncurses library (v6.2) was added to the distribution.

Bug fixes

  • none

Enhancements

  • none

Known problems

  • for unknown reasons, in the Arm distribution used as reference, support for parsing XML files in GDB was disabled; when connecting to SEGGER J-Link GDB server, the warning Can not parse XML target description; XML support was disabled at compile time is displayed and some functionality is not available; fixed in 11.2.1-1.2;
  • due to an error in the build scripts, the libgcov.a library resulted with empty content; fixed in 11.2.1-1.2.

Shared libraries

On all platforms the packages are standalone, and expect only the standard runtime to be present on the host.

All dependencies that are build as shared libraries are copied locally in the libexec folder (or in the same folder as the executable for Windows).

DT_RPATH and LD_LIBRARY_PATH

On GNU/Linux the binaries are adjusted to use a relative path:

$ readelf -d library.so | grep runpath
 0x000000000000001d (RPATH)            Library rpath: [$ORIGIN]

In the GNU ld.so search strategy, the DT_RPATH has the highest priority, higher than LD_LIBRARY_PATH, so if this later one is set in the environment, it should not interfere with the xPack binaries.

Please note that previous versions, up to mid-2020, used DT_RUNPATH, which has a priority lower than LD_LIBRARY_PATH, and does not tolerate setting it in the environment.

@rpath and @loader_path

Similarly, on macOS, the binaries are adjusted with install_name_tool to use a relative path.

Documentation

The original GNU GCC documentation is available online.

Build

The binaries for all supported platforms (Windows, macOS and GNU/Linux) were built using the xPack Build Box (XBB), a set of build environments based on slightly older distributions, that should be compatible with most recent systems.

The scripts used to build this distribution are in:

  • distro-info/scripts

For the prerequisites and more details on the build procedure, please see the README-MAINTAINER page.

CI tests

Before publishing, a set of simple tests were performed on an exhaustive set of platforms. The results are available from:

Tests

The binaries were tested on a variety of platforms, but mainly to check the integrity of the build, not the compiler functionality.

Checksums

The SHA-256 hashes for the files are:

4253a3263108302efcaae03fc247d2826809e58eb02c6f55a59dc2553b19d810
xpack-arm-none-eabi-gcc-11.2.1-1.1-darwin-arm64.tar.gz

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xpack-arm-none-eabi-gcc-11.2.1-1.1-darwin-x64.tar.gz

27913d2fa515da19b91ee06bda362dcf8a5618d1138d85b209b21dc5f3e68478
xpack-arm-none-eabi-gcc-11.2.1-1.1-linux-arm.tar.gz

c1a5fd91bbbb3bf258a96439f13e9baa01c3dc368d406ad68acab3c089f2007f
xpack-arm-none-eabi-gcc-11.2.1-1.1-linux-arm64.tar.gz

898649436d523b4dc552fb5602a9511089bb30e7df1cba3db401e895c04f12b9
xpack-arm-none-eabi-gcc-11.2.1-1.1-linux-x64.tar.gz

a9327ff3a764a2cabfe385921f02d90e9e424d2c8fb504a3600e598fcea99e7c
xpack-arm-none-eabi-gcc-11.2.1-1.1-win32-x64.zip

Deprecation notices

32-bit support

Support for 32-bit Intel Linux and Intel Windows was dropped in 2022. Support for 32-bit Arm Linux (armv7l) will be preserved for a while, due to the large user base of 32-bit Raspberry Pi systems.

Linux minimum requirements

Support for RedHat 7 was dropped in 2022 and the minimum requirement was raised to GLIBC 2.27, available starting with Ubuntu 18, Debian 10 and RedHat 8.

Download analytics

Credit to Shields IO for the badges and to Somsubhra/github-release-stats for the individual file counters.