QNX Technical Articles
QNX® Momentics® 6.3.0 SP2 PE and SE Core Patch for the Advanced Graphics TDK (Patch ID 331) Installation Note
Date of this edition: May 16, 2008
Target OS: QNX® Neutrino® 6.3.0 SP2 or later
Host OS: Microsoft Windows XP SP1 and SP2, 2000 SP4, or NT SP6a; Sun Solaris 7, 8, 9, or 10; QNX® Neutrino® 6.3.0 SP2 or later; Linux Red Hat 8, 9, or Enterprise WS 3 or 4
This patch is required to build and run applications using the
Advanced Graphics TDK v.2.0.0.
You should install this patch after installing the
Advanced Graphics TDK v.2.0.0.
For information about the issues that this patch addresses, see the release notes. |
This note includes:
Installation procedure
The files in this release aren't compatible with Photon. Don't install this patch if you want to run Photon on your target. A Photon patch will be available at a later date containing compatible replacement files for users who want to run both Advanced Graphics TDK and Photon applications on a target. |
- Log in as root (or with administrator privileges on Windows).
- Download the patch-630SP2-0331-agtdk20patch.tar archive to your host environment.
- Determine the base directory of your QNX Momentics installation
by opening a command shell and using the
qconfig command.
For example:
$ qconfig QNX Installations Installation Name: QNX Momentics 6.3.0 Version: 6.3.0 Base Directory: /usr/qnx630/ QNX_HOST: /usr/qnx630/host/qnx6/x86/ QNX_TARGET: /usr/qnx630/target/qnx6/
The base directory in this example is /usr/qnx630/, but it could be different on your machine, depending on your host and where you installed QNX Momentics.
- Extract the archive you downloaded into the base directory:
- Method 1: Command-line based
- Windows hosts:
- Open a command prompt (cmd.exe) and switch to the drive indicated in the base directory that you found in step 2 (e.g. C:).
- Copy the archive to your base directory, replacing base_dir
with the path you found in step 2:
copy drive:\patch-630SP2-0331-agtdk20patch.tar base_dir
- Use the following commands to extract the archive contents.
Don't specify the drive letter in the archive path:
cd base_dir
tar -xvf patch-630SP2-0331-agtdk20patch.tar
- Neutrino, Linux, and Solaris hosts:
Open a command shell and use the following commands (replacing base_dir with the path found in step 2, and archive_path with the full path to the downloaded archive):
cd base_dir
tar -x -v -f archive_path/patch-630SP2-0331-agtdk20patch.tar
- Windows hosts:
- Method 2: GUI based
- Use any GUI-based application that supports the TAR
format (e.g. WinZIP under Windows). Ensure that the destination directory
is your base directory.
If you use WinZIP, choose , switch to the Miscellaneous tab in this dialog, and turn off the TAR file smart CR/LF conversion option. If this option is turned on, and you extract the archive, then your shiplist file will contain ^M characters.
Structure of a patch
The patch is installed in the base_dir/patches/630SP2-0331/ directory. This directory includes:
- version
- Includes the patch number and the build information.
- manifest
- Contains the checksums of the files shipped in the patch (as generated by the cksum utility).
- shiplist
- A list of the files included in the patch.
- target
- A directory of fixes related to components that would be built into QNX Neutrino target or runtime systems.
Applying the patch
Next, you must determine how to incorporate the patch into your host system. The patch is stored in a directory (or folder) that's separate from your development system. This allows you some flexibility in how to apply the patch.
There are three methods for using a patch:
- modifying build and configuration files to look in the patch subdirectory
- creating an override directory tree
- replacing the development host files with those from the patch.
Method 1: Modifying build and configuration files
In the first method, you can use the files in the patch by simply modifying buildfiles to include the full path to the files in the patch subdirectory. This allows you to test the patch before committing to it. It doesn't affect your development host. If you choose to stop using the patch, you just need to change the buildfiles back.
Method 2: Using an override directory tree
You can use a similar approach that involves creating an “override” tree. You can tell the system builder and mkifs utilities to look for binaries in a particular subdirectory before looking in the standard location ($QNX_TARGET).
To do this from the command line:
- cd base_dir
- mkdir build
- pax -rw patches/630SP2-0331/target/qnx6/* build/
- Add base_dir/build to your system builder paths. For mkifs, you can use the -r option, specifying the same path.
Method 3: Replacing the development host files
The third method replaces the files on your development host with the patched files.
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Creating a backup
To create a backup on any of our hosts:
- (Windows only) From the cmd.exe prompt, run ksh.
- Go to the base directory:
cd base_dir
- Make a backup of the files that will be overwritten:
pax -w < patches/630SP2-0331/shiplist > patches/630SP2-0331-backup.tar
You can use whatever name you like for the backup archive. The pax utility might display some error messages when it attempts to back up nonexistent files for host operating systems other than the one you're using. You can ignore these messages.
- (Windows only) Exit ksh.
Copying the files — Windows hosts
To apply the patch on a Windows system from the command prompt (remember to switch back to cmd.exe from ksh):
- Switch to the drive specified in your base directory (e.g. C:).
- Go to the patch directory (remember to replace / characters
in the base directory with \):
cd base_dir\patches\630SP2-0331
- Install the target updates:
cp -Rp target base_dir\.
Copying the files — Neutrino, Linux, and Solaris hosts
To apply the patch on a Neutrino, Linux, or Solaris system:
- Go to the patch directory:
cd base_dir/patches/630SP2-0331
- Install the target updates:
cp -Rp target base_dir/.
- (QNX Neutrino only) Install the runtime updates:
cd target/qnx6/ cp etc/system/config/display.conf /etc/system/config/display.conf cp etc/system/config/img.conf /etc/system/config/img.conf cd usr cp -VRp . /usr cd ../x86 cp -VRp . /
Technical support
If you have any questions, comments, or problems with a QNX product, please contact Technical Support. For more information, see the How to Get Help chapter of the Welcome to QNX Momentics guide or visit our website, www.qnx.com.