Hello Jay,
As you have found, the only limitation on running Kura on a
64-bit system are the native libraries. Further, the udev
library is the only native library required for Kura to start.
There are other native libraries required depending on how you
intend to use Kura (serial, GPIO, etc.). Once you have the
native libraries compiled for your system, you need to get the
libraries into the Kura bundles. You can do this in two ways:
1. Compile Kura from source, replacing the updated libraries.
This requires setting up a Kura build environemnt for your
target. An overview can be found here [1]. This is the preferred
option if you need the Kura installer.
2. Manually updating the bundles with the updated libraries.
This requires un-archiving the bundle(s), replacing the
libraries found in the lib folder, and re-archiving the
bundle(s). This is the quicker/easier option if you are okay
manually setting up your target after a Kura installation.
I can give you more direction on either of these steps if
needed.
[1] http://wiki.eclipse.org/Kura/HardwareTargets
Thanks,
--Dave
On 08/15/2016 06:58 AM, Chetty, Jay
wrote:
Hi,
According to the following link As of July 2015 Kura only supported 32 bit and the support for 64 bit was in the roadmap.
https://www.eclipse.org/forums/index.php/t/1071786/
Does Kura support 64 bit now?
Also as per this link https://www.eclipse.org/forums/index.php/t/1076819/ if I build the 64 bit udev for the platform that I plan to run Kura on will it work?
I did build the libEurotechLinuxUdev.so for my target platform but the install script is not picking it up. what needs to be done?
Thanks
Jay
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