# Building in windows ## Bash On Windows 10 A new feature in Windows 10 allows any developer to quickly and easily run an entire linux subsystem in windows and access it via a bash terminal. This gives developers full use of the entire linux OS and all of the great existing linux tools and programs. When Bash for Windows is up and running it feels like you sshed into a full linux box, except the linux distro is actually running alongside windows locally. If you use Bash on Windows you can easily build cleanflight exactly as you would for Ubuntu. (the linux distro running on Windows is Ubuntu Trusty) Setup for Bash on Windows is very easy and takes less than 5 minutes. [For instructions follow the official guide here.](https://msdn.microsoft.com/commandline/wsl/install_guide) Once you have Bash On Windows running you can follow the "Building in Ubuntu" instructions for building cleanfight. ##Setup Cygwin download the Setup*.exe from https://www.cygwin.com/ ![Cygwin Installation](assets/001.cygwin_dl.png) Execute the download Setup and step through the installation wizard (no need to customize the settings here). Stop at the "Select Packages" Screen and select the following Packages for Installation: - Devel/git - Devel/bash-completion (was git-completion, Optional) - Devel/make - Devel/binutils - Editors/vim - Editors/vim-common (Optional) - Shells/mintty (should be already selected) ![Cygwin Installation](assets/002.cygwin_setup.png) ![Cygwin Installation](assets/003.cygwin_setup.png) ![Cygwin Installation](assets/004.cygwin_setup.png) ![Cygwin Installation](assets/005.cygwin_setup.png) ![Cygwin Installation](assets/006.cygwin_setup.png) Continue with the Installation and accept all autodetected dependencies. ![Cygwin Installation](assets/007.cygwin_setup.png) ##Setup GNU ARM Toolchain ---------- versions do matter, 5.4 is known to work well. Download this version from https://launchpad.net/gcc-arm-embedded/5.0/5-2016-q2-update/+download/gcc-arm-none-eabi-5_4-2016q2-20160622-win32.zip Extract the contents of this archive to any folder of your choice, for instance ```C:\dev\gcc-arm```. ![GNU ARM Toolchain Setup](assets/008.toolchain.png) add the "bin" subdirectory to the PATH Windows environment variable: ```%PATH%;C:\dev\gcc-arm\bin``` ![GNU ARM Toolchain Setup](assets/009.toolchain_path.png) ![GNU ARM Toolchain Setup](assets/010.toolchain_path.png) ## Checkout and compile Cleanflight Head over to the Cleanflight Github page and grab the URL of the GIT Repository: "https://github.com/cleanflight/cleanflight.git" Open the Cygwin-Terminal, navigate to your development folder and use the git commandline to checkout the repository: ```bash cd /cygdrive/c/dev git clone https://github.com/cleanflight/cleanflight.git ``` ![GIT Checkout](assets/011.git_checkout.png) ![GIT Checkout](assets/012.git_checkout.png) To compile your Cleanflight binaries, enter the cleanflight directory and build the project using the make command. You can append TARGET=[HARDWARE] if you want to build anything other than the default NAZE target: ```bash cd cleanflight make TARGET=NAZE ``` ![GIT Checkout](assets/013.compile.png) within few moments you should have your binary ready: ```bash (...) arm-none-eabi-size ./obj/main/cleanflight_NAZE.elf text data bss dec hex filename 95388 308 10980 106676 1a0b4 ./obj/main/cleanflight_NAZE.elf arm-none-eabi-objcopy -O ihex --set-start 0x8000000 obj/main/cleanflight_NAZE.elf obj/cleanflight_NAZE.hex ``` You can use the Cleanflight-Configurator to flash the ```obj/cleanflight_NAZE.hex``` file. ## Updating and rebuilding Navigate to the local cleanflight repository and use the following steps to pull the latest changes and rebuild your version of cleanflight: ```bash cd /cygdrive/c/dev/cleanflight git reset --hard git pull make clean TARGET=NAZE -j16 -l make ``` You may want to remove -j16 -l if your having a hard time narrowing down errors. It does multithreaded make, however it makes it harder to know which warning or error comes from which file.