- Avoid cargo, it it may seem tempting, but you'll just keep running into untested code paths and design flaws; it's not meant to do it.
- Using a target specification to describe your platform is recommended, and you'll likely need one for one reason or another anyways (example: https://github.com/hackndev/zinc/blob/master/thumbv6-none-eabi.json ). Pass it to rustc via --target=target.json
- You wan work without the standard library, by following those instructions: https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/no-stdlib.html
- Inline assembly (asm!) blocks are fed directly into LLVM and have horrible error checking, tread lightly and verify the output.
- LLVM can end up generating dodgy versions of certain instructions on certain versions, it may for example turn "lgdt" into the utterly useless 16-bit version (which truncates the upper 8 bits of the address). Specify operand sizes.
- An "intel" option is supported, but it seems to be somewhat dodgy (for example, it seemed to do handle label operands MASM style but didn't support any "offset of" syntax known to man last I checked).
- Use LTO to trim out unused references to libraries like libm (which can be generated by the compiler).
- rlibc provides reasonable baseline implementations of necessary libc functions such as
memcpy
andmemmove
. - You can use a semi-undocumented environment variable
RUST_TARGET_PATH
to avoid specifying absolute paths to--target
. - To get a
.o
file without the compiler whining about entry points, use:--crate-type staticlib --emit obj
-
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Baremetal Rust
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