riscv64gc-unknown-linux-gnu
Tier: 2 (with Host Tools)
RISC-V targets using the RV64I base instruction set with the G collection of extensions, as well as the C extension.
Target maintainers
- Kito Cheng, [email protected], @kito-cheng
- Michael Maitland, [email protected], @michaelmaitland
- Robin Randhawa, [email protected], @robin-randhawa-sifive
- Craig Topper, [email protected], @topperc
Requirements
This target requires:
- Linux Kernel version 4.20 or later
- glibc 2.17 or later
Building the target
These targets are distributed through rustup
, and otherwise require no
special configuration.
If you need to build your own Rust for some reason though, the targets can be
enabled in config.toml
. For example:
[build]
target = ["riscv64gc-unknown-linux-gnu"]
Building Rust programs
On a RISC-V host, the riscv64gc-unknown-linux-gnu
target should be automatically
installed and used by default.
On a non-RISC-V host, add the target:
rustup target add riscv64gc-unknown-linux-gnu
Then cross compile crates with:
cargo build --target riscv64gc-unknown-linux-gnu
Testing
There are no special requirements for testing and running the targets. For testing cross builds on the host, please refer to the "Cross-compilation toolchains and C code" section below.
Cross-compilation toolchains and C code
A RISC-V toolchain can be obtained for Windows/Mac/Linux from the
riscv-gnu-toolchain
repostory. Binaries are available via
embecosm,
and may also be available from your OS's package manager.
On Ubuntu, a RISC-V toolchain can be installed with:
apt install gcc-riscv64-linux-gnu g++-riscv64-linux-gnu libc6-dev-riscv64-cross
Depending on your system, you may need to configure the target to use the GNU
GCC linker. To use it, add the following to your .cargo/config.toml
:
[target.riscv64gc-unknown-linux-gnu]
linker = "riscv64-linux-gnu-gcc"
If your riscv64-linux-gnu-*
toolchain is not in your PATH
you may need to
configure additional settings:
[target.riscv64gc-unknown-linux-gnu]
# Adjust the paths to point at your toolchain
cc = "/TOOLCHAIN_PATH/bin/riscv64-linux-gnu-gcc"
cxx = "/TOOLCHAIN_PATH/bin/riscv64-linux-gnu-g++"
ar = "/TOOLCHAIN_PATH/bin/riscv64-linux-gnu-ar"
ranlib = "/TOOLCHAIN_PATH/bin/riscv64-linux-gnu-ranlib"
linker = "/TOOLCHAIN_PATH/bin/riscv64-linux-gnu-gcc"
To test cross compiled binaries on a non-RISCV-V host, you can use
qemu
.
On Ubuntu, a RISC-V emulator can be obtained with:
apt install qemu-system-riscv64
Then, in .cargo/config.toml
set the runner
:
[target.riscv64gc-unknown-linux-gnu]
runner = "qemu-riscv64-static -L /usr/riscv64-linux-gnu -cpu rv64"
On Mac and Linux, it's also possible to use
lima
to emulate RISC-V in a similar way to
how WSL2 works on Windows:
limactl start template://riscv
limactl shell riscv
Using Docker (with BuildKit) the
riscv64/ubuntu
image can be used
to buiild or run riscv64gc-unknown-linux-gnu
binaries.
docker run --platform linux/riscv64 -ti --rm --mount "type=bind,src=$(pwd),dst=/checkout" riscv64/ubuntu bash