Software:Newlib

From HandWiki
Revision as of 10:47, 9 February 2024 by Jport (talk | contribs) (linkage)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Short description: Implementation of the C standard library for embedded systems
Newlib
Original author(s)Cygnus Support
Developer(s)Red Hat
Stable release
4.3.0 / January 20, 2023; 22 months ago (2023-01-20)[1]
Operating systemCross-platform[citation needed]
TypeRuntime library
LicenseVarious MIT/BSD-like licenses
Websitewww.sourceware.org/newlib/

Newlib is a C standard library implementation intended for use on embedded systems. It is a conglomeration of several library parts, all under free software licenses that make them easily usable on embedded products.

It was created by Cygnus Support as part of building the first GNU cross-development toolchains. It is now maintained by Red Hat developers Jeff Johnston and Corinna Vinschen, and is used in most commercial and non-commercial GCC ports for non-Linux embedded systems.

System Calls

The section System Calls[2] of the Newlib documentation describes how it can be used with many operating systems. Its primary use is on embedded systems that lack any kind of operating system; in that case it calls a board support package that can do things like write a byte of output on a serial port, or read a sector from a disk or other memory device.

Inclusion

Newlib is included in commercial GCC distributions by Atollic, CodeSourcery, Code Red, KPIT, Red Hat and others, and receives support from major embedded-processor architecture vendors such as ARM and Renesas. It is used as the standard C library in Cygwin, as well as being one standard C library among several for AmigaOS 4.

(As of 2004), KallistiOS, an independent SDK targeting the Sega Dreamcast, has used Newlib as its standard C library, shipping it with many commercial titles on the platform. [3]

(As of 2007), devkitARM and devkitPPC, toolchains targeted at homebrew development for commercial game systems, include Newlib as their C library. The Open-R SDK for Sony AIBO is also based on Newlib on top of the non-Unix Aperios.

(As of 2013), Google Native Client SDK (NaCl) includes Newlib as the default C library over glibc.[4]

In 2019, Keith Packard released Picolibc,[5] a library offering standard C library APIs that targets small embedded systems with limited RAM, based on blending code from Newlib and AVR Libc.

See also

Other C standard libraries


References

Further reading

External links