7.9 KiB
Chapter 0: Development Setup
Before you can build a GBA game you'll have to follow some special steps to setup the development environment. Perhaps unfortunately, there's enough detail here to warrant a mini-chapter all on its own.
Once again, extra special thanks to Ketsuban, who first dove into how to make this all work with rust and then shared it with the world.
Per System Setup
Obviously you need your computer to have a working rust
installation. However, you'll also need to ensure that
you're using a nightly toolchain (we will need it for inline assembly, among
other potential useful features). You can run rustup default nightly
to set
nightly as the system wide default toolchain, or you can use a toolchain
file to use
nightly just on a specific project, but either way we'll be assuming the use of
nightly from now on. You'll also need the rust-src
component so that
cargo-xbuild
will be able to compile the core crate for us in a bit, so run
rustup component add rust-src
.
Next, you need devkitpro. They've
got a graphical installer for Windows that runs nicely, and I guess pacman
support on Linux (I'm on Windows so I haven't tried the Linux install myself).
We'll be using a few of their general binutils for the arm-none-eabi
target,
and we'll also be using some of their tools that are specific to GBA
development, so even if you already have the right binutils for whatever
reason, you'll still want devkitpro for the gbafix
utility.
- On Windows you'll want something like
C:\devkitpro\devkitARM\bin
andC:\devkitpro\tools\bin
to be added to your PATH, depending on where you installed it to and such. - On Linux you'll also want it to be added to your path, but if you're using
Linux I'll just assume you know how to do all that. I'm told that the default
installation path is
/opt/devkitpro/devkitARM/bin
, so look there first if you didn't select some other place.
Finally, you'll need cargo-xbuild
. Just run cargo install cargo-xbuild
and
cargo will figure it all out for you.
Per Project Setup
Once the system wide tools are ready, you'll need some particular files each time you want to start a new project. You can find them in the root of the rust-console/gba repo.
thumbv4-none-agb.json
describes the overall GBA to cargo-xbuild (and LLVM) so it knows what to do. Technically the GBA isthumbv4-none-eabi
, but we change theeabi
toagb
so that we can distinguish it from othereabi
devices when usingcfg
flags.crt0.s
describes some ASM startup stuff. If you have more ASM to place here later on this is where you can put it. You also need to build it into acrt0.o
file before it can actually be used, but we'll cover that below.linker.ld
tells the linker all the critical info about the layout expectations that the GBA has about our program, and that it should also include thecrt0.o
file with our compiled rust code.
Compiling
The next steps only work once you've got some source code to build. If you need
a quick test, copy the hello1.rs
file from our examples directory in the
repository.
Once you've got something to build, you perform the following steps:
-
arm-none-eabi-as crt0.s -o crt0.o
- This builds your text format
crt0.s
file into object formatcrt0.o
. You don't need to perform it every time, only whencrt0.s
changes, but you might as well do it every time so that you never forget to because it's a practically instant operation.
- This builds your text format
-
cargo xbuild --target thumbv4-none-agb.json
- This builds your Rust source. It accepts most of the normal options, such
as
--release
, and options, such as--bin foo
or--examples
, that you'd expectcargo
to accept. - You can not build and run tests this way, because they require
std
, which the GBA doesn't have. If you want you can still run some of your project's tests withcargo test --lib
or similar, but that builds for your local machine, so anything specific to the GBA (such as reading and writing registers) won't be testable that way. If you want to isolate and try out some piece code running on the GBA you'll unfortunately have to make a demo for it in yourexamples/
directory and then run the demo in an emulator and see if it does what you expect. - The file extension is important.
cargo xbuild
takes it as a flag to compile dependencies with the same sysroot, so you can include crates normally. Well, creates that work in the GBA's limited environment, but you get the idea.
- This builds your Rust source. It accepts most of the normal options, such
as
At this point you have an ELF binary that some emulators can execute directly. This is helpful because it'll have debug symbols and all that, assuming a debug build. Specifically, mgba 0.7 beta 1 can do it, and perhaps other emulators can also do it.
However, if you want a "real" ROM that works in all emulators and that you could transfer to a flash cart there's a little more to do.
-
arm-none-eabi-objcopy -O binary target/thumbv4-none-agb/MODE/BIN_NAME target/ROM_NAME.gba
- This will perform an objcopy on our
program. Here I've named the program
arm-none-eabi-objcopy
, which is what devkitpro calls their version ofobjcopy
that's specific to the GBA in the Windows install. If the program isn't found under that name, have a look in your installation directory to see if it's under a slightly different name or something. - As you can see from reading the man page, the
-O binary
option takes our lovely ELF file with symbols and all that and strips it down to basically a bare memory dump of the program. - The next argument is the input file. You might not be familiar with how
cargo
arranges stuff in thetarget/
directory, and between RLS andcargo doc
and stuff it gets kinda crowded, so it goes like this:- Since our program was built for a non-local target, first we've got a
directory named for that target,
thumbv4-none-agb/
- Next, the "MODE" is either
debug/
orrelease/
, depending on if we had the--release
flag included. You'll probably only be packing release mode programs all the way into GBA roms, but it works with either mode. - Finally, the name of the program. If your program is something out of the
project's
src/bin/
then it'll be that file's name, or whatever name you configured for the bin in theCargo.toml
file. If your program is something out of the project'sexamples/
directory there will be a similarexamples/
sub-directory first, and then the example's name.
- Since our program was built for a non-local target, first we've got a
directory named for that target,
- The final argument is the output of the
objcopy
, which I suggest putting at just the top level of thetarget/
directory. Really it could go anywhere, but if you're using git then it's likely that your.gitignore
file is already setup to exclude everything intarget/
, so this makes sure that your intermediate game builds don't get checked into your git.
- This will perform an objcopy on our
program. Here I've named the program
-
gbafix target/ROM_NAME.gba
- The
gbafix
tool also comes from devkitpro. The GBA is very picky about a ROM's format, andgbafix
patches the ROM's header and such so that it'll work right. Unlikeobjcopy
, this tool is custom built for GBA development, so it works just perfectly without any arguments beyond the file name. The ROM is patched in place, so we don't even need to specify a new destination.
- The
And you're finally done!
Of course, you probably want to make a script for all that, but it's up to you.
On our own project we have it mostly set up within a Makefile.toml
which runs
using the cargo-make plugin. It's
not really the best plugin, but it's what's available.