Smart supermarket toy implementation for Networked Embedded Systems exam on Launchpad CC2650 with contiki-ng
9f1e87466f
Up till now we have been installing arm-gcc using apt from the team-gcc-arm-embedded ppa. As discussed in #1453 and implemented in #1504, we have decided to lock travis to use the specific version of the toolchain that is documented in the READMEs of relevant platforms. However, the PPA no longer hosts this version, apt fails to install arm-gcc and as a result the job fails too. This commit changes the travis job to wget an installation tarball for the desired version, instead of trying to install via apt. |
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apps | ||
core | ||
cpu | ||
dev | ||
doc | ||
examples | ||
lib/newlib | ||
platform | ||
regression-tests | ||
tools | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitmodules | ||
.travis.yml | ||
CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
LICENSE | ||
Makefile.include | ||
README-BUILDING.md | ||
README-EXAMPLES.md | ||
README.md |
The Contiki Operating System
Contiki is an open source operating system that runs on tiny low-power microcontrollers and makes it possible to develop applications that make efficient use of the hardware while providing standardized low-power wireless communication for a range of hardware platforms.
Contiki is used in numerous commercial and non-commercial systems, such as city sound monitoring, street lights, networked electrical power meters, industrial monitoring, radiation monitoring, construction site monitoring, alarm systems, remote house monitoring, and so on.
For more information, see the Contiki website: