The purpose of cross-compiling is to build a Berkeley DB library on one platform that is to be used on a different platform. This section demonstrates how to build a library compatible with the ARM platform from a 32-bit x86 Linux platform. You will need to adjust the build tools and options to match your particular platforms.
                Download, install, and test a toolchain that can build the
                desired target binaries. In this example, we use the
                arm-linux-gnueabi-gcc package.
            
Decide on your configuration options, and set up your environment to use the appropriate compiler and compiler tools. It is often easiest to set this up as a small shell script. For example:
#!/bin/sh -f env \ CC=/usr/bin/arm-linux-gnueabi-gcc \ STRIP=/usr/bin/arm-linux-gnueabi-strip \ ../dist/configure \ --build=i686-pc-linux-gnu \ --host=arm-linux-gnueabi \ --enable-java \ --enable-sql \ --enable-jdbc \ --enable-smallbuild \ --enable-shared \ --enable-stripped_messages \ --prefix=$HOME/ARM-linux/install \ $*
                The --build flag indicates the system on
                which you are compiling and the --host
                flag indicates the target platform.  Adjust or omit the
                --enable and --prefix
                flag settings as dictated by your own needs.
            
                Unpack your Berkeley DB distribution and go to the
                build_unix directory. Alternatively, you
                may create a more appropriately-named directory at the same
                level and build in it. For example,
                build_arm.
            
                In your build directory, configure by executing your
                script, then make and 
                make install. Review any compiler
                warnings and fix if necessary, repeating the
                configure and make
                steps until you are satisfied. The resulting libraries and
                executables can then be transferred to your target system.