For a cross-compiler, we only need to make the 'build tools' for the
'build'. We also build the 'build tools' for the 'host' when building a
cross-canadian toolchain.
Closes#430
Signed-off-by: Bryan Hundven <bryanhundven@gmail.com>
No threads (uclibc/libpthread does not compile on ARMv8); no C++ (libitm
depends on pthreads), no GDB/DUMA (depend on threads).
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
Based on the following samples:
- x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu (-m64/-m32/-mx32)
- powerpc64-unknown-linux-gnu (-m64/-m32)
- mipsel-unknown-linux-gnu (-mabi={32,n32,64})
- sh4-unknown-linux-gnu (-m4/-m4a)
- x86_64-unknown-linux-uclibc (-m64/-m32)
- mips64el-unknown-linux-uclibc (-mabi={32,n32,64})
New samples:
- sparc64-multilib-linux-gnu (-m64/-m32)
- sh4-multilib-linux-uclibc (-m4/-m4a/-m3)
- x86_64-multilib-linux-musl (-m64/-m32)
Notably missing is arm-unknown-linux-gnu (aprofile): GLIBC does not
compile in one of the variants in its multilib set (-march=armv4t
-mthumb) due to missing atomic ops implementation.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
It turns out that core GCC on binfmt architectures (m68k, for example)
cannot produce the final executable (looks for ld.real in the wrong
place). Need to wait for the final gcc to become available.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
'ld' does not search for dependency libraries in multi_os_directory, so
if there's both multi_os_directory and multi_root, and there is only one
configuration in each multi_root, forgo the multi_os_directory suffix.
Needed for sh4-multilib-linux-uclibc.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
Create a separate 'libc_backend_once', install headers into a
subdirectory (different sets of headers are installed for 32- and 64-bit
architectures), and create a symlink for the dynamic linker location
expected by GCC.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
Rather than echo-ing the new value, set the value into the variable with
the name passed as an argument (similar to CT_SanitizeVarDir). This
allows to use CT_DoLog in these functions.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
This step was only used in uClibc. However, with upcoming multilib, the
config management will have to be done for each variant differently,
anyway.
uClibc was the only user of libc_check_config step, as well as
CT_CONFIG_DIR directory. Retire these.
Two other clean-ups in uClibc.sh:
- KERNEL_HEADERS check seems to be bogus, this config option is not
present even in 0.9.30 - which is not supported already.
- SHARED_LIB_LOADER_PREFIX was renamed to MULTILIB_DIR in 0.9.31,
according to ChangeLog - and MULTILIB_DIR is passed from command line
instead.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
In preparation for multilib support, use the same "backend" model that
is already employed by glibc and musl.
Also, the verbosity setting descriptions were swapped. V=2 is actually
less verbose than V=1: V=1 prints full commands, while V=2 prints 'CC
<file> <defines>'.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
- Dump CT_LIBC_EXTRA_CC_ARGS: instead, treat CT_LIBC_EXTRA_CFLAGS as
arguments to CC (or they are not applied to .S, for example).
Combine them with multi_flags and CT_TARGET_CFLAGS in proper order.
- Analyze thus combined flags to determine --with-fp/--without-fp.
Don't need to check CT_ARCH_FLOAT - it is reflected in
CT_TARGET_CFLAGS anyway. Check more soft/hard float options defined
on different architectures.
- Drop checking for endianness flags: they are not reflected in
configure arguments in any way, and they're already present in CFLAGS
(either via multi_flags or via CT_TARGET_CFLAGS). Besides,
CT_ARCH_ENDIAN_OPT was actually called CT_ARCH_ENDIAN_CFLAG, so this
was a no-op anyway.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
Install startfiles for libc variants into the most specific combination
(suffixed sysroot, if applicable + suffixed multi-os dir, if
applicable). Install headers once in every suffixed sysroot (although it
seems that GCC picks up headers from top-level sysroot, GCC manual
claims that sysroot suffix affects headers search path).
In uClibc, this requires a better sanitization of the directory: it
creates symlinks from {sysroot}/usr/lib/{multi_os_dir} to
{sysroot}/lib/{multi_os_dir} and to do so, it counts the number of path
components in the libdir. This breaks if one of such components is `..'
- symlinks contain an extra `../..' then. Since such sanitization had to
be implemented anyway, use it in other places to print more sensible
directory names.
Also, fix the description of configure --host/--target per musl's
configure help message (and its actual code).
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
On some arches (e.g. MIPS) the options like -mabi do not work if
specified more than once (see the comment in 100-gcc.sh). Therefore,
we need to determine which of the options produced by <arch>.sh can
be passed to multilib builds and which must be removed (i.e., which
options vary among the multilibs).
This presents a chicken-and-egg problem. GCC developers, in their
infinite wisdom, do not allow arbitrary multilib specification to be
supplied to GCC's configure. Instead, the target (and sometimes some
extra options) determine the set of multilibs - which may include
different CPUs, different ABIs, different endianness, different FPUs,
different floating-point ABIs, ... That is, we don't know which parts
vary until we build GCC and ask it.
So, the solution implemented here is:
- For multilib builds, start with empty CT_ARCH_TARGET_CFLAGS/LDFLAGS.
- For multilib builds, require core pass 1. Pass 1 does not build any
target binaries, so at that point, our target options have not been
used yet.
- Provide an API to modify the environment variables for the steps that
follow the current one.
- As a part of multilib-related housekeeping, determine the variable
part of multilibs and filter out these options; pass the rest into
CT_TARGET_CFLAGS/LDFLAGS.
This still does not handle extra dependencies between GCC options (like
-ma implying -mcpu=X -mtune=Y, etc.) but I feel that would complicate
matters too much. Let's leave this until there's a compelling case for
it.
Also, query GCC's sysroot suffix for targets that use it (SuperH,
for example) - the default multilib may not work if the command line
specifies the default option explicitly (%sysroot_suffix_spec is not
aware of multilib defaults).
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
Rather then building the manuals and locales for each multilib target, only
build the manuals on the last multilib target.
If you are not building a multilib toolchain, then the first libc build will
be the last.
Signed-off-by: Bryan Hundven <bryanhundven@gmail.com>
For 4 different folders:
${CT_PREFIX_DIR}
${CT_SYSROOT_DIR}
${CT_SYSROOT_DIR}/usr
${CT_PREFIX_DIR}/${CT_TARGET}
.. symlinks from 'lib32' and 'lib64' to 'lib' were created.
This was untidy and incorrect for multilib (the bitness of
the libraries in 'lib32' and 'lib64' will not be the same)
We can not know which folders this toolchain configuration
will require at this time so let them be created on-demand
instead.
Changed by Alexey Neyman: original change removed too much; we
still need to create the default directories because the os
directories are based off them (e.g. `lib/../lib64').
Signed-off-by: Ray Donnelly <mingw.android@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
GCC makes the distinction between:
multilib (-print-multi-lib) and
multilib-os (--print-multi-os-directory)
as the GCC library and GCC sysroot library paths, respecitively.
Use this to build libc into the correct locations, the same
applies to the dummy libc.so
Changed by Alexey Neyman: restore missing CT_EndStep.
Signed-off-by: Ray Donnelly <mingw.android@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
This commit makes the README.md more informative and basically jacks a
bunch of content from crosstool-ng.org (plus some extras).
I also added the waffle.io badges
Signed-off-by: Bryan Hundven <bryanhundven@gmail.com>
This change adds a powerpc64le-unknown-linux-gnu sample that can be used
to quickly create a little-endian tool-chain for powerpc64
architecture. This sample is based on the earlier work done by "Yann
E. MORIN" to add support for powerpc64 tool chain and implementing the
power64-unknown-linux-gnu sample. The existing sample however generates
a big-endian tool chain by default.
Signed-off-by: Vaibhav Jain <vaibhav@linux.vnet.ibm.com>