And never had, at least since newlib 1.17 (first version added to
crosstool-ng). Apparently, copy-pasted from glibc.sh.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
... by passing BUILD_LDFLAGS twice (the 2nd argument overrides the first).
Also, no need to pass -I/-L for BUILD_CFLAGS/LDFLAGS, they are already included
by crosstool-NG.sh (but keep for BUILD_CPPFLAGS, as we set it up here).
Remove -Wl,-Bstatic/-Wl,-Bdynamic (we only build static complibs).
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
Make them configurable, default to y when build!=host (i.e.
canadian or cross-native) because we don't know what libraries the host
will provide. GLIBC, as previously, selects them explicitly.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
This is needed for callbacks that use that directory to look inside
GCC internal directories, e.g. moving the libraries. This broke
when I made libexpat for target honor ${CT_SHARED_LIBS}.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
- No new releases in almost 10 year.
- No public bug tracker or VCS.
- No responses from maintainer over sent patches.
RIP, dmalloc.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
This follows the trend set by 1*.sh scripts that configure ISL, GMP,
MPFR, CLooG, etc. Building with shared libraries presents all kinds
of problems:
- The shared libraries need to be installed into ${CT_PREFIX_DIR}.
- The binaries linked against companion libs need to have proper
RPATH, or they're looking for shared libs in
.build/${CT_PREFIX}/buildtools/lib.
- All libraries must agree as to whether they're built shared,
static, or both. Otherwise, gettext tries to link in static libncurses.a
into a shared library and fails (since libncurses was compiled without
the -fPIC switch and hence contains relocations that cannot be handled
in a shared library).
So this fixes the current mess. If we decide to re-enable building
the companion libs shared, we should probably make this dependent on
a separate suboption of CT_STATIC_TOOLCHAIN.
Add a config loosely based on one reported in the issue 274.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
There are two separate issues with gdb configure usage:
1) inspecting build system libraries while cross-compiling;
2) preferring a shared library over static one.
The first usage issue is described and fixed now.
The second issue was described but the notes were removed
for some reason. This patch restores those notes.
Suggested-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
Signed-off-by: Kirill K. Smirnov <kirill.k.smirnov@gmail.com>
In that case, CT_GetCustom just creates a symlink to the original.
In that case, 'cp -a <path> .' gives an error and 'cp -a <path> <newdir>'
creates <newdir> as a symlink (which will then run the build inside
the shared directory, .build/src/<package>).
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
Current build passes {CFLAGS,LDFLAGS}_FOR_HOST - which breaks canadian cross
(e.g. tried building for x86_64-unknown-linux-uclibc host). This dates
back to the days of yore when CFLAGS were set directly in the do_gcc_core_backend
(and that function is used as the final gcc's backend).
do_gcc_core_backend is now passed with CFLAGS/LDFLAGS to use, so let
the pass-1/pass-2/final-for-build steps pass the appropriate flags.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
To build uClibc correctly we need correct endianness selected in the
crosstool-NG. Xtensa cores may be little- or big-endian, but this
property is static. The toolchain knows the core endianness and doesn't
need options to select it.
Enable ARCH_SUPPORTS_BOTH_ENDIAN and select LE by default. Specify empty
CT_ARCH_ENDIAN_CFLAG so that -m{big,little}-endian don't get added to
the TARGET_CFLAGS, as it's not supported by gcc. Specify empty
CT_ARCH_ENDIAN_LDFLAG so that -EB/-EL don't get added to the
TARGET_LDFLAGS as they are ignored. Select big-endian in the example
xtensa-unknown-linux-uclibc configuration.
This fixes uClibc toolchain build for little-endian cores.
Signed-off-by: Max Filippov <jcmvbkbc@gmail.com>
Allow selection of make/m4/... version. Support imports of new versions
via addToolVersion.sh. Import newest versions of the companion tools.
One non-trivial change is the handling of make versions. Existing code
was not handling make companion tool as described (see the previous
commit). However, since most modern systems have make 4.x, that previous
commit made crosstool-ng always build make as a companion tool.
This traces back to the commit dd15c93 from 2014. That commit's log message
says that actually it was 3.81 which broke the build for certain component
(it was originally breaking eglibc, but I noticed it was breaking current
glibc on powerpc64), and introduced an option to force using 3.81 by
"components that really need it". It looks like in 2.5 years we haven't
seen any such components that really need make 3.81, and (given that make
has already had a few releases since 3.81) we're unlikely to see them
in the future.
Hence, the configure check is changed from "exactly 3.81" to "3.81 or newer".
In its current form, configure will accept make 3.80+, and will not require
make as a companion tool for 3.81+. We might want to bump the latter check
to even newer version given the claim from dd15c93. Killed
COMP_TOOLS_make_3_81_NEEDED.
Anyway, I retained 3.81 just in case; ditto for m4 1.14.3, autoconf 2.65
and automake 1.11.1.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
The referenced commit replaced 'make' with '${make}' everywhere. This is
wrong for at least the utilities that we may build as companion tools
(make, libtool): this will always invoke the version detected by configure
by supplying the absolute path. In other words, the wrappers in
.build/tools/bin are not fallbacks - they are either temporary (in case
a respective companion tool is built) or permanent redirectors.
This is the reason why the PATH= has .build/*/buildtools/bin at higher
precedence than .build/tools/bin; the latter has the versions detected by
configure and the former has the versions built as companion tools.
Revert the rest of the gang (grep/sed/...) for consistency. After all,
we may decide to supply some of them as well (awk, for instance).
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
Commit 6f8e89cb5c broke that option.
Since ${make} points to /usr/bin/make, making the symlink from gmake
to /usr/bin/make is obviously the wrong decision. gmake should link to
our (old-versioned) self-built make.
Signed-off-by: Bernhard Walle <bernhard@bwalle.de>
1. Check if anything was installed outside sysroot; on some [baremetal only?]
configurations GCC doesn't install anything to ${CT_PREFIX_DIR}/${CT_TARGET}/lib.
2. We need to create <sysroot>/lib/<multilib> if it doesn't exist
(MUSL only installs in <sysroot>/usr/lib).
3. Do not move the linker scripts; elf2flt expects to find them
in gcc's dir, not sysroot.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>
1.0.15 only kept a single LINUXTHREADS option, and renamed it, making it
no longer option-compatible with uClibc.
The option for "1.0.14 or later" version of uClibc-ng is not currently
used; rename it to "1.0.15 or later" and use it to handle newer
uClibc-ng's linuxthreads.
m68k happens to be the only sample using linuxthreads.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net>