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Reported-by: "Antony N. Pavlov" <antony@niisi.msk.ru> Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@anciens.enib.fr>
258 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
258 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
File.........: 9 - Build procedure overview.txt
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Copyright....: (C) 2011 Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@anciens.enib.fr>
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License......: Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike (CC-by-sa), v2.5
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How is a toolchain constructed? /
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_______________________________/
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This is the result of a discussion with Francesco Turco <mail@fturco.org>:
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http://sourceware.org/ml/crossgcc/2011-01/msg00060.html
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Francesco has a nice tutorial for beginners, along with a sample, step-by-
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step procedure to build a toolchain for an ARM target from an x86_64 Debian
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host:
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http://fturco.org/wiki/doku.php?id=debian:cross-compiler
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Thank you Francesco for initiating this!
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I want a cross-compiler! What is this toolchain you're speaking about? |
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
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A cross-compiler is in fact a collection of different tools set up to
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tightly work together. The tools are arranged in a way that they are
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chained, in a kind of cascade, where the output from one becomes the
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input to another one, to ultimately produce the actual binary code that
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runs on a machine. So, we call this arrangement a "toolchain". When
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a toolchain is meant to generate code for a machine different from the
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machine it runs on, this is called a cross-toolchain.
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So, what are those components in a toolchain? |
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----------------------------------------------+
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The components that play a role in the toolchain are first and foremost
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the compiler itself. The compiler turns source code (in C, C++, whatever)
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into assembly code. The compiler of choice is the GNU compiler collection,
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well known as 'gcc'.
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The assembly code is interpreted by the assembler to generate object code.
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This is done by the binary utilities, such as the GNU 'binutils'.
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Once the different object code files have been generated, they got to get
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aggregated together to form the final executable binary. This is called
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linking, and is achieved with the use of a linker. The GNU 'binutils' also
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come with a linker.
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So far, we get a complete toolchain that is capable of turning source code
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into actual executable code. Depending on the Operating System, or the lack
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thereof, running on the target, we also need the C library. The C library
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provides a standard abstraction layer that performs basic tasks (such as
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allocating memory, printing output on a terminal, managing file access...).
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There are many C libraries, each targeted to different systems. For the
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Linux /desktop/, there is glibc or eglibc or even uClibc, for embedded Linux,
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you have a choice of eglibc or uClibc, while for system without an Operating
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System, you may use newlib, dietlibc, or even none at all. There a few other
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C libraries, but they are not as widely used, and/or are targeted to very
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specific needs (eg. klibc is a very small subset of the C library aimed at
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building constrained initial ramdisks).
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Under Linux, the C library needs to know the API to the kernel to decide
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what features are present, and if needed, what emulation to include for
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missing features. That API is provided by the kernel headers. Note: this
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is Linux-specific (and potentially a very few others), the C library on
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other OSes do not need the kernel headers.
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And now, how do all these components chained together? |
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-------------------------------------------------------+
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So far, all major components have been covered, but yet there is a specific
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order they need to be built. Here we see what the dependencies are, starting
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with the compiler we want to ultimately use. We call that compiler the
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'final compiler'.
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- the final compiler needs the C library, to know how to use it,
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but:
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- building the C library requires a compiler
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A needs B which needs A. This is the classic chicken'n'egg problem... This
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is solved by building a stripped-down compiler that does not need the C
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library, but is capable of building it. We call it a bootstrap, initial, or
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core compiler. So here is the new dependency list:
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- the final compiler needs the C library, to know how to use it,
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- building the C library requires a core compiler
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but:
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- the core compiler needs the C library headers and start files, to know
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how to use the C library
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B needs C which needs B. Chicken'n'egg, again. To solve this one, we will
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need to build a C library that will only install its headers and start
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files. The start files are a very few files that gcc needs to be able to
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turn on thread local storage (TLS) on an NPTL system. So now we have:
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- the final compiler needs the C library, to know how to use it,
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- building the C library requires a core compiler
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- the core compiler needs the C library headers and start files, to know
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how to use the C library
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but:
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- building the start files require a compiler
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Geez... C needs D which needs C, yet again. So we need to build a yet
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simpler compiler, that does not need the headers and does need the start
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files. This compiler is also a bootstrap, initial or core compiler. In order
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to differentiate the two core compilers, let's call that one "core pass 1",
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and the former one "core pass 2". The dependency list becomes:
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- the final compiler needs the C library, to know how to use it,
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- building the C library requires a compiler
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- the core pass 2 compiler needs the C library headers and start files,
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to know how to use the C library
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- building the start files requires a compiler
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- we need a core pass 1 compiler
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And as we said earlier, the C library also requires the kernel headers.
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There is no requirement for the kernel headers, so end of story in this
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case:
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- the final compiler needs the C library, to know how to use it,
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- building the C library requires a core compiler
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- the core pass 2 compiler needs the C library headers and start files,
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to know how to use the C library
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- building the start files requires a compiler and the kernel headers
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- we need a core pass 1 compiler
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We need to add a few new requirements. The moment we compile code for the
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target, we need the assembler and the linker. Such code is, of course,
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built from the C library, so we need to build the binutils before the C
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library start files, and the complete C library itself. Also, some code
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in gcc will turn to run on the target as well. Luckily, there is no
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requirement for the binutils. So, our dependency chain is as follows:
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- the final compiler needs the C library, to know how to use it, and the
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binutils
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- building the C library requires a core pass 2 compiler and the binutils
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- the core pass 2 compiler needs the C library headers and start files,
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to know how to use the C library, and the binutils
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- building the start files requires a compiler, the kernel headers and the
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binutils
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- the core pass 1 compiler needs the binutils
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Which turns in this order to build the components:
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1 binutils
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2 core pass 1 compiler
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3 kernel headers
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4 C library headers and start files
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5 core pass 2 compiler
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6 complete C library
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7 final compiler
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Yes! :-) But are we done yet?
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In fact, no, there are still missing dependencies. As far as the tools
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themselves are involved, we do not need anything else.
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But gcc has a few pre-requisites. It relies on a few external libraries to
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perform some non-trivial tasks (such as handling complex numbers in
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constants...). There are a few options to build those libraries. First, one
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may think to rely on a Linux distribution to provide those libraries. Alas,
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they were not widely available until very, very recently. So, if the distro
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is not too recent, chances are that we will have to build those libraries
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(which we do below). The affected libraries are:
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- the GNU Multiple Precision Arithmetic Library, GMP
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- the C library for multiple-precision floating-point computations with
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correct rounding, MPFR
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- the C library for the arithmetic of complex numbers, MPC
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The dependencies for those libraries are:
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- MPC requires GMP and MPFR
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- MPFR requires GMP
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- GMP has no pre-requisite
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So, the build order becomes:
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1 GMP
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2 MPFR
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3 MPC
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4 binutils
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5 core pass 1 compiler
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6 kernel headers
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7 C library headers and start files
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8 core pass 2 compiler
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9 complete C library
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10 final compiler
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Yes! Or yet some more?
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This is now sufficient to build a functional toolchain. So if you've had
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enough for now, you can stop here. Or if you are curious, you can continue
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reading.
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gcc can also make use of a few other external libraries. These additional,
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optional libraries are used to enable advanced features in gcc, such as
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loop optimisation (GRAPHITE) and Link Time Optimisation (LTO). If you want
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to use these, you'll need three additional libraries:
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To enable GRAPHITE:
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- the Parma Polyhedra Library, PPL
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- the Chunky Loop Generator, using the PPL backend, CLooG/PPL
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To enable LTO:
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- the ELF object file access library, libelf
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The dependencies for those libraries are:
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- PPL requires GMP
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- CLooG/PPL requires GMP and PPL
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- libelf has no pre-requisites
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The list now looks like (optional libs with a *):
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1 GMP
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2 MPFR
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3 MPC
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4 PPL *
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5 CLooG/PPL *
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6 libelf *
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7 binutils
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8 core pass 1 compiler
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9 kernel headers
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10 C library headers and start files
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11 core pass 2 compiler
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12 complete C library
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13 final compiler
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This list is now complete! Wouhou! :-)
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So the list is complete. But why does crosstool-NG have more steps? |
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--------------------------------------------------------------------+
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The already thirteen steps are the necessary steps, from a theoretical point
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of view. In reality, though, there are small differences; there are three
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different reasons for the additional steps in crosstool-NG.
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First, the GNU binutils do not support some kinds of output. It is not possible
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to generate 'flat' binaries with binutils, so we have to use another component
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that adds this support: elf2flt. Another binary utility called sstrip has been
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added. It allows for super-stripping the target binaries, although it is not
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strictly required.
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Second, some C libraries require another step after the compiler is built, to
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install additional stuff. This is the case for mingw and newlib. Hence the
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libc_finish step.
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Third, crosstool-NG can also build some additional debug utilities to run on
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the target. This is where we build, for example, the cross-gdb, the gdbserver
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and the native gdb (the last two run on the target, the first runs on the
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same machine as the toolchain). The others (strace, ltrace, DUMA and dmalloc)
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are absolutely not related to the toolchain, but are nice-to-have stuff that
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can greatly help when developing, so are included as goodies (and they are
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quite easy to build, so it's OK; more complex stuff is not worth the effort
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to include in crosstool-NG).
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