ARM EABI support is disabled by default and can be enabled by setting
WITH_ARM_EABI when building, however only the kernel-toolchain target will
work with this flag until the rest of the support is added.
1. Don't do upgrade_checks when using bmake. As long as we have WITH_BMAKE,
there's a bootstrap complication in ths respect. Avoid it. Make the
necessary changes to have upgrade_checks work wth bmake anyway.
2. Remove the use of -E. It's not needed in our build because we use ?= for
the respective variables, which means that we'll take the environment
value (if any) anyway.
3. Properly declare phony targets as phony as bmake is a lot smarter (and
thus agressive) about build avoidance.
4. Make sure CLEANFILES is complete and use it on .NOPATH. bmake is a lot
smarter about build avoidance and should not find files we generate in
the source tree. We should not have files in the repository we want to
generate, but this is an easier way to cross this hurdle.
5. Have behavior under bmake the same as it is under make with respect to
halting when sub-commands fail. Add "set -e" to compound commands so
that bmake is informed when sub-commands fail.
6. Make sure crunchgen uses the same make as the rest of the build. This
is important when the make utility isn't called make (but bmake for
example).
7. While here, add support for using MAKEOBJDIR to set the object tree
location. It's the second alternative bmake looks for when determining
the actual object directory (= .OBJDIR).
Submitted by: Simon Gerraty <sjg@juniper.net>
Submitted by: John Van Horne <jvanhorne@juniper.net>
TARGET_BIG_ENDIAN is now completely dead, except where it was
originally supposed to be used (internally in the toolchain building).
TARGET_ARCH has changed in three cases:
(1) Little endian mips has changed to mipsel.
(2) Big endian mips has changed to mipseb.
(3) Big endian arm has changed to armeb.
Some additional changes are needed to make 'make universe' work on arm
and mips after this change, so those are commented out for now.
UPDATING information will be forthcoming. Any remaining rough edges
will be hammered out in -current.
Also:
Switch FreeBSD to use libgcc_s.so.1.
Use dl_iterate_phdr to locate shared objects' exception frame
info instead of depending on older register_frame_info machinery.
This allows us to avoid depending on libgcc_s.so.1 in binaries
that do not use exception handling directly. As an additional
benefit it breaks circular libc <=> libgcc_s.so.1 dependency too.
Build newly added libgomp.so.1 library, the runtime support
bits for OpenMP.
Build LGPLed libssp library. Our libc provides our own
BSD-licensed SSP callbacks implementation, so this library
is only built to benefit applications that have hadcoded
knowledge of libssp.so and libssp_nonshared.a. When linked
in from command line, these libraries override libc
implementation.
'target'. Latter is problematic in particular as apparently FreeBSD's
bsd.prog.mk re-defines it under some circumstances. This causes an
unexpected failures like -dumpmachine not working for cc while working
fine for c++.
Do not re-define IN_GCC in multipe places, it gets inherited from
Makefile.in anyway.
PR: gnu/110143
Submitted by: usleepless at gmail
give the cvs tree a surviving a 'make world'. One of the two diff chunks
is already in gcc-3.3, the other has been committed to gcc's HEAD and
is in the pipeline for gcc-3.3.1 (but has not been committed yet).
The first chunk simplifies an excessively complex assembler statement
when generating switch jump tables. The use of '.' causes as(1) to choke
on big files. Use a simpler form instead. This is only an issue for
TARGET_64BIT mode.
The second chunk fixes an internal compiler error when compiling
libc/stdio/vfprinf.c. While this is supposedly only an issue for
64 bit mode, it does touch the 32 bit i386 code paths, so this patch
is only applied for TARGET_ARCH == amd64 to keep the risks down.
Breaking gcc at the 11th hour would suck.
This will be removed when it is time to import gcc-3.3.
Discussed with: kan
Approved by: re (jhb)
under way to move the remnants of the a.out toolchain to ports. As the
comment in src/Makefile said, this stuff is deprecated and one should not
expect this to remain beyond 4.0-REL. It has already lasted WAY beyond
that.
Notable exceptions:
gcc - I have not touched the a.out generation stuff there.
ldd/ldconfig - still have some code to interface with a.out rtld.
old as/ld/etc - I have not removed these yet, pending their move to ports.
some includes - necessary for ldd/ldconfig for now.
Tested on: i386 (extensively), alpha
where it is used. c-decl has symbols that conflict with several of the
cc1plus sources.
GNU `ld' was changed in Dec 1999 to be more be compatable with the way that
other linkers work (specifically in the Solaris linker). The 2.9.1 `ld',
did the Wrong Thing in that if a library contained a common symbol that
matched a definition of that symbol in another (already linked in object)
it would also be linked in, even if there was no other reason to do so.
This is wrong. The library should only be linked in if it contains
non-common, non-weak symbols which are needed by previously linked in
objects.
than ".so". The old extension conflicted with well-established
naming conventions for dynamically loadable modules.
The "clean" targets continue to remove ".so" files too, to deal with
old systems.
This will make a number of things easier in the future, as well as (finally!)
avoiding the Id-smashing problem which has plagued developers for so long.
Boy, I'm glad we're not using sup anymore. This update would have been
insane otherwise.