If one wishes to anchor the compiler toolchain tree somewhere other than /,
all one needs to do is set "TOOLS_PREFIX" to a different rooting.
Submitted by: marcel (in a different format and reworked by me)
of changing the search dirs. This also removes an used search dir,
removes unneeded redundancy, and a bugus dir we enherited on the i386
by baseing off of svr4.h.
We went from:
install: /usr/libexec/(null)
programs: /usr/libexec/<OBJFORMAT>/:/usr/libexec/:/usr/bin/:/usr/libexec/
libraries: /usr/libdata/gcc/:/usr/libexec/:/usr/ccs/lib/:/usr/lib/
to:
install: /usr/libexec/(null)
programs: /usr/libexec/<OBJFORMAT>/:/usr/libexec/
libraries: /usr/libexec/:/usr/lib/
Configuration header inclusion has been moved around to reduce diffs from
the offical GCC distribution. We now generate the same ``tm.h'' produced by
gcc's `configure' script [minus all the "#ifdef IN_GCC"'s].
Jeff Law of EGCS/Cygus says the new "approved" way of doing configure-related
includes is to list them all in ``tm.h'' rather than having the architure
config headers include large numbers of other configure headers.
code still applies, but the code attached to it had rotted:
# ../Makefile.inc will put an absolute path to our objdir in CFLAGS.
# Prevent mkdep from using it, so that we don't have to give rules for
# aliases of generated headers.
Many other makefiles seem to have the same bug (i.e., spelling "." as
"${.OBJDIR}" or as an even more complicated alias in -I directives).
The previous commit made things worse by breaking the -j0 case and
moving around the breakage for the -jN case. The fix involves
restoring .ORDER statements that were deleted in the previous commit,
removing wrong special handling of tree-check.h, and rewriting the
generation of fudged dependencies based on an idea I got from the
previous commit (filter out problematic objects first).
before it is installed.
This upsets Bruce because the host boostrap build forces tools to be
static anyway. He says I'm abusing NOTOOLS in src/Makefile by using
it to do a aout->elf transition build. One day I'll find a place to
install host tools like these to allow a true cross build.
on bi-parser.h. Not having it sometimes (only with `make -j') triggered
a bug suite that led to ordinary cpp output being put in .depend files.
Various bugs (the main one only with `make -j') prevented timely detection
of failure to build and install gnu/usr.bin/cc. Eventually the missing
${WORLDTMP}/usr/libexec/cpp caused ${WORLDTMP}/usr/bin/cpp to be invoked
by cc, and this version of cpp is not suitable for such invocation.
Ordinary cpp output was put in .depend files when cpp terminated options
processing before seeing the -M flag.
Cleaned up.
target. .ORDER doesn't work right, but is used for things related
to the depend target. It "works" for the depend target by skipping
the build of .depend when N >= 2 and there is a non-default
beforedepend target with no rules. Recent fixes made almost all
the beforedepend targets in the tree a no-op except for this bug.
Removed vestiges of elf and aout targets.
a.out gas and the binutils gas (elf or a.out) with a single compiler.
This uses other infrastructure not yet committed, in order to support
both a.out and elf it needs to be able to get to both a.out and elf
gas, ld, libs, crt* etc. So for now, the support is pretty much dormant.
The new freebsd.h file is based on the old freebsd-elf.h file (which has a
long lineage, right back through linux and svr4 files). The change is
pretty dramatic from a gcc internals standpoint as it overrides a lot of
definitions in order to generate different output based on target mode.
There is potential for screw-ups, so please be on the lookout - gcc's
configuration mechanism wasn't really meant for this kind of thing.
It's believed to compile world etc just fine under both a.out and elf, can
handle global constructors and destructors, handles the differences in
a.out and elf stabs, and what sections things like exceptions go in.
The initial idea came from i386/osfrose.h which is a dual rose/elf format
target. These two are not as diverse as a.out and elf it would seem.
The cc front-end uses external configuration to determine default object
format (still being thrashed out, so read the source if you want to see
it so far), and has a '-aout' and '-elf' override command line switch.
There are some other internal switches that can be accessed, namely -maout,
-mno-aout, -munderscores and -mnounderscores. The underscore and local
symbol prefixing rules are controllable seperately to the output format.
(ie: it's possible to generate a.out without the _ prefixes on symbols and
also to generate elf with the _ prefixes. This isn't quite optimal, but
does seem to work pretty well, except the linkers don't always recognise
the local symbols without their normal names)
The default format is a.out (still), nobody should see any major changes.
With both elf and a.out tools and libraries installed:
[1:26pm]/tmp-223> cc -elf -o hello hello.c
peter@beast[1:27pm]/tmp-224> file hello
hello: ELF 32-bit LSB executable, Intel 80386, version 1 (FreeBSD), dynamically linked, not stripped
[1:27pm]/tmp-225> ./hello
hello world!
[1:27pm]/tmp-226> cc -aout -o hello hello.c
[1:27pm]/tmp-227> file hello
hello: FreeBSD/i386 compact demand paged dynamically linked executable not stripped
1:27pm]/tmp-228> ./hello
hello world!
Since my co-conspirators put a lot of effort into this too, I'll add them
so they can share the blame^H^H^H^H^Hglory. :-)
Reviewed by: sos, jdp
objects depend on all generated headers doesn't work because it gives
cyclic dependencies. Give enough dependencies explicitly. We no
longer need to use .SINGLESHELL for `make depend'. .SINGLESHELL was
more of a bottleneck than usual because `make depend' makes everything.
Fixed some spelling and English errors.
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.