buildworld. This gives 5-11% percent gain in real buildworld
times on various UP and SMP systems here. I used 4 * hw.ncpu
as an argument to "make -j" in my tests.
glibc which is externally maintained, so GCC ships with these
warnings turned off by default. This is also consistent with
the src/contrib/gcc/c-lex.c,v 1.2 change.
and kgzip(8) from the list of cross-tools during the normal,
non-"make release" buildworld.
Also, don't gratuitously build them, btxld(8) and elf2aout(1)
for native architecture builds, since they have no known
boostrapping issues along the supported upgrade path.
Prodded by: peter
from the source directory. (This mostly affects the RELENG_4's
``make release'' release.5 target, where "rtermcap" build-tool
for release/sysinstall ends up in the source directory and later
steps of release.5 wipe it out.)
Spotted by: jhay
is a compiler tool and needs to be compiled by the host compiler. I've
tested this in i386->sparc cross-build, 4.7->current upgrade, normal
buildkernel target, and normal /sys/i386/compile/GENERIC configurations.
Submitted by: ru
non-cross cases without DESTDIR, that the bin/sh that we're about to
install works. Otherwise, a 'make installworld' without having already
rebooted with a post-signal-fix kernel is a rather big disaster when
important things like /bin/sh coredump.
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
doing the cd. This is done for bootstrap-tools,
build-tools, cross-tools, and the libraries loop.
Reviewed by: ru
Approved by: sheldonh (mentor)
MFC after: 1 week
endless recursion bug similar to the one that has been fixed in
release/Makefile,v 1.698, in advance. A related fix to make(1)
has been committed in make/main.c,v 1.68.
Requested by: bde (who has them merged already)
If there was no CPUTYPE assignment in /etc/make.conf, this would
cause the ``CPUTYPE assignment type'' check to falsely fail.
Reported by: johan
Fixed this by making sure we always pass the non-empty CPUTYPE.
Also make sure we use the correct set of share/mk files in our
test.
TARGET_ARCH and TARGET. This is problematic when one has the =
(unconditional) type of assigment for CPUTYPE in /etc/make.conf.
(This would override what was set on the command line to "make
buildworld".)
Add a (horrible) kludge to Makefile.inc1 to check the type of
assignment for CPUTYPE (only for those who attempts to set it to
a different value). Fix an example make.conf. Fix the kernel's
build-tools target (aicasm only at the moment) to catch up with
bsd.cpu.mk,v 1.15 (BOOTSTRAPPING replaced with NO_CPU_CFLAGS in
Makefile.inc1's BMAKE).
Reviewed by: jhb
bsd.cpu.mk doesn't have to worry about compilers other than the current
version.
- Allow TARGET_CPUTYPE to override CPUTYPE in bsd.cpu.mk.
- Treat an empty CPUTYPE the same as an undefined CPUTYPE.
- For buildworld, buildkernel, etc., define TARGET_CPUTYPE to CPUTYPE for
native builds and define it to be empty for cross-builds.
TARGET_CPUTYPE is only defined if it is not already defined via the
commandline or environment.
This only affects the -current early adopters and developers who have
done a 'make world' in the last few weeks and as a result installed a
gcc-3.1 version of /usr/bin/c++ but without the corresponding library
support that this now requires. This is a temporary hack that should be
deleted within a few weeks. In this case we will use the existing
gperf/groff one last time around for the early stage1 bootstrap. (This
isn't so bad, because we were unconditionally using the host one before)