source: chapter05/gcc-pass2-inst.xml@ a3f6e124

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Last change on this file since a3f6e124 was a3f6e124, checked in by Greg Schafer <greg@…>, 21 years ago

Minor touchups.

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1<sect2><title>&nbsp;</title><para>&nbsp;</para></sect2>
2
3<sect2>
4<title>Re-installation of GCC</title>
5
6<para>The tools required to test GCC and Binutils are installed now (Tcl, Expect
7and DejaGnu). We can continue on rebuilding GCC and Binutils, link them against
8the new Glibc, and test them properly. One thing to note, however, is that these
9test suites are highly dependent on properly functioning pseudo terminals (PTYs)
10which are provided by your host distribution. These days, PTYs are most commonly
11implemented via the <emphasis>devpts</emphasis> file system. You can quickly
12check if your host system is set up correctly in this regard by performing a
13simple test:</para>
14
15<screen><userinput>expect -c "spawn ls"</userinput></screen>
16
17<para>If you receive the message:</para>
18
19<blockquote><screen>The system has no more ptys. Ask your system administrator to create more.</screen></blockquote>
20
21<para>Your host distribution is not set up for proper PTY operation. In this
22case there is no point in running the test suites for GCC and Binutils until you
23are able to resolve the issue. You can consult the LFS Wiki at
24<ulink url="http://wiki.linuxfromscratch.org/"/> for more information on how to
25get PTYs working.</para>
26
27<para>Unpack all three GCC tarballs (-core, -g++, and -testsuite) in one and the
28same working directory. They will all unfold into a single
29<filename>gcc-&gcc-version;/</filename> subdirectory.</para>
30
31<para>First correct one problem and make an essential adjustment:</para>
32
33<screen><userinput>patch -Np1 -i ../&gcc-nofixincludes-patch;
34patch -Np1 -i ../&gcc-specs-patch;</userinput></screen>
35
36<para>The first patch disables the GCC "fixincludes" script. We mentioned this
37briefly earlier, but a slightly more in-depth explanation of the fixincludes
38process is warranted here. Under normal circumstances, the GCC fixincludes
39script scans your system for header files that need to be fixed. It might find
40that some Glibc header files on your host system need to be fixed, fix them and
41put them in the GCC private include directory. Then, later on in Chapter 6,
42after we've installed the newer Glibc, this private include directory would be
43searched before the system include directory, resulting in GCC finding the
44fixed headers from the host system, which would most likely not match the Glibc
45version actually used for the LFS system.</para>
46
47<para>The last patch changes GCC's default location of the dynamic linker
48(typically <filename>ld-linux.so.2</filename>). It also removes
49<filename class="directory">/usr/include</filename> from GCC's include search
50path. Patching now rather than adjusting the specs file after installation
51ensures that our new dynamic linker gets used during the actual build of GCC.
52That is, all the final (and temporary) binaries created during the build will
53link against the new Glibc.</para>
54
55<important><para>These patches are <emphasis>critical</emphasis> in ensuring a
56successful overall build. Do not forget to apply them.</para></important>
57
58<para>Create a separate build directory again:</para>
59
60<screen><userinput>mkdir ../gcc-build
61cd ../gcc-build</userinput></screen>
62
63<para>Before starting to build GCC, remember to unset any environment
64variables that override the default optimization flags.</para>
65
66<para>Now prepare GCC to be compiled:</para>
67
68<screen><userinput>../gcc-&gcc-version;/configure --prefix=/tools \
69&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;--with-local-prefix=/tools \
70&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;--enable-clocale=gnu --enable-shared \
71&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;--enable-threads=posix --enable-__cxa_atexit \
72&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;--enable-languages=c,c++</userinput></screen>
73
74<para>The meaning of the new configure options:</para>
75
76<itemizedlist>
77<listitem><para><userinput>--enable-threads=posix</userinput>: This enables
78C++ exception handling for multi-threaded code.</para></listitem>
79
80<listitem><para><userinput>--enable-__cxa_atexit</userinput>: This option
81allows use of __cxa_atexit, rather than atexit, to register C++ destructors for
82local statics and global objects and is essential for fully standards-compliant
83handling of destructors. It also affects the C++ ABI and therefore results in
84C++ shared libraries and C++ programs that are interoperable with other Linux
85distributions.</para></listitem>
86
87<listitem><para><userinput>--enable-clocale=gnu</userinput>: This option ensures
88the correct locale model is selected for the C++ libraries under all
89circumstances. If the configure script finds the <emphasis>de_DE</emphasis>
90locale installed, it will select the correct model of <emphasis>gnu</emphasis>.
91However, people who don't install the <emphasis>de_DE</emphasis> locale, run the
92risk of building ABI incompatible C++ libraries due to the wrong locale model of
93<emphasis>generic</emphasis> being selected.</para></listitem>
94
95<listitem><para><userinput>--enable-languages=c,c++</userinput>: This option is
96needed to ensure that both C and C++ compilers are built.</para></listitem>
97</itemizedlist>
98
99<para>Compile the package:</para>
100
101<screen><userinput>make</userinput></screen>
102
103<para>There is no need to use the <userinput>bootstrap</userinput> target now,
104as the compiler we're using to compile this GCC was built from the exact same
105version of the GCC sources we used earlier.</para>
106
107<note><para>It's worth pointing out that running the GCC test suite here
108is considered not as important running it in Chapter 6.</para></note>
109
110<para>Test the results:</para>
111
112<screen><userinput>make -k check</userinput></screen>
113
114<para>The <userinput>-k</userinput> flag is used to make the test suite run
115through to completion and not stop at the first failure. The GCC test suite is
116very comprehensive and is almost guaranteed to generate a few failures. To get
117a summary of the test suite results, run this:</para>
118
119<screen><userinput>../gcc-&gcc-version;/contrib/test_summary | less</userinput></screen>
120
121<para>You can compare your results to those posted to the gcc-testresults
122mailing list for similar configurations to your own. For an example of how
123current GCC-3.3.1 should look on i686-pc-linux-gnu, see
124<ulink url="http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-testresults/2003-08/msg01612.html"/>.</para>
125
126<para>Note that the results contain:</para>
127
128<screen>* 1 XPASS (unexpected pass) for g++
129* 1 FAIL (unexpected failure) for g++
130* 2 FAIL for gcc
131* 26 XPASS's for libstdc++</screen>
132
133<para>The unexpected pass for g++ is due to the use of
134<userinput>--enable-__cxa_atexit</userinput>. Apparently not all platforms
135supported by GCC have support for "__cxa_atexit" in their C libraries, so this
136test is not always expected to pass.</para>
137
138<para>The 26 unexpected passes for libstdc++ are due to the use of
139<userinput>--enable-clocale=gnu</userinput>, which is the correct choice on
140Glibc-based systems of versions 2.2.5 and above. The underlying locale support
141in the GNU C library is superior to that of the otherwise selected "generic"
142model (which may be applicable if for instance you were using Newlibc, Sun-libc
143or whatever libc). The libstdc++ test suite is apparently expecting the
144"generic" model, hence those tests are not always expected to pass.</para>
145
146<para>Unexpected failures often cannot be avoided. The GCC developers are
147usually aware of them but haven't yet gotten around to fixing them. In short,
148unless your results are vastly different from those at the above URL, it is safe
149to continue on.</para>
150
151<para>And finally install the package:</para>
152
153<screen><userinput>make install</userinput></screen>
154
155<note><para>At this point it is strongly recommended to repeat the sanity check
156we performed earlier in the chapter. Refer back to
157<xref linkend="ch05-locking-glibc"/> and repeat the check. If the results are
158wrong, then most likely you forgot to apply the above mentioned GCC Specs
159patch.</para></note>
160
161</sect2>
162
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