source: chapter05/gcc-pass1.xml@ 0fc98a0

11.1 11.1-rc1 11.2 11.2-rc1 11.3 11.3-rc1 12.0 12.0-rc1 12.1 12.1-rc1 arm bdubbs/gcc13 multilib renodr/libudev-from-systemd s6-init trunk xry111/arm64 xry111/arm64-12.0 xry111/clfs-ng xry111/lfs-next xry111/loongarch xry111/loongarch-12.0 xry111/loongarch-12.1 xry111/mips64el xry111/pip3 xry111/rust-wip-20221008 xry111/update-glibc
Last change on this file since 0fc98a0 was 0fc98a0, checked in by Xi Ruoyao <xry111@…>, 2 years ago

gcc-pass1: set --with-glibc-version to target glibc version

"info gccinstall" says:

'--with-glibc-version=MAJOR.MINOR'

Tell GCC that when the GNU C Library (glibc) is used on the target
it will be version MAJOR.MINOR or later. Normally this can be
detected from the C library's header files, but this option may be
needed when bootstrapping a cross toolchain without the header
files available for building the initial bootstrap compiler.

So it can, and should be set to the version of glibc which will be built
for the chroot environment.

On x86_64, currently it does not make any difference with values >=
2.13. But it may make a difference if a new feature is added to glibc,
or on other platforms.

  • Property mode set to 100644
File size: 7.9 KB
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1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
2<!DOCTYPE sect1 PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.5//EN"
3 "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.5/docbookx.dtd" [
4 <!ENTITY % general-entities SYSTEM "../general.ent">
5 %general-entities;
6]>
7
8<sect1 id="ch-tools-gcc-pass1" role="wrap" xreflabel="gcc-pass1">
9 <?dbhtml filename="gcc-pass1.html"?>
10
11 <sect1info condition="script">
12 <productname>gcc-pass1</productname>
13 <productnumber>&gcc-version;</productnumber>
14 <address>&gcc-url;</address>
15 </sect1info>
16
17 <title>GCC-&gcc-version; - Pass 1</title>
18
19 <indexterm zone="ch-tools-gcc-pass1">
20 <primary sortas="a-GCC">GCC</primary>
21 <secondary>tools, pass 1</secondary>
22 </indexterm>
23
24 <sect2 role="package">
25 <title/>
26
27 <xi:include xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
28 href="../chapter08/gcc.xml"
29 xpointer="xpointer(/sect1/sect2[1]/para[1])"/>
30
31 <segmentedlist>
32 <segtitle>&buildtime;</segtitle>
33 <segtitle>&diskspace;</segtitle>
34
35 <seglistitem>
36 <seg>&gcc-tmpp1-sbu;</seg>
37 <seg>&gcc-tmpp1-du;</seg>
38 </seglistitem>
39 </segmentedlist>
40
41 </sect2>
42
43 <sect2 role="installation">
44 <title>Installation of Cross GCC</title>
45
46 <para>GCC requires the GMP, MPFR and MPC packages. As these packages may
47 not be included in your host distribution, they will be built with
48 GCC. Unpack each package into the GCC source directory and rename the
49 resulting directories so the GCC build procedures will automatically
50 use them:</para>
51
52 <note><para>There are frequent misunderstandings about this chapter. The
53 procedures are the same as every other chapter as explained earlier (<xref
54 linkend='buildinstr'/>). First extract the gcc tarball from the sources
55 directory and then change to the directory created. Only then should you
56 proceed with the instructions below.</para></note>
57
58<screen><userinput remap="pre">tar -xf ../mpfr-&mpfr-version;.tar.xz
59mv -v mpfr-&mpfr-version; mpfr
60tar -xf ../gmp-&gmp-version;.tar.xz
61mv -v gmp-&gmp-version; gmp
62tar -xf ../mpc-&mpc-version;.tar.gz
63mv -v mpc-&mpc-version; mpc</userinput></screen>
64
65 <para>On x86_64 hosts, set the default directory name for
66 64-bit libraries to <quote>lib</quote>:</para>
67
68<screen><userinput remap="pre">case $(uname -m) in
69 x86_64)
70 sed -e '/m64=/s/lib64/lib/' \
71 -i.orig gcc/config/i386/t-linux64
72 ;;
73esac</userinput></screen>
74
75 <para>The GCC documentation recommends building GCC
76 in a dedicated build directory:</para>
77
78<screen><userinput remap="pre">mkdir -v build
79cd build</userinput></screen>
80
81 <para>Prepare GCC for compilation:</para>
82
83<screen><userinput remap="configure">../configure \
84 --target=$LFS_TGT \
85 --prefix=$LFS/tools \
86 --with-glibc-version=&glibc-version; \
87 --with-sysroot=$LFS \
88 --with-newlib \
89 --without-headers \
90 --enable-initfini-array \
91 --disable-nls \
92 --disable-shared \
93 --disable-multilib \
94 --disable-decimal-float \
95 --disable-threads \
96 --disable-libatomic \
97 --disable-libgomp \
98 --disable-libquadmath \
99 --disable-libssp \
100 --disable-libvtv \
101 --disable-libstdcxx \
102 --enable-languages=c,c++</userinput></screen>
103 <variablelist>
104 <title>The meaning of the configure options:</title>
105
106 <varlistentry>
107 <term><parameter>--with-glibc-version=&glibc-version;</parameter></term>
108 <listitem>
109 <para>This option specifies the version of glibc which will be
110 used on the target. It is not relevent to the minimum glibc
111 requirement specified in the
112 <xref linkend="ch-partitioning-hostreqs"/> because everything
113 compiled by pass1 gcc will run in the chroot environment,
114 which is isolated from glibc of the host distro.</para>
115 </listitem>
116 </varlistentry>
117
118 <varlistentry>
119 <term><parameter>--with-newlib</parameter></term>
120 <listitem>
121 <para>Since a working C library is not yet available, this ensures
122 that the inhibit_libc constant is defined when building libgcc. This prevents
123 the compiling of any code that requires libc support.</para>
124 </listitem>
125 </varlistentry>
126
127 <varlistentry>
128 <term><parameter>--without-headers</parameter></term>
129 <listitem>
130 <para>When creating a complete cross-compiler, GCC requires
131 standard headers compatible with the target system. For our
132 purposes these headers will not be needed. This switch prevents
133 GCC from looking for them.</para>
134 </listitem>
135 </varlistentry>
136
137 <varlistentry>
138 <term><parameter>--enable-initfini-array</parameter></term>
139 <listitem>
140 <para>This switch forces the use of some internal data structures
141 that are needed but cannot be detected when building a cross
142 compiler.</para>
143 </listitem>
144 </varlistentry>
145
146 <varlistentry>
147 <term><parameter>--disable-shared</parameter></term>
148 <listitem>
149 <para>This switch forces GCC to link its internal libraries
150 statically. We need this because the shared libraries require glibc,
151 which is not yet installed on the target system.</para>
152 </listitem>
153 </varlistentry>
154
155 <varlistentry>
156 <term><parameter>--disable-multilib</parameter></term>
157 <listitem>
158 <para>On x86_64, LFS does not support a multilib configuration.
159 This switch is harmless for x86.</para>
160 </listitem>
161 </varlistentry>
162
163 <varlistentry>
164 <term><parameter>--disable-decimal-float, --disable-threads,
165 --disable-libatomic, --disable-libgomp,
166 --disable-libquadmath, --disable-libssp, --disable-libvtv,
167 --disable-libstdcxx</parameter></term>
168 <listitem>
169 <para>These switches disable support for the decimal floating point
170 extension, threading, libatomic, libgomp, libquadmath, libssp,
171 libvtv, and the C++ standard library respectively. These features
172 will fail to compile when building a cross-compiler and are not
173 necessary for the task of cross-compiling the temporary libc.</para>
174 </listitem>
175 </varlistentry>
176
177 <varlistentry>
178 <term><parameter>--enable-languages=c,c++</parameter></term>
179 <listitem>
180 <para>This option ensures that only the C and C++ compilers are built.
181 These are the only languages needed now.</para>
182 </listitem>
183 </varlistentry>
184
185 </variablelist>
186
187 <para>Compile GCC by running:</para>
188
189<screen><userinput remap="make">make</userinput></screen>
190
191 <para>Install the package:</para>
192
193 <screen><userinput remap="install">make install</userinput></screen>
194
195 <para>This build of GCC has installed a couple of internal system
196 headers. Normally one of them, <filename>limits.h</filename>, would in turn
197 include the corresponding system <filename>limits.h</filename> header, in
198 this case, <filename>$LFS/usr/include/limits.h</filename>. However, at the
199 time of this build of GCC <filename>$LFS/usr/include/limits.h</filename>
200 does not exist, so the internal header that has just been installed is a
201 partial, self-contained file and does not include the extended features of
202 the system header. This is adequate for building glibc, but the full
203 internal header will be needed later. Create a full version of the internal
204 header using a command that is identical to what the GCC build system does
205 in normal circumstances:</para>
206
207<screen><userinput remap="install">cd ..
208cat gcc/limitx.h gcc/glimits.h gcc/limity.h > \
209 `dirname $($LFS_TGT-gcc -print-libgcc-file-name)`/install-tools/include/limits.h</userinput></screen>
210 </sect2>
211
212 <sect2 role="content">
213 <title/>
214
215 <para>Details on this package are located in
216 <xref linkend="contents-gcc" role="."/></para>
217
218 </sect2>
219
220</sect1>
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