source: chapter05/toolchaintechnotes.xml@ 1435e8f

10.0 10.0-rc1 10.1 10.1-rc1 11.0 11.0-rc1 11.0-rc2 11.0-rc3 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 6.6 6.7 6.8 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.5-systemd 7.6 7.6-systemd 7.7 7.7-systemd 7.8 7.8-systemd 7.9 7.9-systemd 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 9.0 9.1 arm bdubbs/gcc13 ml-11.0 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 1435e8f was 1435e8f, checked in by Matthew Burgess <matthew@…>, 15 years ago

Further improvements to toolchain technical notes. Fixes #2461.

git-svn-id: http://svn.linuxfromscratch.org/LFS/trunk/BOOK@9026 4aa44e1e-78dd-0310-a6d2-fbcd4c07a689

  • Property mode set to 100644
File size: 12.1 KB
Line 
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-toolchaintechnotes">
9 <?dbhtml filename="toolchaintechnotes.html"?>
10
11 <title>Toolchain Technical Notes</title>
12
13 <para>This section explains some of the rationale and technical details
14 behind the overall build method. It is not essential to immediately
15 understand everything in this section. Most of this information will be
16 clearer after performing an actual build. This section can be referred
17 to at any time during the process.</para>
18
19 <para>The overall goal of <xref linkend="chapter-temporary-tools"/> is to
20 produce a temporary area that contains a known-good set of tools that can be
21 isolated from the host system. By using <command>chroot</command>, the
22 commands in the remaining chapters will be contained within that environment,
23 ensuring a clean, trouble-free build of the target LFS system. The build
24 process has been designed to minimize the risks for new readers and to provide
25 the most educational value at the same time.</para>
26
27 <important>
28 <para>Before continuing, be aware of the name of the working platform,
29 often referred to as the target triplet. A simple way to determine the
30 name of the target triplet is to run the <command>config.guess</command>
31 script that comes with the source for many packages. Unpack the Binutils
32 sources and run the script: <userinput>./config.guess</userinput> and note
33 the output. For example, for a modern 32-bit Intel processor the
34 output will likely be <emphasis>i686-pc-linux-gnu</emphasis>.</para>
35
36 <para>Also be aware of the name of the platform's dynamic linker, often
37 referred to as the dynamic loader (not to be confused with the standard
38 linker <command>ld</command> that is part of Binutils). The dynamic linker
39 provided by Glibc finds and loads the shared libraries needed by a program,
40 prepares the program to run, and then runs it. The name of the dynamic
41 linker for a 32-bit Intel machine will be
42 <filename class="libraryfile">ld-linux.so.2</filename>.
43 A sure-fire way to determine the name of the dynamic linker is to
44 inspect a random binary from the host system by running:
45 <userinput>readelf -l &lt;name of binary&gt; | grep interpreter</userinput>
46 and noting the output. The authoritative reference covering all platforms
47 is in the <filename>shlib-versions</filename> file in the root of the Glibc
48 source tree.</para>
49 </important>
50
51 <para>Some key technical points of how the <xref
52 linkend="chapter-temporary-tools"/> build method works:</para>
53
54 <itemizedlist>
55 <listitem>
56 <para>Slightly adjusting the name of the working platform, by changing the
57 &quot;vendor&quot; field target triplet by way of the
58 <envar>LFS_TGT</envar> variable, ensures that the first build of Binutils
59 and GCC produces a compatible cross-linker and cross-compiler. Instead of
60 producing binaries for another architecture, the cross-linker and
61 cross-compiler will produce binaries compatible with the current
62 hardware.</para>
63 </listitem>
64 <listitem>
65 <para>The temporary libraries are cross-compiled. This removes all
66 dependency on the host system, lessens the chance of headers or libraries
67 from the host corrupting the new tools and allows for the possibility of
68 building both 32-bit and 64-bit libraries on 64-bit capable hardware.</para>
69 </listitem>
70 <listitem>
71 <para>Careful manipulation of <command>gcc</command>'s
72 <filename>specs</filename> file tells the compiler which target dynamic
73 linker will be used</para>
74 </listitem>
75 </itemizedlist>
76
77 <para>Binutils is installed first because the <command>configure</command>
78 runs of both GCC and Glibc perform various feature tests on the assembler
79 and linker to determine which software features to enable or disable. This
80 is more important than one might first realize. An incorrectly configured
81 GCC or Glibc can result in a subtly broken toolchain, where the impact of
82 such breakage might not show up until near the end of the build of an
83 entire distribution. A test suite failure will usually highlight this error
84 before too much additional work is performed.</para>
85
86 <para>Binutils installs its assembler and linker in two locations,
87 <filename class="directory">/tools/bin</filename> and <filename
88 class="directory">/tools/$LFS_TGT/bin</filename>. The tools in one
89 location are hard linked to the other. An important facet of the linker is
90 its library search order. Detailed information can be obtained from
91 <command>ld</command> by passing it the <parameter>--verbose</parameter>
92 flag. For example, an <userinput>ld --verbose | grep SEARCH</userinput>
93 will illustrate the current search paths and their order. It shows which
94 files are linked by <command>ld</command> by compiling a dummy program and
95 passing the <parameter>--verbose</parameter> switch to the linker. For example,
96 <userinput>gcc dummy.c -Wl,--verbose 2&gt;&amp;1 | grep succeeded</userinput>
97 will show all the files successfully opened during the linking.</para>
98
99 <para>The next package installed is GCC. An example of what can be
100 seen during its run of <command>configure</command> is:</para>
101
102<screen><computeroutput>checking what assembler to use... /tools/i686-lfs-linux-gnu/bin/as
103checking what linker to use... /tools/i686-lfs-linux-gnu/bin/ld</computeroutput></screen>
104
105 <para>This is important for the reasons mentioned above. It also demonstrates
106 that GCC's configure script does not search the PATH directories to find which
107 tools to use. However, during the actual operation of <command>gcc</command>
108 itself, the same search paths are not necessarily used. To find out which
109 standard linker <command>gcc</command> will use, run:
110 <userinput>gcc -print-prog-name=ld</userinput>.</para>
111
112 <para>Detailed information can be obtained from <command>gcc</command> by
113 passing it the <parameter>-v</parameter> command line option while compiling
114 a dummy program. For example, <userinput>gcc -v dummy.c</userinput> will show
115 detailed information about the preprocessor, compilation, and assembly stages,
116 including <command>gcc</command>'s included search paths and their order.</para>
117
118 <para>The next package installed is Glibc. The most important considerations
119 for building Glibc are the compiler, binary tools, and kernel headers. The
120 compiler is generally not an issue since Glibc will always use the compiler
121 relating to the <parameter>--host</parameter> parameter passed to its
122 configure script, e.g. in our case,
123 <command>i686-lfs-linux-gnu-gcc</command>. The binary tools and kernel
124 headers can be a bit more complicated. Therefore, take no risks and use the
125 available configure switches to enforce the correct selections. After the run
126 of <command>configure</command>, check the contents of the
127 <filename>config.make</filename> file in the <filename
128 class="directory">glibc-build</filename> directory for all important details.
129 Note the use of <parameter>CC="i686-lfs-gnu-gcc"</parameter> to control which
130 binary tools are used and the use of the <parameter>-nostdinc</parameter> and
131 <parameter>-isystem</parameter> flags to control the compiler's include
132 search path. These items highlight an important aspect of the Glibc
133 package&mdash;it is very self-sufficient in terms of its build machinery and
134 generally does not rely on toolchain defaults.</para>
135
136 <para>After the Glibc installation, change <command>gcc</command>'s specs file
137 to point to the new dynamic linker in <filename
138 class="directory">/tools/lib</filename>. This last step is vital in ensuring
139 that searching and linking take place only within the <filename
140 class="directory">/tools</filename> prefix. A hard-wired
141 path to a dynamic linker is embedded into every Executable and Link Format
142 (ELF)-shared executable. This can be inspected by running:
143 <userinput>readelf -l &lt;name of binary&gt; | grep interpreter</userinput>.
144 Amending <command>gcc</command>'s specs file ensures that every program
145 compiled from here through the end of this chapter will use the new dynamic
146 linker in <filename class="directory">/tools/lib</filename>.</para>
147
148 <para>For the second pass of GCC, its sources also need to be modified
149 to tell GCC to use the new dynamic linker. Failure to do
150 so will result in the GCC programs themselves having the name of the
151 dynamic linker from the host system's <filename
152 class="directory">/lib</filename> directory embedded into them, which
153 would defeat the goal of getting away from the host.</para>
154
155 <para>During the second pass of Binutils, we are able to utilize the
156 <parameter>--with-lib-path</parameter> configure switch to control
157 <command>ld</command>'s library search path. From this point onwards,
158 the core toolchain is self-contained and self-hosted. The remainder of
159 the <xref linkend="chapter-temporary-tools"/> packages all build against
160 the new Glibc in <filename class="directory">/tools</filename>.</para>
161
162 <para>Upon entering the chroot environment in <xref
163 linkend="chapter-building-system"/>, the first major package to be
164 installed is Glibc, due to its self-sufficient nature mentioned above.
165 Once this Glibc is installed into <filename
166 class="directory">/usr</filename>, we will perform a quick changeover of the
167 toolchain defaults, and then proceed in building the rest of the target
168 LFS system.</para>
169
170 <!-- FIXME: Removed as part of the fix for bug 1061 - we no longer build pass1
171 packages statically, therefore this explanation isn't required
172
173 <sect2>
174 <title>Notes on Static Linking</title>
175
176 <para>Besides their specific task, most programs have to perform many
177 common and sometimes trivial operations. These include allocating
178 memory, searching directories, reading and writing files, string
179 handling, pattern matching, arithmetic, and other tasks. Instead of
180 obliging each program to reinvent the wheel, the GNU system provides
181 all these basic functions in ready-made libraries. The major library
182 on any Linux system is Glibc.</para>
183
184 <para>There are two primary ways of linking the functions from a
185 library to a program that uses them&mdash;statically or dynamically. When
186 a program is linked statically, the code of the used functions is
187 included in the executable, resulting in a rather bulky program. When
188 a program is dynamically linked, it includes a reference to the
189 dynamic linker, the name of the library, and the name of the function,
190 resulting in a much smaller executable. A third option is to use the
191 programming interface of the dynamic linker (see <filename>dlopen(3)</filename>
192 for more information).</para>
193
194 <para>Dynamic linking is the default on Linux and has three major
195 advantages over static linking. First, only one copy of the executable
196 library code is needed on the hard disk, instead of having multiple
197 copies of the same code included in several programs, thus saving
198 disk space. Second, when several programs use the same library
199 function at the same time, only one copy of the function's code is
200 required in core, thus saving memory space. Third, when a library
201 function gets a bug fixed or is otherwise improved, only the one
202 library needs to be recompiled instead of recompiling all programs
203 that make use of the improved function.</para>
204
205 <para>If dynamic linking has several advantages, why then do we
206 statically link the first two packages in this chapter? The reasons
207 are threefold&mdash;historical, educational, and technical. The
208 historical reason is that earlier versions of LFS statically linked
209 every program in this chapter. Educationally, knowing the difference
210 between static and dynamic linking is useful. The technical benefit is
211 a gained element of independence from the host, meaning that those
212 programs can be used independently of the host system. However, it is
213 worth noting that an overall successful LFS build can still be
214 achieved when the first two packages are built dynamically.</para>
215
216 </sect2>-->
217
218</sect1>
Note: See TracBrowser for help on using the repository browser.