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1<sect1 id="ch05-toolchaintechnotes">
2<title>Toolchain technical notes</title>
3<?dbhtml filename="toolchaintechnotes.html" dir="chapter05"?>
4
5<para>This section attempts to explain some of the rationale and technical
6details behind the overall build method. It's not essential that you understand
7everything here immediately. Most of it will make sense once you have performed
8an actual build. Feel free to refer back here at any time.</para>
9
10<para>The overall goal of Chapter 5 is to provide a sane, temporary environment
11that we can chroot into, and from which we can produce a clean, trouble-free
12build of the target LFS system in Chapter 6. Along the way, we attempt to
13divorce ourselves from the host system as much as possible, and in so doing
14build a self-contained and self-hosted toolchain. It should be noted that the
15build process has been designed in such a way so as to minimize the risks for
16new readers and provide maximum educational value at the same time. In other
17words, more advanced techniques could be used to build the system.</para>
18
19<important>
20<para>Before continuing, you really should be aware of the name of your working
21platform, often also referred to as the <emphasis>target triplet</emphasis>. For
22many folks the target triplet will be, for example:
23<emphasis>i686-pc-linux-gnu</emphasis>. A simple way to determine your target
24triplet is to run the <filename>config.guess</filename> script that comes with
25the source for many packages. Unpack the Binutils sources and run the script:
26<userinput>./config.guess</userinput> and note the output.</para>
27
28<para>You'll also need to be aware of the name of your platform's
29<emphasis>dynamic linker</emphasis>, often also referred to as the
30<emphasis>dynamic loader</emphasis>, not to be confused with the standard linker
31<emphasis>ld</emphasis> that is part of Binutils. The dynamic linker is provided
32by Glibc and has the job of finding and loading the shared libraries needed by a
33program, preparing the program to run and then running it. For most folks, the
34name of the dynamic linker will be <emphasis>ld-linux.so.2</emphasis>. On
35platforms that are less prevalent, the name might be
36<emphasis>ld.so.1</emphasis> and newer 64 bit platforms might even have
37something completely different. You should be able to determine the name
38of your platform's dynamic linker by looking in the
39<filename class="directory">/lib</filename> directory on your host system. A
40surefire way is to inspect a random binary from your host system by running:
41<userinput>'readelf -l &lt;name of binary&gt; | grep interpreter'</userinput>
42and noting the output. The authoritative reference covering all platforms is in
43the <filename>shlib-versions</filename> file in the root of the Glibc source
44tree.</para>
45</important>
46
47<para>Some key technical points of how the Chapter 5 build method works:</para>
48
49<itemizedlist>
50<listitem><para>Similar in principle to cross compiling whereby tools installed
51into the same prefix work in cooperation and thus utilize a little GNU
52"magic".</para></listitem>
53
54<listitem><para>Careful manipulation of the standard linker's library search
55path to ensure programs are linked only against libraries we
56choose.</para></listitem>
57
58<listitem><para>Careful manipulation of <userinput>gcc</userinput>'s
59<emphasis>specs</emphasis> file to tell the compiler which target dynamic
60linker will be used.</para></listitem>
61</itemizedlist>
62
63<para>Binutils is installed first because both GCC and Glibc perform various
64feature tests on the assembler and linker during their respective runs of
65<userinput>./configure</userinput> to determine which software features to enable
66or disable. This is more important than one might first realize. An incorrectly
67configured GCC or Glibc can result in a subtly broken toolchain where the impact
68of such breakage might not show up until near the end of the build of a whole
69distribution. Thankfully, a test suite failure will usually alert us before too
70much time is wasted.</para>
71
72<para>Binutils installs its assembler and linker into two locations,
73<filename class="directory">/tools/bin</filename> and
74<filename class="directory">/tools/$TARGET_TRIPLET/bin</filename>. In reality,
75the tools in one location are hard linked to the other. An important facet of
76the linker is its library search order. Detailed information can be obtained
77from <userinput>ld</userinput> by passing it the <emphasis>--verbose</emphasis>
78flag. For example: <userinput>'ld --verbose | grep SEARCH'</userinput> will
79show you the current search paths and their order. You can see what files are
80actually linked by <userinput>ld</userinput> by compiling a dummy program and
81passing the <emphasis>--verbose</emphasis> switch. For example:
82<userinput>'gcc dummy.c -Wl,--verbose 2>&amp;1 | grep succeeded'</userinput>
83will show you all the files successfully opened during the link.</para>
84
85<para>The next package installed is GCC and during its run of
86<userinput>./configure</userinput> you'll see, for example:</para>
87
88<blockquote><screen>checking what assembler to use... /tools/i686-pc-linux-gnu/bin/as
89checking what linker to use... /tools/i686-pc-linux-gnu/bin/ld</screen></blockquote>
90
91<para>This is important for the reasons mentioned above. It also demonstrates
92that GCC's configure script does not search the $PATH directories to find which
93tools to use. However, during the actual operation of <userinput>gcc</userinput>
94itself, the same search paths are not necessarily used. You can find out which
95standard linker <userinput>gcc</userinput> will use by running:
96<userinput>'gcc -print-prog-name=ld'</userinput>.
97Detailed information can be obtained from <userinput>gcc</userinput> by passing
98it the <emphasis>-v</emphasis> flag while compiling a dummy program. For
99example: <userinput>'gcc -v dummy.c'</userinput> will show you detailed
100information about the preprocessor, compilation and assembly stages, including
101<userinput>gcc</userinput>'s include search paths and their order.</para>
102
103<para>The next package installed is Glibc. The most important considerations for
104building Glibc are the compiler, binary tools and kernel headers. The compiler
105is generally no problem as Glibc will always use the <userinput>gcc</userinput>
106found in a $PATH directory. The binary tools and kernel headers can be a little
107more troublesome. Therefore we take no risks and use the available configure
108switches to enforce the correct selections. After the run of
109<userinput>./configure</userinput> you can check the contents of the
110<filename>config.make</filename> file in the
111<filename class="directory">glibc-build</filename> directory for all the
112important details. You'll note some interesting items like the use of
113<userinput>CC="gcc -B/tools/bin/"</userinput> to control which binary tools are
114used, and also the use of the <emphasis>-nostdinc</emphasis> and
115<emphasis>-isystem</emphasis> flags to control the compiler's include search
116path. These items help to highlight an important aspect of the Glibc package:
117it is very self-sufficient in terms of its build machinery and generally does
118not rely on toolchain defaults.</para>
119
120<para>After the Glibc installation, we make some adjustments to ensure that
121searching and linking take place only within our <filename>/tools</filename>
122prefix. We install an adjusted <userinput>ld</userinput>, which has a hard-wired
123search path limited to <filename class="directory">/tools/lib</filename>. Then
124we amend <userinput>gcc</userinput>'s specs file to point to our new dynamic
125linker in <filename class="directory">/tools/lib</filename>. This last step is
126<emphasis>vital</emphasis> to the whole process. As mentioned above, a
127hard-wired path to a dynamic linker is embedded into every ELF shared
128executable. You can inspect this by running:
129<userinput>'readelf -l &lt;name of binary&gt; | grep interpreter'</userinput>.
130By amending <userinput>gcc</userinput>'s specs file, we are ensuring that every
131program compiled from here through the end of Chapter 5 will use our new
132dynamic linker in <filename class="directory">/tools/lib</filename>.</para>
133
134<para>The need to use the new dynamic linker is also the reason why we apply the
135Specs patch for the second pass of GCC. Failure to do so will result in the GCC
136programs themselves having the name of the dynamic linker from the host system's
137<filename class="directory">/lib</filename> directory embedded into them, which
138would defeat our goal of getting away from the host.</para>
139
140<para>During the second pass of Binutils, we are able to utilize the
141<emphasis>--with-lib-path</emphasis> configure switch to control
142<userinput>ld</userinput>'s library search path. From this point onwards, the
143core toolchain is self-contained and self-hosted. The remainder of the
144Chapter 5 packages all build against the new Glibc in
145<filename class="directory">/tools</filename> and all is well.</para>
146
147<para>Upon entering the chroot environment in Chapter 6, the first major package
148we install is Glibc, due to its self-sufficient nature that we mentioned above.
149Once this Glibc is installed into <filename class="directory">/usr</filename>,
150we perform a quick changeover of the toolchain defaults, then proceed for real
151in building the rest of the target Chapter 6 LFS system.</para>
152
153<sect2>
154<title>Notes on static linking</title>
155
156<para>Most programs have to perform, beside their specific task, many rather
157common and sometimes trivial operations. These include allocating memory,
158searching directories, reading and writing files, string handling, pattern
159matching, arithmetic and many other tasks. Instead of obliging each program to
160reinvent the wheel, the GNU system provides all these basic functions in
161ready-made libraries. The major library on any Linux system is
162<emphasis>Glibc</emphasis>.</para>
163
164<para>There are two primary ways of linking the functions from a library to a
165program that uses them: statically or dynamically. When a program is linked
166statically, the code of the used functions is included in the executable,
167resulting in a rather bulky program. When a program is dynamically linked, what
168is included is a reference to the dynamic linker, the name of the library, and
169the name of the function, resulting in a much smaller executable. (A third way
170is to use the programming interface of the dynamic linker. See the
171<emphasis>dlopen</emphasis> man page for more information.)</para>
172
173<para>Dynamic linking is the default on Linux and has three major advantages
174over static linking. First, you need only one copy of the executable library
175code on your hard disk, instead of having many copies of the same code included
176into a whole bunch of programs -- thus saving disk space. Second, when several
177programs use the same library function at the same time, only one copy of the
178function's code is required in core -- thus saving memory space. Third, when a
179library function gets a bug fixed or is otherwise improved, you only need to
180recompile this one library, instead of having to recompile all the programs that
181make use of the improved function.</para>
182
183<para>Why do we statically link the first two packages in Chapter 5? The reasons
184are threefold: historical, educational and technical. Historical because earlier
185versions of LFS statically linked every program in Chapter 5. Educational
186because knowing the difference is useful. Technical because we gain an element
187of independence from the host in doing so, i.e. those programs can be used
188independently of the host system. However, it's worth noting that an overall
189successful LFS build can still be achieved when the first two packages are built
190dynamically.</para>
191
192</sect2>
193
194</sect1>
195
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