source: chapter06/binutils.xml@ e63529b

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Last change on this file since e63529b was e63529b, checked in by Manuel Canales Esparcia <manuel@…>, 20 years ago

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1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
2<!DOCTYPE sect1 PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.3//EN" "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.3/docbookx.dtd" [
3 <!ENTITY % general-entities SYSTEM "../general.ent">
4 %general-entities;
5]>
6<sect1 id="ch-system-binutils" xreflabel="Binutils" role="wrap">
7<title>Binutils-&binutils-version;</title>
8<?dbhtml filename="binutils.html"?>
9
10<indexterm zone="ch-system-binutils"><primary sortas="a-Binutils">Binutils</primary></indexterm>
11
12<sect2 role="package"><title/>
13<para>The Binutils package contains a linker, an assembler, and other tools for
14handling object files.</para>
15
16<segmentedlist>
17<segtitle>&buildtime;</segtitle>
18<segtitle>&diskspace;</segtitle>
19<seglistitem><seg>1.4 SBU</seg><seg>167 MB</seg></seglistitem>
20</segmentedlist>
21
22<segmentedlist>
23<segtitle>Binutils installation depends on</segtitle>
24<seglistitem><seg>Bash, Coreutils, Diffutils, GCC, Gettext,
25Glibc, Grep, Make, Perl, Sed, Texinfo</seg></seglistitem>
26</segmentedlist>
27</sect2>
28
29<sect2 role="installation">
30<title>Installation of Binutils</title>
31
32<para>Now is an appropriate time to verify that your pseudo terminals (PTYs) are
33working properly inside the chroot environment. We will again quickly check that
34everything is set up correctly by performing a simple test:</para>
35
36<screen><userinput>expect -c "spawn ls"</userinput></screen>
37
38<para>If you receive the message:</para>
39
40<screen><computeroutput>The system has no more ptys. Ask your system administrator to create more.</computeroutput></screen>
41
42<para>Your chroot environment is not set up for proper PTY operation. In this
43case there is no point in running the test suites for Binutils and GCC until you
44are able to resolve the issue.</para>
45
46<para>This package is known to behave badly when you have changed its
47default optimization flags (including the <parameter>-march</parameter> and <parameter>-mcpu</parameter> options).
48Therefore, if you have defined any environment variables that override
49default optimizations, such as CFLAGS and CXXFLAGS, we recommend un-setting
50or modifying them when building Binutils.</para>
51
52<para>The Binutils documentation recommends building Binutils outside of the
53source directory in a dedicated build directory:</para>
54
55<screen><userinput>mkdir ../binutils-build
56cd ../binutils-build</userinput></screen>
57
58<para>Now prepare Binutils for compilation:</para>
59
60<screen><userinput>../binutils-&binutils-version;/configure --prefix=/usr --enable-shared</userinput></screen>
61
62<para>Compile the package:</para>
63
64<screen><userinput>make tooldir=/usr</userinput></screen>
65
66<para>Normally, the <emphasis>tooldir</emphasis> (the directory where the
67executables end up) is set to $(exec_prefix)/$(target_alias), which expands
68into, for example, <filename class="directory">/usr/i686-pc-linux-gnu</filename>. Since we only
69build for our own system, we don't need this target specific directory in
70<filename class="directory">/usr</filename>. That setup would be used if the system was used to
71cross-compile (for example compiling a package on an Intel machine that
72generates code that can be executed on PowerPC machines).</para>
73
74<important><para>The test suite for Binutils in this section is considered
75<emphasis>critical</emphasis>. Our advice is to not skip it under any
76circumstances.</para></important>
77
78<para>Test the results:</para>
79
80<screen><userinput>make -k check</userinput></screen>
81
82<para>The test suite notes from <xref linkend="ch-tools-binutils-pass2"/> are still
83very much appropriate here. Be sure to refer back there should you have any
84doubts.</para>
85
86<para>Install the package:</para>
87
88<screen><userinput>make tooldir=/usr install</userinput></screen>
89
90<para>Install the <filename class="headerfile">libiberty</filename> header file that is needed by
91some packages:</para>
92
93<screen><userinput>cp ../binutils-&binutils-version;/include/libiberty.h /usr/include</userinput></screen>
94
95</sect2>
96
97
98<sect2 id="contents-binutils" role="content"><title>Contents of Binutils</title>
99
100<segmentedlist>
101<segtitle>Installed programs</segtitle>
102<segtitle>Installed libraries</segtitle>
103<seglistitem><seg>addr2line, ar, as, c++filt, gprof, ld, nm, objcopy, objdump,
104ranlib, readelf, size, strings and strip</seg>
105<seg>libiberty.a, libbfd.[a,so] and libopcodes.[a,so]</seg></seglistitem>
106</segmentedlist>
107
108<variablelist><title>Short descriptions</title>
109
110<varlistentry id="addr2line">
111<term><command>addr2line</command></term>
112<listitem>
113<indexterm zone="ch-system-binutils addr2line"><primary sortas="b-addr2line">addr2line</primary></indexterm>
114<para>translates program addresses to file
115names and line numbers. Given an address and the name of an executable, it
116uses the debugging information in the executable to figure out which source
117file and line number are associated with the address.</para>
118</listitem>
119</varlistentry>
120
121<varlistentry id="ar">
122<term><command>ar</command></term>
123<listitem>
124<indexterm zone="ch-system-binutils ar"><primary sortas="b-ar">ar</primary></indexterm>
125<para>creates, modifies, and extracts from archives. An archive
126is a single file holding a collection of other files in a structure that makes
127it possible to retrieve the original individual files (called members of
128the archive).</para>
129</listitem>
130</varlistentry>
131
132<varlistentry id="as">
133<term><command>as</command></term>
134<listitem>
135<indexterm zone="ch-system-binutils as"><primary sortas="b-as">as</primary></indexterm>
136<para>is an assembler. It assembles the output of <command>gcc</command> into object files.</para>
137</listitem>
138</varlistentry>
139
140<varlistentry id="c-filt">
141<term><command>c++filt</command></term>
142<listitem>
143<indexterm zone="ch-system-binutils c-filt"><primary sortas="b-c++filt">c++filt</primary></indexterm>
144<para>is used by the linker to de-mangle C++ and
145Java symbols, to keep overloaded functions from clashing.</para>
146</listitem>
147</varlistentry>
148
149<varlistentry id="gprof">
150<term><command>gprof</command></term>
151<listitem>
152<indexterm zone="ch-system-binutils gprof"><primary sortas="b-gprof">gprof</primary></indexterm>
153<para>displays call graph profile data.</para>
154</listitem>
155</varlistentry>
156
157<varlistentry id="ld">
158<term><command>ld</command></term>
159<listitem>
160<indexterm zone="ch-system-binutils ld"><primary sortas="b-ld">ld</primary></indexterm>
161<para>is a linker. It combines a number of object and archive files into a single file,
162relocating their data and tying up symbol references.</para>
163</listitem>
164</varlistentry>
165
166<varlistentry id="nm">
167<term><command>nm</command></term>
168<listitem>
169<indexterm zone="ch-system-binutils nm"><primary sortas="b-nm">nm</primary></indexterm>
170<para>lists the symbols occurring in a given object file.</para>
171</listitem>
172</varlistentry>
173
174<varlistentry id="objcopy">
175<term><command>objcopy</command></term>
176<listitem>
177<indexterm zone="ch-system-binutils objcopy"><primary sortas="b-objcopy">objcopy</primary></indexterm>
178<para>is used to translate one type of object file into another.</para>
179</listitem>
180</varlistentry>
181
182<varlistentry id="objdump">
183<term><command>objdump</command></term>
184<listitem>
185<indexterm zone="ch-system-binutils objdump"><primary sortas="b-objdump">objdump</primary></indexterm>
186<para>displays information about the given object file, with options controlling what
187particular information to display. The information shown is mostly only useful to
188programmers who are working on the compilation tools.</para>
189</listitem>
190</varlistentry>
191
192<varlistentry id="ranlib">
193<term><command>ranlib</command></term>
194<listitem>
195<indexterm zone="ch-system-binutils ranlib"><primary sortas="b-ranlib">ranlib</primary></indexterm>
196<para>generates an index of the contents of an
197archive, and stores it in the archive. The index lists all the symbols defined
198by archive members that are relocatable object files.</para>
199</listitem>
200</varlistentry>
201
202<varlistentry id="readelf">
203<term><command>readelf</command></term>
204<listitem>
205<indexterm zone="ch-system-binutils readelf"><primary sortas="b-readelf">readelf</primary></indexterm>
206<para>displays information about elf type binaries.</para>
207</listitem>
208</varlistentry>
209
210<varlistentry id="size">
211<term><command>size</command></term>
212<listitem>
213<indexterm zone="ch-system-binutils size"><primary sortas="b-size">size</primary></indexterm>
214<para>lists the section sizes -- and the grand total -- for the given object files.</para>
215</listitem>
216</varlistentry>
217
218<varlistentry id="strings">
219<term><command>strings</command></term>
220<listitem>
221<indexterm zone="ch-system-binutils strings"><primary sortas="b-strings">strings</primary></indexterm>
222<para>outputs, for each given file, the sequences
223of printable characters that are of at least the specified length (defaulting to 4).
224For object files it prints, by default, only the strings from the initializing
225and loading sections. For other types of files it scans the whole file.</para>
226</listitem>
227</varlistentry>
228
229<varlistentry id="strip">
230<term><command>strip</command></term>
231<listitem>
232<indexterm zone="ch-system-binutils strip"><primary sortas="b-strip">strip</primary></indexterm>
233<para>discards symbols from object files.</para>
234</listitem>
235</varlistentry>
236
237<varlistentry id="libiberty">
238<term><filename class="libraryfile">libiberty</filename></term>
239<listitem>
240<indexterm zone="ch-system-binutils libiberty"><primary sortas="c-libiberty">libiberty</primary></indexterm>
241<para>contains routines used by various GNU
242programs, including getopt, obstack, strerror, strtol and strtoul.</para>
243</listitem>
244</varlistentry>
245
246<varlistentry id="libbfd">
247<term><filename class="libraryfile">libbfd</filename></term>
248<listitem>
249<indexterm zone="ch-system-binutils libbfd"><primary sortas="c-libbfd">libbfd</primary></indexterm>
250<para>is the Binary File Descriptor library.</para>
251</listitem>
252</varlistentry>
253
254<varlistentry id="libopcodes">
255<term><filename class="libraryfile">libopcodes</filename></term>
256<listitem>
257<indexterm zone="ch-system-binutils libopcodes"><primary sortas="c-libopcodes">libopcodes</primary></indexterm>
258<para>is a library for dealing with opcodes.
259It is used for building utilities like objdump. Opcodes are the <quote>readable
260text</quote> versions of instructions for the processor.</para>
261</listitem>
262</varlistentry>
263</variablelist>
264
265</sect2>
266
267</sect1>
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