source: part3intro/toolchaintechnotes.xml@ aa9ade1

11.3 11.3-rc1 12.0 12.0-rc1 12.1 12.1-rc1 12.2 12.2-rc1 bdubbs/gcc13 multilib renodr/libudev-from-systemd trunk xry111/arm64 xry111/arm64-12.0 xry111/clfs-ng xry111/loongarch xry111/loongarch-12.0 xry111/loongarch-12.1 xry111/loongarch-12.2 xry111/mips64el xry111/multilib xry111/pip3 xry111/rust-wip-20221008 xry111/update-glibc
Last change on this file since aa9ade1 was 5620622, checked in by David Bryant <davidbryant@…>, 2 years ago

Polish up the prose in "Toolchain Technical Notes". Fix capitalization.
Rough edges remain. For instance, $LFS_TGT-ld is referenced, but not
clearly defined. Will need to discuss wirh other editors to resolve.

  • Property mode set to 100644
File size: 17.6 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-toolchaintechnotes" xreflabel="Toolchain Technical Notes">
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. Don't try to immediately
15 understand everything in this section. Most of this information will be
16 clearer after performing an actual build. Come back and re-read this chapter
17 at any time during the build process.</para>
18
19 <para>The overall goal of <xref linkend="chapter-cross-tools"/> and <xref
20 linkend="chapter-temporary-tools"/> is to produce a temporary area
21 containing a set of tools that are known to be good, and that are isolated from the host system.
22 By using the <command>chroot</command> command, the compilations in the remaining chapters
23 will be isolated within that environment, ensuring a clean, trouble-free
24 build of the target LFS system. The build process has been designed to
25 minimize the risks for new readers, and to provide the most educational value
26 at the same time.</para>
27
28 <para>This build process is based on
29 <emphasis>cross-compilation</emphasis>. Cross-compilation is normally used
30 to build a compiler and its associated toolchain for a machine different from
31 the one that is used for the build. This is not strictly necessary for LFS,
32 since the machine where the new system will run is the same as the one
33 used for the build. But cross-compilation has one great advantage:
34 anything that is cross-compiled cannot depend on the host environment.</para>
35
36 <sect2 id="cross-compile" xreflabel="About Cross-Compilation">
37
38 <title>About Cross-Compilation</title>
39
40 <note>
41 <para>
42 The LFS book is not (and does not contain) a general tutorial to
43 build a cross (or native) toolchain. Don't use the commands in the
44 book for a cross toolchain for some purpose other
45 than building LFS, unless you really understand what you are doing.
46 </para>
47 </note>
48
49 <para>Cross-compilation involves some concepts that deserve a section of
50 their own. Although this section may be omitted on a first reading,
51 coming back to it later will help you gain a fuller understanding of
52 the process.</para>
53
54 <para>Let us first define some terms used in this context.</para>
55
56 <variablelist>
57 <varlistentry><term>The build</term><listitem>
58 <para>is the machine where we build programs. Note that this machine
59 is also referred to as the <quote>host</quote>.</para></listitem>
60 </varlistentry>
61
62 <varlistentry><term>The host</term><listitem>
63 <para>is the machine/system where the built programs will run. Note
64 that this use of <quote>host</quote> is not the same as in other
65 sections.</para></listitem>
66 </varlistentry>
67
68 <varlistentry><term>The target</term><listitem>
69 <para>is only used for compilers. It is the machine the compiler
70 produces code for. It may be different from both the build and
71 the host.</para></listitem>
72 </varlistentry>
73
74 </variablelist>
75
76 <para>As an example, let us imagine the following scenario (sometimes
77 referred to as <quote>Canadian Cross</quote>): we have a
78 compiler on a slow machine only, let's call it machine A, and the compiler
79 ccA. We also have a fast machine (B), but no compiler for (B), and we
80 want to produce code for a third, slow machine (C). We will build a
81 compiler for machine C in three stages.</para>
82
83 <informaltable align="center">
84 <tgroup cols="5">
85 <colspec colnum="1" align="center"/>
86 <colspec colnum="2" align="center"/>
87 <colspec colnum="3" align="center"/>
88 <colspec colnum="4" align="center"/>
89 <colspec colnum="5" align="left"/>
90 <thead>
91 <row><entry>Stage</entry><entry>Build</entry><entry>Host</entry>
92 <entry>Target</entry><entry>Action</entry></row>
93 </thead>
94 <tbody>
95 <row>
96 <entry>1</entry><entry>A</entry><entry>A</entry><entry>B</entry>
97 <entry>Build cross-compiler cc1 using ccA on machine A.</entry>
98 </row>
99 <row>
100 <entry>2</entry><entry>A</entry><entry>B</entry><entry>C</entry>
101 <entry>Build cross-compiler cc2 using cc1 on machine A.</entry>
102 </row>
103 <row>
104 <entry>3</entry><entry>B</entry><entry>C</entry><entry>C</entry>
105 <entry>Build compiler ccC using cc2 on machine B.</entry>
106 </row>
107 </tbody>
108 </tgroup>
109 </informaltable>
110
111 <para>Then, all the programs needed by machine C can be compiled
112 using cc2 on the fast machine B. Note that unless B can run programs
113 produced for C, there is no way to test the newly built programs until machine
114 C itself is running. For example, to run a test suite on ccC, we may want to add a
115 fourth stage:</para>
116
117 <informaltable align="center">
118 <tgroup cols="5">
119 <colspec colnum="1" align="center"/>
120 <colspec colnum="2" align="center"/>
121 <colspec colnum="3" align="center"/>
122 <colspec colnum="4" align="center"/>
123 <colspec colnum="5" align="left"/>
124 <thead>
125 <row><entry>Stage</entry><entry>Build</entry><entry>Host</entry>
126 <entry>Target</entry><entry>Action</entry></row>
127 </thead>
128 <tbody>
129 <row>
130 <entry>4</entry><entry>C</entry><entry>C</entry><entry>C</entry>
131 <entry>Rebuild and test ccC using ccC on machine C.</entry>
132 </row>
133 </tbody>
134 </tgroup>
135 </informaltable>
136
137 <para>In the example above, only cc1 and cc2 are cross-compilers, that is,
138 they produce code for a machine different from the one they are run on.
139 The other compilers ccA and ccC produce code for the machine they are run
140 on. Such compilers are called <emphasis>native</emphasis> compilers.</para>
141
142 </sect2>
143
144 <sect2 id="lfs-cross">
145 <title>Implementation of Cross-Compilation for LFS</title>
146
147 <note>
148 <para>Almost all the build systems use names of the form
149 cpu-vendor-kernel-os, referred to as the machine triplet. An astute
150 reader may wonder why a <quote>triplet</quote> refers to a four component
151 name. The reason is historical: initially, three component names were enough
152 to designate a machine unambiguously, but as new machines and systems
153 proliferated, that proved insufficient. The word <quote>triplet</quote>
154 remained. A simple way to determine your machine triplet is to run
155 the <command>config.guess</command>
156 script that comes with the source for many packages. Unpack the binutils
157 sources and run the script: <userinput>./config.guess</userinput> and note
158 the output. For example, for a 32-bit Intel processor the
159 output will be <emphasis>i686-pc-linux-gnu</emphasis>. On a 64-bit
160 system it will be <emphasis>x86_64-pc-linux-gnu</emphasis>. On most
161 Linux systems the even simpler <command>gcc -dumpmachine</command> command
162 will give you the same information.</para>
163
164 <para>You should also be aware of the name of the platform's dynamic linker, often
165 referred to as the dynamic loader (not to be confused with the standard
166 linker <command>ld</command> that is part of binutils). The dynamic linker
167 provided by package glibc finds and loads the shared libraries needed by a
168 program, prepares the program to run, and then runs it. The name of the
169 dynamic linker for a 32-bit Intel machine is <filename
170 class="libraryfile">ld-linux.so.2</filename>; it's <filename
171 class="libraryfile">ld-linux-x86-64.so.2</filename> on 64-bit systems. A
172 sure-fire way to determine the name of the dynamic linker is to inspect a
173 random binary from the host system by running: <userinput>readelf -l
174 &lt;name of binary&gt; | grep interpreter</userinput> and noting the
175 output. The authoritative reference covering all platforms is in the
176 <filename>shlib-versions</filename> file in the root of the glibc source
177 tree.</para>
178 </note>
179
180 <para>In order to fake a cross compilation in LFS, the name of the host triplet
181 is slightly adjusted by changing the &quot;vendor&quot; field in the
182 <envar>LFS_TGT</envar> variable so it says &quot;lfs&quot;. We also use the
183 <parameter>--with-sysroot</parameter> option when building the cross linker and
184 cross compiler to tell them where to find the needed host files. This
185 ensures that none of the other programs built in <xref
186 linkend="chapter-temporary-tools"/> can link to libraries on the build
187 machine. Only two stages are mandatory, plus one more for tests.</para>
188
189 <informaltable align="center">
190 <tgroup cols="5">
191 <colspec colnum="1" align="center"/>
192 <colspec colnum="2" align="center"/>
193 <colspec colnum="3" align="center"/>
194 <colspec colnum="4" align="center"/>
195 <colspec colnum="5" align="left"/>
196 <thead>
197 <row><entry>Stage</entry><entry>Build</entry><entry>Host</entry>
198 <entry>Target</entry><entry>Action</entry></row>
199 </thead>
200 <tbody>
201 <row>
202 <entry>1</entry><entry>pc</entry><entry>pc</entry><entry>lfs</entry>
203 <entry>Build cross-compiler cc1 using cc-pc on pc.</entry>
204 </row>
205 <row>
206 <entry>2</entry><entry>pc</entry><entry>lfs</entry><entry>lfs</entry>
207 <entry>Build compiler cc-lfs using cc1 on pc.</entry>
208 </row>
209 <row>
210 <entry>3</entry><entry>lfs</entry><entry>lfs</entry><entry>lfs</entry>
211 <entry>Rebuild and test cc-lfs using cc-lfs on lfs.</entry>
212 </row>
213 </tbody>
214 </tgroup>
215 </informaltable>
216
217 <para>In the preceding table, <quote>on pc</quote> means the commands are run
218 on a machine using the already installed distribution. <quote>On
219 lfs</quote> means the commands are run in a chrooted environment.</para>
220
221 <para>Now, there is more about cross-compiling: the C language is not
222 just a compiler, but also defines a standard library. In this book, the
223 GNU C library, named glibc, is used (there is an alternative, &quot;musl&quot;). This library must
224 be compiled for the LFS machine; that is, using the cross compiler cc1.
225 But the compiler itself uses an internal library implementing complex
226 subroutines for functions not available in the assembler instruction set. This
227 internal library is named libgcc, and it must be linked to the glibc
228 library to be fully functional! Furthermore, the standard library for
229 C++ (libstdc++) must also be linked with glibc. The solution to this
230 chicken and egg problem is first to build a degraded cc1-based libgcc,
231 lacking some functionalities such as threads and exception handling, and then
232 to build glibc using this degraded compiler (glibc itself is not
233 degraded), and also to build libstdc++. This last library will lack some of the
234 functionality of libgcc.</para>
235
236 <para>This is not the end of the story: the upshot of the preceding
237 paragraph is that cc1 is unable to build a fully functional libstdc++, but
238 this is the only compiler available for building the C/C++ libraries
239 during stage 2! Of course, the compiler built during stage 2, cc-lfs,
240 would be able to build those libraries, but (1) the build system of
241 gcc does not know that it is usable on pc, and (2) using it on pc
242 would create a risk of linking to the pc libraries, since cc-lfs is a native
243 compiler. So we have to re-build libstdc++ later, in the chroot environment.</para>
244
245 </sect2>
246
247 <sect2 id="other-details">
248
249 <title>Other procedural details</title>
250
251 <para>The cross-compiler will be installed in a separate <filename
252 class="directory">$LFS/tools</filename> directory, since it will not
253 be part of the final system.</para>
254
255 <para>Binutils is installed first because the <command>configure</command>
256 runs of both gcc and glibc perform various feature tests on the assembler
257 and linker to determine which software features to enable or disable. This
258 is more important than one might realize at first. An incorrectly configured
259 gcc or glibc can result in a subtly broken toolchain, where the impact of
260 such breakage might not show up until near the end of the build of an
261 entire distribution. A test suite failure will usually highlight this error
262 before too much additional work is performed.</para>
263
264 <para>Binutils installs its assembler and linker in two locations,
265 <filename class="directory">$LFS/tools/bin</filename> and <filename
266 class="directory">$LFS/tools/$LFS_TGT/bin</filename>. The tools in one
267 location are hard linked to the other. An important facet of the linker is
268 its library search order. Detailed information can be obtained from
269 <command>ld</command> by passing it the <parameter>--verbose</parameter>
270 flag. For example, <command>$LFS_TGT-ld --verbose | grep SEARCH</command>
271 will illustrate the current search paths and their order. It shows which
272 files are linked by <command>ld</command> by compiling a dummy program and
273 passing the <parameter>--verbose</parameter> switch to the linker. For
274 example,
275 <command>$LFS_TGT-gcc dummy.c -Wl,--verbose 2&gt;&amp;1 | grep succeeded</command>
276 will show all the files successfully opened during the linking.</para>
277
278 <para>The next package installed is gcc. An example of what can be
279 seen during its run of <command>configure</command> is:</para>
280
281<screen><computeroutput>checking what assembler to use... /mnt/lfs/tools/i686-lfs-linux-gnu/bin/as
282checking what linker to use... /mnt/lfs/tools/i686-lfs-linux-gnu/bin/ld</computeroutput></screen>
283
284 <para>This is important for the reasons mentioned above. It also
285 demonstrates that gcc's configure script does not search the PATH
286 directories to find which tools to use. However, during the actual
287 operation of <command>gcc</command> itself, the same search paths are not
288 necessarily used. To find out which standard linker <command>gcc</command>
289 will use, run: <command>$LFS_TGT-gcc -print-prog-name=ld</command>.</para>
290
291 <para>Detailed information can be obtained from <command>gcc</command> by
292 passing it the <parameter>-v</parameter> command line option while compiling
293 a dummy program. For example, <command>gcc -v dummy.c</command> will show
294 detailed information about the preprocessor, compilation, and assembly
295 stages, including <command>gcc</command>'s included search paths and their
296 order.</para>
297
298 <para>Next installed are sanitized Linux API headers. These allow the
299 standard C library (glibc) to interface with features that the Linux
300 kernel will provide.</para>
301
302 <para>The next package installed is glibc. The most important
303 considerations for building glibc are the compiler, binary tools, and
304 kernel headers. The compiler is generally not an issue since glibc will
305 always use the compiler relating to the <parameter>--host</parameter>
306 parameter passed to its configure script; e.g. in our case, the compiler
307 will be <command>$LFS_TGT-gcc</command>. The binary tools and kernel
308 headers can be a bit more complicated. Therefore, we take no risks and use
309 the available configure switches to enforce the correct selections. After
310 the run of <command>configure</command>, check the contents of the
311 <filename>config.make</filename> file in the <filename
312 class="directory">build</filename> directory for all important details.
313 Note the use of <parameter>CC="$LFS_TGT-gcc"</parameter> (with
314 <envar>$LFS_TGT</envar> expanded) to control which binary tools are used
315 and the use of the <parameter>-nostdinc</parameter> and
316 <parameter>-isystem</parameter> flags to control the compiler's include
317 search path. These items highlight an important aspect of the glibc
318 package&mdash;it is very self-sufficient in terms of its build machinery
319 and generally does not rely on toolchain defaults.</para>
320
321 <para>As mentioned above, the standard C++ library is compiled next, followed in
322 <xref linkend="chapter-temporary-tools"/> by all the remaining programs that need
323 to be cross compiled. The install step of all those packages uses the
324 <envar>DESTDIR</envar> variable to force installation
325 in the LFS filesystem.</para>
326
327 <para>At the end of <xref linkend="chapter-temporary-tools"/> the native
328 LFS compiler is installed. First binutils-pass2 is built,
329 in the same <envar>DESTDIR</envar> directory as the other programs,
330 then the second version of gcc is constructed, omitting libstdc++
331 and other non-critical libraries. Due to some weird logic in gcc's
332 configure script, <envar>CC_FOR_TARGET</envar> ends up as
333 <command>cc</command> when the host is the same as the target, but
334 different from the build system. This is why
335 <parameter>CC_FOR_TARGET=$LFS_TGT-gcc</parameter> is declared explicitly
336 as one of the configuration options.</para>
337
338 <para>Upon entering the chroot environment in <xref
339 linkend="chapter-chroot-temporary-tools"/>, the first task is to install
340 libstdc++. Then temporary installations of programs needed for the proper
341 operation of the toolchain are performed. From this point onwards, the
342 core toolchain is self-contained and self-hosted. In
343 <xref linkend="chapter-building-system"/>, final versions of all the
344 packages needed for a fully functional system are built, tested and
345 installed.</para>
346
347 </sect2>
348
349</sect1>
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