gcc-pass2-inst.xml 5.2 KB

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  1. <sect2><title>&nbsp;</title><para>&nbsp;</para></sect2>
  2. <sect2>
  3. <title>Re-installation of GCC</title>
  4. <para>The tools required to test GCC and Binutils are installed now
  5. (Expect, Tcl and DejaGnu). We can continue on rebuilding GCC and Binutils,
  6. link them against the new Glibc, and test them properly. One thing to note,
  7. however, is that these test suites are highly dependent on the features
  8. supported by your host distribution. Most notably, a host distribution
  9. which does not properly support the devpts filesystem will cause most of
  10. these tests to fail.</para>
  11. <note><para>It's worth noting that the GCC test suite we run in this chapter is
  12. considered not as critical as the one we run in Chapter 6.</para></note>
  13. <para>Unpack all three GCC tarballs (-core, -g++, and -testsuite) in one and the same working directory.
  14. They will all unfold into a single <filename>gcc-&gcc-version;/</filename>
  15. subdir.</para>
  16. <para>First correct one problem and make an essential adjustment:</para>
  17. <para><screen><userinput>patch -Np1 -i ../gcc-&gcc-version;-no_fixincludes-2.patch
  18. patch -Np1 -i ../gcc-&gcc-specs-version;.patch</userinput></screen></para>
  19. <para>The first patch disables the GCC "fixincludes" script. We mentioned this
  20. briefly earlier, but a slightly more in-depth explanation of the fixincludes
  21. process is warranted here. Under normal circumstances, the GCC fixincludes
  22. script scans your system for header files that need to be fixed. It might find
  23. that the Glibc header files on your host system need to be fixed, fix them and
  24. put them in the GCC private include directory. Then, later on in Chapter 6,
  25. after we've installed the newer Glibc, this private include directory would be
  26. searched before the system include directory, resulting in GCC finding the
  27. fixed headers from the host system, which would most likely not match the Glibc
  28. version actually used for the LFS system.</para>
  29. <para>The last patch changes GCC's default location of the dynamic linker
  30. (typically <filename>ld-linux.so.2</filename>). It also removes
  31. <filename class="directory">/usr/include</filename> from GCC's include search
  32. path. Patching now rather than adjusting the specs file after installation
  33. ensures that our new dynamic linker gets used during the actual build of GCC.
  34. That is, all the final (and temporary) binaries created during the build will
  35. link against the new Glibc.</para>
  36. <important><para>These patches are <emphasis>critical</emphasis> in ensuring a
  37. successful overall build. Do not forget to apply them.</para></important>
  38. <para>Create a separate build directory again:</para>
  39. <para><screen><userinput>mkdir ../gcc-build
  40. cd ../gcc-build</userinput></screen></para>
  41. <para>Before starting to build GCC, remember to unset any environment
  42. variables that override the default optimization flags.</para>
  43. <para>Now prepare GCC to be compiled:</para>
  44. <para><screen><userinput>../gcc-&gcc-version;/configure --prefix=/tools \
  45. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;--with-local-prefix=/tools \
  46. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;--enable-clocale=gnu --enable-shared \
  47. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;--enable-threads=posix --enable-__cxa_atexit \
  48. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;--enable-languages=c,c++</userinput></screen></para>
  49. <para>Compile the package:</para>
  50. <para><screen><userinput>make</userinput></screen></para>
  51. <para>There is no need to use the <userinput>bootstrap</userinput> target now,
  52. as the compiler we're using to compile this GCC has been built from the exact
  53. same sources.</para>
  54. <para>Test the results:</para>
  55. <para><screen><userinput>make -k check</userinput></screen></para>
  56. <para>The <userinput>-k</userinput> flag is used to make the test suite run
  57. through to completion and not stop at the first failure. The GCC test suite is
  58. very comprehensive and is almost guaranteed to generate a few failures. To get
  59. a summary of the test suite results, run this:</para>
  60. <para><screen><userinput>../gcc-&gcc-version;/contrib/test_summary | less</userinput></screen></para>
  61. <para>You can compare your results to those posted to the gcc-testresults
  62. mailing list for similar configurations to your own. For an example of how
  63. current GCC-3.3.1 should look on i686-pc-linux-gnu, see
  64. <ulink url="http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-testresults/2003-08/msg01612.html"/>.</para>
  65. <para>Note that the results contain:</para>
  66. <screen>* 1 XPASS (unexpected pass) for g++
  67. * 1 FAIL for g++
  68. * 2 FAIL for gcc
  69. * 26 XPASS's for libstdc++</screen>
  70. <para>The unexpected pass for g++ is due to the use of
  71. <userinput>--enable-__cxa_atexit</userinput>. Apparently not all platforms
  72. supported by GCC have support for "__cxa_atexit" in their C libraries, so this
  73. test is not always expected to pass.</para>
  74. <para>The 26 unexpected passes for libstdc++ are due to the use of
  75. <userinput>--enable-clocale=gnu</userinput>, which is the correct choice on
  76. Glibc-based systems of versions 2.2.5 and above. The underlying locale support
  77. in the GNU C library is superior to that of the otherwise selected "generic"
  78. model (which may be applicable if for instance you were using Newlibc, Sun-libc
  79. or whatever libc). The libstdc++ test suite is apparently expecting the
  80. "generic" model, hence those tests are not always expected to pass.</para>
  81. <para>And finally install the package:</para>
  82. <para><screen><userinput>make install</userinput></screen></para>
  83. </sect2>