1.1 --- a/scripts/crosstool.sh Fri Nov 07 08:09:42 2008 +0000
1.2 +++ b/scripts/crosstool.sh Sun Nov 16 21:55:46 2008 +0000
1.3 @@ -223,10 +223,11 @@
1.4
1.5 # Setting up the rest of the environment only if not restarting
1.6 if [ -z "${CT_RESTART}" ]; then
1.7 - # Determine build system if not set by the user
1.8 - CT_Test "You did not specify the build system. That's OK, I can guess..." -z "${CT_BUILD}"
1.9 - CT_BUILD="${CT_BUILD:-$(CT_DoConfigGuess)}"
1.10 - CT_BUILD=$(CT_DoConfigSub "${CT_BUILD}")
1.11 + # What's our shell?
1.12 + # Will be plain /bin/sh on most systems, except if we have /bin/ash and we
1.13 + # _explictly_ required using it
1.14 + CT_SHELL="/bin/sh"
1.15 + [ "${CT_CONFIG_SHELL_ASH}" = "y" -a -x "/bin/ash" ] && CT_SHELL="/bin/ash"
1.16
1.17 # Arrange paths depending on wether we use sys-root or not.
1.18 if [ "${CT_USE_SYSROOT}" = "y" ]; then
1.19 @@ -273,63 +274,121 @@
1.20 ln -sf "sys-root/lib" "${CT_PREFIX_DIR}/${CT_TARGET}/lib64"
1.21 fi
1.22
1.23 - # Canadian-cross are really picky on the way they are built. Tweak the values.
1.24 - CT_UNIQ_BUILD=$(echo "${CT_BUILD}" |sed -r -e 's/-/-build_/')
1.25 - if [ "${CT_CANADIAN}" = "y" ]; then
1.26 - # Arrange so that gcc never, ever think that build system == host system
1.27 - CT_CANADIAN_OPT="--build=${CT_UNIQ_BUILD}"
1.28 - # We shall have a compiler for this target!
1.29 - # Do test here...
1.30 - else
1.31 - CT_HOST="${CT_BUILD}"
1.32 - CT_CANADIAN_OPT="--build=${CT_BUILD}"
1.33 - # Add the target toolchain in the path so that we can build the C library
1.34 - # Carefully add paths in the order we want them:
1.35 - # - first try in ${CT_PREFIX_DIR}/bin
1.36 - # - then try in ${CT_CC_CORE_SHARED_PREFIX_DIR}/bin
1.37 - # - then try in ${CT_CC_CORE_STATIC_PREFIX_DIR}/bin
1.38 - # - fall back to searching user's PATH
1.39 - export PATH="${CT_PREFIX_DIR}/bin:${CT_CC_CORE_SHARED_PREFIX_DIR}/bin:${CT_CC_CORE_STATIC_PREFIX_DIR}/bin:${PATH}"
1.40 - fi
1.41 -
1.42 - # Modify GCC_HOST to never be equal to $BUILD or $TARGET
1.43 - # This strange operation causes gcc to always generate a cross-compiler
1.44 - # even if the build machine is the same kind as the host.
1.45 - # This is why CC has to be set when doing a canadian cross; you can't find a
1.46 - # host compiler by appending -gcc to our whacky $GCC_HOST
1.47 - # Kludge: it is reported that the above causes canadian crosses with cygwin
1.48 - # hosts to fail, so avoid it just in that one case. It would be cleaner to
1.49 - # just move this into the non-canadian case above, but I'm afraid that might
1.50 - # cause some configure script somewhere to decide that since build==host, they
1.51 - # could run host binaries.
1.52 - # (Copied almost as-is from original crosstool):
1.53 - case "${CT_KERNEL},${CT_CANADIAN}" in
1.54 - cygwin,y) ;;
1.55 - *,y) CT_HOST=$(echo "${CT_HOST}" |sed -r -e 's/-/-host_/;');;
1.56 + # Determine build system if not set by the user
1.57 + CT_Test "You did not specify the build system. That's OK, I can guess..." -z "${CT_BUILD}"
1.58 + case "${CT_BUILD}" in
1.59 + "") CT_BUILD=$(gcc -dumpmachine);;
1.60 + *) CT_BUILD=$(CT_DoConfigSub "${CT_BUILD}");;
1.61 esac
1.62
1.63 - # What's our shell?
1.64 - # Will be plain /bin/sh on most systems, except if we have /bin/ash and we
1.65 - # _explictly_ required using it
1.66 - CT_SHELL="/bin/sh"
1.67 - [ "${CT_CONFIG_SHELL_ASH}" = "y" -a -x "/bin/ash" ] && CT_SHELL="/bin/ash"
1.68 + # Prepare mangling patterns to later modifyu BUILD and HOST (see below)
1.69 + case "${CT_TOOLCHAIN_TYPE}" in
1.70 + cross)
1.71 + CT_HOST="${CT_BUILD}"
1.72 + build_mangle="build_"
1.73 + host_mangle="build_"
1.74 + ;;
1.75 + *) CT_Abort "No code for '${CT_TOOLCHAIN_TYPE}' toolchain type!"
1.76 + ;;
1.77 + esac
1.78
1.79 - # Ah! Recent versions of binutils need some of the build and/or host system
1.80 - # (read CT_BUILD and CT_HOST) tools to be accessible (ar is but an example).
1.81 - # Do that:
1.82 + # Save the real tuples to generate shell-wrappers to the real tools
1.83 + CT_REAL_BUILD="${CT_BUILD}"
1.84 + CT_REAL_HOST="${CT_HOST}"
1.85 +
1.86 + # Make BUILD and HOST full-fledge four-part tuples (gcc -dumpmachine
1.87 + # might be only three-part tuple, and I don't know wether config.guess
1.88 + # can return 3-part tuples...)
1.89 + case "${CT_BUILD}" in
1.90 + *-*-*-*-*) CT_Abort "Unexpected 5-part (or more) build tuple: '${CT_BUILD}'";;
1.91 + *-*-*-*) ;;
1.92 + *-*-*) CT_BUILD="${CT_BUILD/-/-unknown-}";;
1.93 + *) CT_Abort "Unepxected 1- or 2-part build tuple: '${CT_BUILD}'";;
1.94 + esac
1.95 + case "${CT_HOST}" in
1.96 + *-*-*-*-*) CT_Abort "Unexpected 5-part (or more) host tuple: '${CT_HOST}'";;
1.97 + *-*-*-*) ;;
1.98 + *-*-*) CT_HOST="${CT_HOST/-/-unknown-}";;
1.99 + *) CT_Abort "Unepxected 1- or 2-part host tuple: '${CT_HOST}'";;
1.100 + esac
1.101 +
1.102 + # Modify BUILD and HOST so that gcc always generate a cross-compiler
1.103 + # even if any of the build, host or target machines are the same.
1.104 + # NOTE: we'll have to mangle the (BUILD|HOST)->TARGET x-compiler to
1.105 + # support canadain build, later...
1.106 + CT_BUILD="${CT_BUILD/-/-${build_mangle}}"
1.107 + CT_HOST="${CT_HOST/-/-${host_mangle}}"
1.108 +
1.109 + # Now we have mangled our BUILD and HOST tuples, we must fake the new
1.110 + # cross-tools for those mangled tuples.
1.111 BANG='!'
1.112 CT_DoLog DEBUG "Making build system tools available"
1.113 mkdir -p "${CT_PREFIX_DIR}/bin"
1.114 - for tool in ar as dlltool ${CT_CC_NATIVE:=gcc} gnatbind gnatmake ld nm ranlib strip windres objcopy objdump; do
1.115 - tmp=$(CT_Which ${tool})
1.116 - if [ -n "${tmp}" ]; then
1.117 - printf "#${BANG}${CT_SHELL}\nexec '${tmp}' \"\${@}\"\n" >"${CT_PREFIX_DIR}/bin/${CT_BUILD}-${tool}"
1.118 - printf "#${BANG}${CT_SHELL}\nexec '${tmp}' \"\${@}\"\n" >"${CT_PREFIX_DIR}/bin/${CT_UNIQ_BUILD}-${tool}"
1.119 - printf "#${BANG}${CT_SHELL}\nexec '${tmp}' \"\${@}\"\n" >"${CT_PREFIX_DIR}/bin/${CT_HOST}-${tool}"
1.120 - chmod 700 "${CT_PREFIX_DIR}/bin/${CT_BUILD}-${tool}" "${CT_PREFIX_DIR}/bin/${CT_UNIQ_BUILD}-${tool}" "${CT_PREFIX_DIR}/bin/${CT_HOST}-${tool}"
1.121 - fi |CT_DoLog DEBUG
1.122 + for m in BUILD HOST; do
1.123 + r="CT_REAL_${m}"
1.124 + v="CT_${m}"
1.125 + p="CT_${m}_PREFIX"
1.126 + s="CT_${m}_SUFFIX"
1.127 + if [ -n "${!p}" ]; then
1.128 + t="${!p}"
1.129 + else
1.130 + t="${!r}-"
1.131 + fi
1.132 +
1.133 + for tool in ar as dlltool gcc g++ gnatbind gnatmake ld nm objcopy objdump ranlib strip windres; do
1.134 + # First try with prefix + suffix
1.135 + # Then try with prefix only
1.136 + # Then try with suffix only, but only for BUILD, and HOST iff REAL_BUILD == REAL_HOST
1.137 + # Finally try with neither prefix nor suffix, but only for BUILD, and HOST iff REAL_BUILD == REAL_HOST
1.138 + # This is needed, because some tools have a prefix and
1.139 + # a suffix (eg. gcc), while others may have only one,
1.140 + # or even none (eg. binutils)
1.141 + where=$(CT_Which "${t}${tool}${!s}")
1.142 + [ -z "${where}" ] && where=$(CT_Which "${t}${tool}")
1.143 + if [ -z "${where}" \
1.144 + -a \( "${m}" = "BUILD" \
1.145 + -o "${CT_REAL_BUILD}" = "${!r}" \) ]; then
1.146 + where=$(CT_Which "${tool}${!s}")
1.147 + fi
1.148 + if [ -z "${where}" \
1.149 + -a \( "${m}" = "BUILD" \
1.150 + -o "${CT_REAL_BUILD}" = "${!r}" \) ]; then
1.151 + where=$(CT_Which "${tool}")
1.152 + fi
1.153 +
1.154 + # Not all tools are available for all platforms, but some are really,
1.155 + # bally needed
1.156 + if [ -n "${where}" ]; then
1.157 + CT_DoLog DEBUG " '${!v}-${tool}' -> '${where}'"
1.158 + printf "#${BANG}${CT_SHELL}\nexec '${where}' \"\${@}\"\n" >"${CT_PREFIX_DIR}/bin/${!v}-${tool}"
1.159 + chmod 700 "${CT_PREFIX_DIR}/bin/${!v}-${tool}"
1.160 + else
1.161 + # We'll at least need some of them...
1.162 + case "${tool}" in
1.163 + ar|as|gcc|ld|nm|objcopy|objdump|ranlib)
1.164 + CT_Abort "Missing: '${t}${tool}${!s}' or '${t}${tool}' or '${tool}' : either needed!"
1.165 + ;;
1.166 + *)
1.167 + # It does not deserve a WARN level.
1.168 + CT_DoLog DEBUG " Missing: '${t}${tool}${!s}' or '${t}${tool}' or '${tool}' : not required."
1.169 + ;;
1.170 + esac
1.171 + fi
1.172 + done
1.173 done
1.174
1.175 + # Carefully add paths in the order we want them:
1.176 + # - first try in ${CT_PREFIX_DIR}/bin
1.177 + # - then try in ${CT_CC_CORE_SHARED_PREFIX_DIR}/bin
1.178 + # - then try in ${CT_CC_CORE_STATIC_PREFIX_DIR}/bin
1.179 + # - fall back to searching user's PATH
1.180 + # Of course, neither cross-native nor canadian can run on BUILD,
1.181 + # so don't add those PATHs in this case...
1.182 + case "${CT_TOOLCHAIN_TYPE}" in
1.183 + cross) export PATH="${CT_PREFIX_DIR}/bin:${CT_CC_CORE_SHARED_PREFIX_DIR}/bin:${CT_CC_CORE_STATIC_PREFIX_DIR}/bin:${PATH}";;
1.184 + *) ;;
1.185 + esac
1.186 +
1.187 # Some makeinfo versions are a pain in [put your most sensible body part here].
1.188 # Go ahead with those, by creating a wrapper that keeps partial files, and that
1.189 # never fails:
1.190 @@ -359,8 +418,8 @@
1.191
1.192 CT_DoStep EXTRA "Dumping internal crosstool-NG configuration"
1.193 CT_DoLog EXTRA "Building a toolchain for:"
1.194 - CT_DoLog EXTRA " build = ${CT_BUILD}"
1.195 - CT_DoLog EXTRA " host = ${CT_HOST}"
1.196 + CT_DoLog EXTRA " build = ${CT_REAL_BUILD}"
1.197 + CT_DoLog EXTRA " host = ${CT_REAL_HOST}"
1.198 CT_DoLog EXTRA " target = ${CT_TARGET}"
1.199 set |egrep '^CT_.+=' |sort |CT_DoLog DEBUG
1.200 CT_EndStep
1.201 @@ -434,7 +493,6 @@
1.202
1.203 CT_DoLog DEBUG "Removing access to the build system tools"
1.204 find "${CT_PREFIX_DIR}/bin" -name "${CT_BUILD}-"'*' -exec rm -fv {} \; |CT_DoLog DEBUG
1.205 - find "${CT_PREFIX_DIR}/bin" -name "${CT_UNIQ_BUILD}-"'*' -exec rm -fv {} \; |CT_DoLog DEBUG
1.206 find "${CT_PREFIX_DIR}/bin" -name "${CT_HOST}-"'*' -exec rm -fv {} \; |CT_DoLog DEBUG
1.207 rm -fv "${CT_PREFIX_DIR}/bin/makeinfo" |CT_DoLog DEBUG
1.208