Remove any reference to libfloat. That has gone once and for all.
Rationale:
Most of the time, soft-float problems are caused by this sucker of gcc:
it has support for soft float for all of the targets I've tried so far,
but does not activate this code until you dwelve into half a dozen of
files to make it accept to build and link the support code...
So, yes: gcc has soft-float support. And again, yes: gcc is a sucker.
1 --- gdb-6.3.org/gdb/gdbserver/thread-db.c 2004-10-17 02:42:00.000000000 +0900
2 +++ gdb-6.3/gdb/gdbserver/thread-db.c 2005-01-27 12:19:29.000000000 +0900
4 Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
5 Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
10 #include "linux-low.h"
14 struct inferior_linux_data *tdata;
18 fprintf (stderr, "Thread creation event.\n");
20 In the LinuxThreads implementation, this is safe,
21 because all events come from the manager thread
22 (except for its own creation, of course). */
23 - err = td_ta_event_getmsg (thread_agent, &msg);
24 + for (timeout = 0; timeout < 50000; timeout++)
26 + err = td_ta_event_getmsg (thread_agent, &msg);
27 + if (err != TD_NOMSG)
32 fprintf (stderr, "thread getmsg err: %s\n",
33 thread_db_err_str (err));