scripts/showTuple.sh.in
author "Benoît THÉBAUDEAU" <benoit.thebaudeau@advansee.com>
Thu Jul 28 22:09:31 2011 +0200 (2011-07-28)
changeset 2573 424fa2092ace
parent 1336 bc8b9381f637
child 2838 822af73497bf
permissions -rw-r--r--
scripts/libc: do not build add-ons by default

Currently, no --enable-add-ons option is passed to libc configure when
"$(do_libc_add_ons_list ,)" is empty, which makes configure automatically search
for present add-ons. In that case, all present add-ons are built, although
no add-on was selected by the user in the config. Moreover, this can make the
configure fail if some non-standard add-ons like eglibc-localedef are present.

This behavior also leads to an inconsistency from a user point of view between
the following cases:
- LIBC_ADDONS_LIST="", LIBC_GLIBC_USE_PORTS=n and THREADS="none" in the config,
which makes "$(do_libc_add_ons_list ,)" return "", so all present add-ons
are built.
- LIBC_ADDONS_LIST="", LIBC_GLIBC_USE_PORTS=n and THREADS!="none" in the
config, which makes "$(do_libc_add_ons_list ,)" return the add-on supporting
the chosen threading implementation, e.g. "nptl", so only this add-on is
built.

This patch disables the building of all add-ons in that case.

It is still possible to build all present add-ons by adding --enable-add-ons to
LIBC_GLIBC_EXTRA_CONFIG_ARRAY.

Signed-off-by: "Benoît THÉBAUDEAU" <benoit.thebaudeau@advansee.com>
     1 #!@@CT_bash@@
     2 
     3 # What we need:
     4 #  - the .config file
     5 
     6 # Parse the tools' paths configuration
     7 . "${CT_LIB_DIR}/paths.mk"
     8 
     9 # We'll need the stdout later, save it
    10 exec 7>&1
    11 
    12 # Parse the common functions
    13 . "${CT_LIB_DIR}/scripts/functions"
    14 
    15 # Don't care about any log file
    16 exec >/dev/null
    17 rm -f "${tmp_log_file}"
    18 
    19 # Parse the configuration file
    20 . .config.2
    21 
    22 # Parse architecture and kernel specific functions
    23 . "${CT_LIB_DIR}/scripts/build/arch/${CT_ARCH}.sh"
    24 . "${CT_LIB_DIR}/scripts/build/kernel/${CT_KERNEL}.sh"
    25 
    26 # Build CT_TARGET
    27 CT_DoBuildTargetTuple
    28 
    29 # All this for this single echo... :-( Sigh, I'll have to re-arrange things...
    30 echo "${CT_TARGET}" >&7