Have the glibc build use the cross-objdump, rather than the host one.
On some distros (eg. Fedora), the native objdump can not interpret objects not for the native system, and thus fail.
This commit adds a new patch against glibc-2.7 that introduces OBJDUMP_FOR_HOST, wich, if set, overides the detected objdump.
Note: bizarely enough, glibc already has code to detect the cross-objdump, but that does not work for an unknown reason... :-(
/trunk/patches/glibc/2.7/220-objdump_for_host.patch | 13 13 0 0 +++++++++
/trunk/scripts/build/libc_glibc.sh | 37 21 16 0 +++++++++++++++------------
2 files changed, 34 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-)
1 diff -durN gcc-4.2.1.orig/gcc/Makefile.in gcc-4.2.1/gcc/Makefile.in
2 --- gcc-4.2.1.orig/gcc/Makefile.in 2007-05-31 17:37:38.000000000 +0200
3 +++ gcc-4.2.1/gcc/Makefile.in 2007-08-03 20:36:14.000000000 +0200
5 # FIXME: writing proper dependencies for this is a *LOT* of work.
6 libbackend.o : $(OBJS-common:.o=.c) $(out_file) \
7 insn-config.h insn-flags.h insn-codes.h insn-constants.h \
8 - insn-attr.h $(DATESTAMP) $(BASEVER) $(DEVPHASE)
9 + insn-attr.h $(DATESTAMP) $(BASEVER) $(DEVPHASE) gcov-iov.h
10 $(CC) $(ALL_CFLAGS) $(ALL_CPPFLAGS) \
11 -DTARGET_NAME=\"$(target_noncanonical)\" \
12 -DLOCALEDIR=\"$(localedir)\" \