build failures after stdlib update

jhell jhell at DataIX.net
Mon Mar 22 00:29:06 UTC 2010


On Sun, 21 Mar 2010 07:00, alexbestms@ wrote:
> Garrett Cooper schrieb am 2010-03-21:
>> On Sat, Mar 20, 2010 at 5:55 PM, Alexander Best <alexbestms at wwu.de>
>> wrote:
>>> ok. i think i finally solved this riddle. the cause for the problem
>>> seems to
>>> have been my CPUTYPE in /etc/make.conf. it is set to 'native'.
>>> actually i've
>>> been using the 'native' keyword for years now and never had any
>>> problems with
>>> it, but it seems a recent commit broke 'native' as CPUTYPE. for me
>>> this is
>>> 100% reproducable:
>
>>> 1. put 'CPUTYPE = native' in /etc/make.conf
>>> 2. build and install gnu/usr.bin/cc
>>> 3. do 'buildkernel' or 'buildworld' and observe the segfault. for
>>>    some reason
>>> this always occurs in lib/libc/string/strlen.c (r205108). i've
>>> tested this
>>> with older version of libc.so (built 22. Feb) and got the same
>>> result. so i
>>> assume this is not a libc problem, but a problem with gcc tripping
>>> over some
>>> code in libc. i have no clue however why this happend just now and
>>> not
>>> earlier. i don't think there has been a recent commit to gcc.
>
>>> to solve this there are two ways:
>
>>> 1. set CPUTYPE to 'nocona' (i'm running amd64). this will let you
>>>    compile
>>> everything just fine even with a gcc that has itself been built
>>> with 'CPUTYPE
>>> = native'.
>>> 2. build and install gnu/usr.bin/cc with 'CPUTYPE = nocona'. the
>>>    gcc version
>>> that has been built this way will compile everything just fine even
>>> with
>>> 'CPUTYPE = native'. the only way to break this is to go and compile
>>> gcc again
>>> with the CPUTYPE set to 'native'.
>
>>> so to summarize: compiling gnu/usr.bin/cc with CPUTYPE set to
>>> 'native' will
>>> give you a broken gcc!
>
>>     What does -march=native yield in your case? There haven't been
>>     any
>> recent commits to gcc, so I'm not sure whether or not that's the
>> issue. The libraries that I provided could have just been built from
>> a
>> sane system -- maybe it's something else that needs to be explored a
>> bit more closely to root cause the issue.
>
> i've experimented with setting CPUTYPE to native yesterday, but still couldn't
> figure out what the cause of it is. only a few points i'd like to point out:
>
> 1. this is very easily reproducible for me. i just need to set CPUTYPE=native
> in my /etc/make.conf and everything that gets linked against libc and uses the
> strlen() function won't compile due to gcc segfaulting. this is the case with
> /usr/src/bin/cat e.g. as well as kernel, world and probably lots of other
> stuff.
>
> also the following gcc command segfaults too (no need for setting
> CPUTYPE=native in this case, because -mtune gets set manually):
>
> gcc -v -x c -E -mtune=native /dev/null -o /dev/null 2>&1
>
> 2. there seems to be a connection with strlen.c because gcc alaways segfaults
> here. also i've been using CPUTYPE=native for years now and never had any
> problems with it. for me the segfault always happens in:
>
> #0  strlen (str=Variable "str" is not available.
> ) at /usr/src/lib/libc/string/strlen.c:100
> 100             va = (*lp - mask01);
>
> it would be nice if people with arch i386 and amd64 could try to reproduce
> this (i believe the other archs don't support CPUTYPE=native). again the
> easiest way to trigger this (you don't need to edit your /etc/make.conf for
> this) should be running:
>
> gcc -v -x c -E -mtune=native /dev/null -o /dev/null 2>&1
>
> for now i'm using the attached patch to prevent myself from shooting me in the
> foot again. ;)
>
> cheers.
> alex
>
>> Cheers,
>> -Garrett
>
>

Native is equal to CPUTYPE not being defined right ?

So if the above is true why would you set CPUTYPE to native in the first 
place ? when you can just leave it unset and its equal to native.

Nowhere in /usr/share/examples/etc/make.conf do I see a referance to this 
type of CPUTYPE so unless I am totally missing the point of this thread, I 
do not see a problem that has to be fixed.

With all due respect,

-- 

  jhell



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