commit 20ce424e65 introduced a situation
where two instances of gcc's build process could be invoked
concurrently in the process of fixing the same issue for musl. only
the production of native compilers seems to have been affected. add a
direct dependency edge rather than relying on the indirect dependency,
which was only present in non-native mode.
these are not needed since the cross toolchain being used to build the
native compiler already has its own libc and headers.
but more importantly, due to lack of certain dependency chains that
would be present for a cross compiler build, it was possible for two
invocations of musl's make process to occur in parallel (one for temp
sysroot headers, one for actual libc build). this could (and was
observed to) lead to a race condition where alltypes.h was momentarily
truncated in the middle of the libc build.
commit 03bd65562a wrongly placed the
logic conditional on $(TARGET) before inclusion of config.mak, so that
it only worked when TARGET was set from the make command line or
environment. reorder to fix.
leaving necessary configuration options for certain targets to the
user is error-prone and inconvenient. instead of configuration for
exact target string matchs in the sample config.mak, provide general
logic in the makefile itself which should cover all variants as well.
I didn't realize before but, using the O make variable, kernel source
can do out-of-tree builds, making it safe to use a symlink rather than
partial copy for the source dir. the partial copy did not work for all
archs; in particular x86 was broken.
this feature is still experimental and requires manually setting a
LINUX_ARCH make variable matching the target. automatic mapping will
be added later. if LINUX_ARCH is not set, header installation is
skipped.
libmpx is broken in all gcc versions that have it (not supported yet
by mcm/litecross, but will be).
ifunc is not supported by musl and won't be unless/until the contract
for resolvers can be specified clearly in a way that real-world usage
is safe and does not require lazy binding; having it enabled at gcc
level reportedly produces a broken libatomic.
explicitly enabling libstdcxx-time is needed to get libc clock_gettime
(with vdso support) to be used in libstdc++; it's disabled by default
because of glibc legacy practice of having clock_gettime in librt,
which depends on glibc's libpthread and undermines libstdc++'s
(invalid use of) weak references to pthread symbols.
others are untested and some are likely broken. add this config option
before including config.mak rather than after so that the user can
override it in config.mak if desired.
multilib would not be usable without building multiple versions of
musl anyway, which we don't yet support, so enabling it does not make
sense. due to bugs in gcc's build system, even with multilib disabled,
multilib dir structures get used on 64-bit archs leading to target
libs being installed in /lib64 (or /libx32, etc.) under the sysroot,
rather than /lib. fix this by suppressing the variable that controls
it.
blanking INFO_DEPS suffices to prevent attempts to rebuild the docs,
but does not reliably suppress their installation. blanking infodir
does the latter. there are other methods that work too but this seems
to be the simplest.
nothing in a normal gcc/binutils actually uses flex and bison, but
this useless test for the output filename lex produces breaks the
build unless [f]lex is installed. the result of this check is
specified by posix anyway, so hard-code the specified result.
commit 23d6f66966 introduced this
regression as a failure to backport part of the gas testsuite diff
from binutils master to 2.25.1 where the file being patched had a
trivial difference. I'm not sure how this went unnoticed at the time
it was committed.
this allows sharing a sources directory between multiple checkouts or
independent toolchain-using projects.
also, during distclean, only remove the in-tree sources directory, not
a custom/external one. this is a safety measure in case the SOURCES
variable is set to something stupid like blank, root directory, or
some large shared directory.