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|
[[!meta copyright="Copyright © 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012 Free Software
Foundation, Inc."]]
[[!meta license="""[[!toggle id="license" text="GFDL 1.2+"]][[!toggleable
id="license" text="Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this
document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or
any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant
Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license
is included in the section entitled [[GNU Free Documentation
License|/fdl]]."]]"""]]
[[!tag open_issue_gcc]]
Here's what's to be done for maintaining GCC.
Apart from the target-specific configuration machinery, there shouldn't be any
major differences within GCC between the GNU/Hurd and GNU/Linux ports, for
example. Especially all the compiler magic is all the same.
[[!toc levels=2]]
# [[General information|/gcc]]
# [[Sources|source_repositories/gcc]]
# Configuration
<!--
git checkout reviewed
git log --reverse --topo-order --pretty=fuller --stat=$COLUMNS,$COLUMNS -w -p -C --cc ..upstream/trunk
-i
/^commit |^merge:|^---$|hurd|linux|nacl|nptl|glibc|gs:
-->
Last reviewed up to the [[Git mirror's be3860ba8df48cca3253da4f02fd2d42d856ce80
(2012-12-10) sources|source_repositories/gcc]].
<http://gcc.gnu.org/install/configure.html> has documentation for the
`configure` switches.
* Configure fragments that have `*linux*` cases might/should often contain
those for us (and GNU/k*BSD) as well.
* `configure.ac`
* `libgomp/configure.tgt`
* `libstdc++-v3/configure.host`
`abi_baseline_pair` etc. setting.
* `libstdc++-v3/config/os/gnu-linux/*`
Is used for all GNU systems, as per `libstdc++-v3/configure.host`.
Should rename to `gnu-user` to reflect this?
* `gcc/acinclude.m4`:`gcc_GAS_FLAGS`: always pass `--32` to assembler for
x86 Linux. (Why?)
* `hurd/usr`
`NATIVE_SYSTEM_HEADER_DIR`, `638454a19c1c08f01c10517bc72a114250fc4f33`,
[[!message-id "mcrzkhcbftp.fsf@coign.corp.google.com"]].
Debian.
* Eventually: get rid of this special-casing. [[!message-id
"gckk1s$e0b$1@ger.gmane.org"]].
* [[`libmudflap`|libmudflap]].
* [`-fsplit-stack`](http://nickclifton.livejournal.com/6889.html)
* Also see `libgcc/config/i386/morestack.S`: comments w.r.t
`TARGET_THREAD_SPLIT_STACK_OFFSET`/`%gs:0x30` usage; likely needs
porting.
* As per `libgcc/config/i386/t-stack-i386`, the former file is only used
for `-fsplit-stack` support -- which is currently enabled for us in
`libgcc/config.host`.
* `gcc/config/gnu-user.h` defines `*SPLIT_STACK*` macros -- which aren't
valid for us (yet), I think.
* Might `-fsplit-stack` be useful for us with respect to our
[[multithreaded|multithreading]] libraries?
* `--enable-languages=[...]`
* [[Ada (GNAT)|GNAT]] support is work in progress.
* The [[Google Go's libgo|gccgo]] (introduced in
e440a3286bc89368b8d3a8fd6accd47191790bf2 (2010-12-03)) needs
OS configuration / support.
* `--enable-frame-pointer`
`gcc/configure.ac`: `enable_frame_pointer=no`
* `--with-dwarf2`?
* `--enable-werror`
* `--enable-checking`
* `--enable-linker-build-id`
* `--enable-gnu-unique-object`
* `--enable-lto`
* `--enable-indirect-function`
[[IFUNC]]
* <http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/2007-11/msg00289.html>,
<http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2010-12/msg00672.html>
* `gcc/config/t-linux` should be named `gcc/config/t-gnu-user` or
similar. Likewise for `gcc/config/i386/t-linux`.
* Debian's GCC package has Hurd-specific patches. Some have been forwarded
upstream (and have been ignored). [[Thomas_Schwinge|tschwinge]] is working
on getting them integrated.
* [\[meta-bug\] bootstrap bugs for
\*-gnu\*](http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=21824)
* [build system: gcc\_cv\_libc\_provides\_ssp and
NATIVE\_SYSTEM\_HEADER\_DIR](http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/2008-10/msg00130.html)
* [-fstack-protector shouldn't use TLS in freestanding
mode](http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29838)
* See also commit bf1c0af128f33bd342636c4afeaa8f3a8a7cf8ca (reverted in
commit a204f0622242865ffea889bd698bc7c7bd236bd1), commit
05c1aa95e6c37b3b281d749c76c673392941a031.
* Check before/after Joseph changes. (Should be fine.)
* 34618b3190c110b8926cc2b1db4b4eac95451995 »config-list.mk«
What's this used for? (Check ML.) Ask to include i686-pc-gnu (once it is
buildable out of the box)? See also
73905b5de0d9a086f22ded7638bb1c0ae1b91326.
* Various testsuite bits should include `*-*-gnu*`, too.
* [low] [[toolchain/cross-gnu]] toolchain bootstrap vs. `fenv.h` in libgcc's
libbid:
[...]/xgcc [...] -DIN_LIBGCC2 -fbuilding-libgcc [...] -Dinhibit_libc [...] -o bid_decimal_globals.o [...] -c [...]/libgcc/config/libbid/bid_decimal_globals.c
[...]/libgcc/config/libbid/bid_decimal_globals.c:47:18: fatal error: fenv.h: No such file or directory
compilation terminated.
make[1]: *** [bid_decimal_globals.o] Error 1
make[1]: Leaving directory `/media/boole-data/thomas/tmp/gnu-0/src/gcc.obj/i686-pc-gnu/libgcc'
make: *** [all-target-libgcc] Error 2
See threads at [[!message-id
"AANLkTinY1Cd4_qO_9euYJN8zev4hdr7_ANpjNG+yGRMn@mail.gmail.com"]],
[[!message-id "20110328225532.GE5293@synopsys.com"]], [[!message-id
"4D52D522.1040804@gmail.com"]]. Can simply configure the first GCC with
`--disable-decimal-float`.
Alternatively, can we use `#ifndef inhibit_libc` for this (these?) file(s)?
See `generic-nonstrack.c`, for example. The latter (and also
`generic-morestack-thread.c`) also has a nice explanation of `inhibit_libc`
which could be centralized at one place, for example definition of
`inhibit_libc`.
* [low] [[toolchain/cross-gnu]]
The directory that should contain system headers does not exist:
/media/boole-data/thomas/tmp/gnu-0/sys_root/usr/include
make[2]: *** [stmp-fixinc] Error 1
make[2]: Leaving directory `/media/boole-data/thomas/tmp/gnu-0/src/gcc.obj/gcc'
make[1]: *** [all-gcc] Error 2
make[1]: Leaving directory `/media/boole-data/thomas/tmp/gnu-0/src/gcc.obj'
`mkdir` the directory for now, but what is really going on? GCC has *use
`/usr/include` patch*, but glibc still installs into `/include/`?
* `__GLIBC__`
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-01-05:
<civodul> on GNU/kFreeBSD, it's GCC that defines __GLIBC__, funny
<youpi> ??
<youpi> not from features.h ?
<civodul> in gcc/config/kfreebsd-gnu.h
<civodul> :-)
<pinotree> correct, it's enabled in gcc's config
<pinotree> i discovered that after banging my head on the wall trying
to find out why some stuff wasn't compiling even after kfreebsd
porting patches adding preprocessors checks for __GLIBC__
GNU/kFreeBSD and GNU/kNetBSD: commit
6396cc37141180db4d2c8f73cab4f5977d8a1e19 (2004-06-24, r83577),
GNU/kOpenSolaris: commit 3bef40126fb1633018fce47828df0fa9f65f110c
(2009-01-29, r143768). See also GDB commits
fda1b24c62843f81d31de2af57b1ed9c55f1e348 and
1acb4f4ff73d20850a7524fc939d2651be75f47b, and binutils commits
e3081899be7570eb90ccfd5d767950d3a62871ee,
127c4d4a4fe65bd17ea64db1be7f3c93d393afcb,
47dbf5b634b955c2db1221715d15751e1281546a, and
ad2be7e8b846f4cd67fa1e032f98d5dc1cdb6b8d.
IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-05-25:
<gnu_srs> Hi, looks like __GLIBC__ is not defined by default for GNU?
<gnu_srs> touch foo.h; cpp -dM foo.h|grep LIBC: empty
<braunr> gnu_srs: well, this only tells your the compiler defaults
<tschwinge> gnu_srs: See the email I just sent.
[[!message-id "87396od3ej.fsf@schwinge.name"]]
<braunr> __GLIBC__ would probably be introduced by a glibc header
<gnu_srs> tschwinge: I saw your email. I wonder if features.h is
included in the kFreeBSD build of webkit.
<gnu_srs> It is defined in their build, but not in the Hurd build.
<pinotree> gcc on kfreebsd unconditionally defines __GLIBC__
<pinotree> (a bit stupid choice imho, but hardly something that could
be changed now...)
<braunr> :/
<braunr> personally i don't consider this only "a bit" stupid, as
kfreebsd is one of the various efforts pushing towards portability
<braunr> and using such hacks actually hinders portability ...
<pinotree> yeah don't tell me, i can remember at least half dozen of
occasions when a code wouldn't have been compiling at all on other
glibc platforms otherwise
<pinotree> sure, i have nothing against kfreebsd's efforts, but making
gcc define something which is proper of the libc used is stupid
<braunr> it is
<pinotree> i spotted changes like:
<pinotree> -#ifdef __linux
<pinotree> +#if defined(__linux__) || defined(__GLIBC__)
<pinotree> and wondered why they wouldn't work at all for us... and
then realized there were no #include in that file before that
preprocessor check
<tschwinge> This is even in upstream GCC gcc/config/kfreebsd-gnu.h:
<tschwinge> #define GNU_USER_TARGET_OS_CPP_BUILTINS() \
<tschwinge> do \
<tschwinge> { \
<tschwinge> builtin_define ("__FreeBSD_kernel__"); \
<tschwinge> builtin_define ("__GLIBC__"); \
<tschwinge> builtin_define_std ("unix"); \
<tschwinge> builtin_assert ("system=unix"); \
<tschwinge> builtin_assert ("system=posix"); \
<tschwinge> } \
<tschwinge> while (0)
<tschwinge> I might raise this upstream at some point.
<pinotree> tschwinge: i could guess the change was proposed by the
kfreebsd people, so asking them before at d-bsd@d.o would be a start
<tschwinge> pinotree: Ack.
<pinotree> especially that they would need to fix stuff afterwards
<pinotree> imho we could propose them the change, and if they agree put
that as local patch to debian's gcc4.6/.7 after wheezy, so there is
plenty of time for them to fix stuff
<pinotree> what should be done first is, however, find out why that
define has been added to gcc
[[!message-id "201211061305.02565.pino@debian.org"]].
* [low] Does `-mcpu=native` etc. work? (For example,
2ae1f0cc764e998bfc684d662aba0497e8723e52.)
* transactional memory, 4c0315d05fa0f707875686abc4f91f7a979a7c7b
* `config/mmap.m4`
* In `libitm/config/`, is the generic stuff (`tls.h`, etc.) enough for
us?
* f29a2041f32773464e226a83f41762c2e9cf658e
(e53a96c2136f7cdff4699475fea41afeed9dece3)
Testresults same as for GNU/Linux.
* [high] 3efc00f6f17778172d3fa7ac737fa1473b3b4d5a, `Check __GLIBC__ when
using __SIGRTMIN`. GCC PR52390. Fixed by
8d2259c83f94c082ad8a00b5d00bb639ce24efce.
* 15ac1e637ad0cb92bf7629205c617ea847a4b810 `Build 64-bit libffi multilib for
i?86-linux`.
* `libstdc++`: uses `_GLIBCXX_HAVE_TLS`, but where is this defined? Supposed
to come from `config/tls.m4:GCC_CHECK_TLS`?
* `libgcc/gthr-posix.h:__gthread_active_p` -- is this suitable for us? This
is used in libgcc for ObjC wrapper stuff and similar in libstdc++.
C.f. [[!message-id "x57jobtqx89w.fsf@frobland.mtv.corp.google.com"]],
[[!message-id "x57jd359fkx3.fsf@frobland.mtv.corp.google.com"]] as well as
[[!debbug 629866]]/[[!message-id
"20110609002620.GA16719@const.famille.thibault.fr"]]. commit
026e608ecebcb2a6193971006a85276307d79b00.
* 549e2197b118efb2d947aaa15d445b05c1b5ed62 `Import the asan runtime library
into GCC tree`. Linux-specific things:
`ASAN_USE_ALIAS_ATTRIBUTE_FOR_INDEX`, `ASAN_LINUX`, `ASAN_POSIX`,
`libsanitizer/asan/asan_linux.cc`,
`libsanitizer/asan/asan_malloc_linux.cc`,
`libsanitizer/asan/asan_posix.cc`,
`libsanitizer/interception/interception.h`,
`libsanitizer/interception/interception_linux.cc`,
`libsanitizer/interception/interception_linux.h`,
`libsanitizer/sanitizer_common/sanitizer_allocator.cc`,
`libsanitizer/sanitizer_common/sanitizer_linux.cc`,
`libsanitizer/sanitizer_common/sanitizer_posix.cc`,
`libsanitizer/sanitizer_common/sanitizer_procmaps.h`,
`libsanitizer/sanitizer_common/sanitizer_symbolizer_linux.cc`.
4afab99bf0fe2d6905a9fa9d6ab886ca102312df `Enable libsanitizer just on x86
linux for now`. 492e75a7336b4dbfe38207ea3abf8d5bd72376a9 `Move
libsanitizer configure logic to subdirectory`.
6aea389d84c2172668af5f108e2b17e131120d0b `Add STATIC_LIBASAN_LIBS for
-static-libasan`. Further commits later on.
* 9cf754572854d9d9cd43c277eb7afb12e4911358 `Import tsan runtime from
llvm`. Linux-specific things: `libsanitizer/tsan/tsan_platform.h`,
`libsanitizer/tsan/tsan_platform_linux.cc`,
`libsanitizer/tsan/tsan_symbolize_addr2line_linux.cc`.
a96132f29aa3dfe94141a87537f62ea73ce0fc19 `Set TSAN_SUPPORTED=yes for
x86_64/i686-linux for 64-bit multilib`. Further commits later on.
# Build
Here's a log of a GCC build run; this is from our [[Git repository's
a1d48e100791bc67ff355e0931a604e767c827b7 (2012-12-10;
be3860ba8df48cca3253da4f02fd2d42d856ce80 (2012-12-10))
sources|source_repositories/gcc]], run on kepler.SCHWINGE and coulomb.SCHWINGE.
$ export LC_ALL=C
$ (cd ../master/ && contrib/gcc_update --touch)
$ ../master/configure --prefix="$PWD".install SHELL=/bin/dash CC=gcc-4.6 CXX=g++-4.6 --enable-languages=all,ada 2>&1 | tee log_build
[...]
$ make 2>&1 | tee log_build_
[...]
Different hosts may default to different shells and compiler versions; thus
harmonized.
This takes up around 3.5 GiB, and needs roughly 3.25 h on kepler.SCHWINGE and
14.25 h on coulomb.SCHWINGE.
<!--
$ (make && touch .go-install) 2>&1 | tee log_build_ && test -f .go-install && (make install && touch .go-test) 2>&1 | tee log_install && test -f .go-test && make -k RUNTESTFLAGS=-v check 2>&1 | tee log_test
-->
## Analysis
$ toolchain/logs/process gcc build
* [[`checking if gcc static flag -static
works... no`|glibc_madvise_vs_static_linking]]
Addressed in Debian glibc.
* `host-linux.c` vs. `host-default.c`
* *fixincludes* stuff
* malloc?
-cat ../../hurd/gcc/config/i386/pmm_malloc.h > mm_malloc.h
+cat ../../hurd/gcc/config/i386/gmm_malloc.h > mm_malloc.h
Comes from `gcc/config.gcc`: `i386/t-pmm_malloc` vs. `i386/t-gmm_malloc`
for `i[34567]86-*-linux*` vs. `i[34567]86-*-*`.
* *libgomp*
* `libgomp/config/linux/`, `libgomp/config/linux/x86`
`sed`ed away.
* `-ftls-model=initial-exec -march=i486 -mtune=i686`
`sed`ed away.
* Missing `EOWNERDEAD`, `ENOTRECOVERABLE`. What're they used for?
* `RLIMIT_VMEM`. Usage kosher?
* `libtool: link: ar rc .libs/libstdc++.a [...]`
Just different order of object files, or another problem? TODO
* `libobjc/encoding.c`:
libtool: compile: [...]/hurd/master.build/./gcc/xgcc [...] [...]/hurd/master/libobjc/encoding.c -c [...]
+[...]/hurd/master/libobjc/encoding.c:128:1: warning: '_darwin_rs6000_special_round_type_align' defined but not used [-Wunused-function]
* `libobjc/thr.c`: `gcc/gthr-posix.h`
libtool: compile: [...]/hurd/master.build/./gcc/xgcc [...] [...]/hurd/master/libobjc/thr.c -c [...]
+In file included from [...]/hurd/master/libobjc/../libgcc/gthr.h:142:0,
+ from [...]/hurd/master/libobjc/thr.c:45:
+../libgcc/gthr-default.h: In function '__gthread_objc_thread_set_priority':
+../libgcc/gthr-default.h:388:41: warning: unused parameter 'priority' [-Wunused-parameter]
* `/proc/self/*`
-checking for /proc/self/exe... yes
-checking for /proc/self/maps... yes
+checking for /proc/self/exe... no
+checking for /proc/self/maps... no
* GCJ: `java-signal.h`, `java-signal-aux.h`
-config.status: linking ../../../hurd/libjava/include/i386-signal.h to include/java-signal.h
-config.status: linking ../../../hurd/libjava/include/i386-signal.h to include/java-signal-aux.h
+config.status: linking ../../../hurd/libjava/include/default-signal.h to include/java-signal.h
+config.status: linking ../../../hurd/libjava/include/default-signal.h to include/java-signal-aux.h
* GCJ: `jni_md.h`
-checking jni_md.h support... yes
+checking jni_md.h support... configure: WARNING: no
* *default library search path*
-checking for the default library search path... /lib /usr/lib /lib/i386-linux-gnu /usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu /lib/i486-linux-gnu /usr/lib/i486-linux-gnu /usr/local/lib
+checking for the default library search path... /lib /usr/lib
[[binutils]] issue? Should be aligned by Samuel's binutils patch.
* `./classpath/[...]/*.properties`
Just different order of files, or another problem?
* `libjava/gnu/gcj/util/natGCInfo.cc`
libtool: compile: [...]/hurd/master.build/./gcc/xgcc [...] -c ../../../master/libjava/gnu/gcj/util/natGCInfo.cc [...]
+../../../master/libjava/gnu/gcj/util/natGCInfo.cc:440:1: warning: unused parameter 'name' [-Wunused-parameter]
+../../../master/libjava/gnu/gcj/util/natGCInfo.cc:446:1: warning: unused parameter 'name' [-Wunused-parameter]
+../../../master/libjava/gnu/gcj/util/natGCInfo.cc:452:1: warning: unused parameter 'name' [-Wunused-parameter]
* `libgcj.la`
Just different order of object files, or another problem?
Is there a pattern that GNU/Hurd hands out the files alphabetically sorted
where it wouldn't need to ([[!taglink open_issue_hurd]])?
* `libjvm.la`, `.libs/libjvm.so`, `libgij.la`, `.libs/libgij.so.12.0.0`
`-Wl,-Bsymbolic` vs. `-Wl,-Bsymbolic-functions`
* `jar`
make[2]: Entering directory `[...]/hurd/master.build/[ARCH]/libjava'
-: make ; exec make "AR_FLAGS=rc" [...] "RANLIB=ranlib" "DESTDIR=" "JAR=[...]/hurd/master.build/[ARCH]/libjava/scripts/jar" DO=all multi-do
+: make ; exec make "AR_FLAGS=rc" [...] "RANLIB=ranlib" "DESTDIR=" "JAR=jar" DO=all multi-do
Probably because kepler.SCHWINGE has an OpenJDK `/usr/bin/jar`, and
coulomb.SCHWINGE a GCJ one.
There are other instances of this in the following.
* `value-unwind.h`
-DEFINES='' HEADERS='../../../master/libgcc/config/i386/value-unwind.h' \
+DEFINES='' HEADERS='' \
../../../master/libgcc/mkheader.sh > tmp-libgcc_tm.h
Comes from `gcc/config.gcc`: for `i[34567]86-*-linux*`
vs. `i[34567]86-*-*`, but apparently is important only for *x86_64* anyway.
* `soft-fp` prototypes
../../../master/libgcc/soft-fp/eqtf2.c:34:9: warning: no previous prototype for '__eqtf2' [-Wmissing-prototypes]
+../../../master/libgcc/soft-fp/eqtf2.c:50:1: warning: no previous prototype for '__netf2' [-Wmissing-prototypes]
../../../master/libgcc/soft-fp/getf2.c:34:9: warning: no previous prototype for '__getf2' [-Wmissing-prototypes]
+../../../master/libgcc/soft-fp/getf2.c:50:1: warning: no previous prototype for '__gttf2' [-Wmissing-prototypes]
../../../master/libgcc/soft-fp/letf2.c:34:9: warning: no previous prototype for '__letf2' [-Wmissing-prototypes]
+../../../master/libgcc/soft-fp/letf2.c:50:1: warning: no previous prototype for '__lttf2' [-Wmissing-prototypes]
* `libatomic` on GNU/Linux compiles several more files than on GNU/Hurd. Is
that correct? Probably futex support.
* 2e2db3f92b534460c68c2f9ae64455884424beb6..3336556d2cb32f46322922a83015f760cfb79d8f
Both GNU/Linux and GNU/Hurd:
-checking assembler for rep and lock prefix... yes
+checking assembler for rep and lock prefix... no
TODO.
# Install
$ make install 2>&1 | tee log_install
[...]
This takes up around 1 GiB, and needs roughly 5 min on kepler.SCHWINGE and 37
min on coulomb.SCHWINGE.
## Analysis
$ toolchain/logs/process gcc install
* `libtool: finish`: `ldconfig` is not run for the Hurd.
[[libtool]].
* `libjvm.la`, `.libs/libjvm.so`, `libgij.la`, `.libs/libgij.so.12.0.0`
`-Wl,-Bsymbolic` vs. `-Wl,-Bsymbolic-functions` (as above)
* `jar`: as above.
# Testsuite
<http://gcc.gnu.org/install/test.html>
Testing on GNU/Hurd is blocked on
[[fork_mach_port_mod_refs_ekern_urefs_owerflow]].
TODO. On GNU/Hurd, it is advisable to reboot after having built and installed
GCC, before running the testsuite, as otherwise there seems to be a tendency
that the system crashes during the `gcc.c-torture/compile/limits-structnest.c`
tests, which are rather memory hungry, see [[!message-id
"87bol6aixd.fsf@schwinge.name"]]. Likewise, it also seems advisable to add
further reboots in between, that is, separate `make check`'s `check-host` into
several separate runs, and then one for `check-target` (see
`[build]/Makefile:do-check`, `[build]/gcc/Makefile:CHECK_TARGETS`), as
otherwise there seems to be a tendency for the system crashing sooner or later.
(Running `check-host` accumulates to something like 44 hours worth of
forking/execing of GCC and testcases.) On GNU/Linux we run it in one go, so
that we'll catch any fundamental rearrangements of/additions to the testsuites.
kepler.SCHWINGE:
$ make -k check 2>&1 | tee log_test
[...]
coulomb.SCHWINGE:
$ awk '/^maybe-check-target/ { next; }; /^maybe-check-[^:]*:./ { print; };' < Makefile
maybe-check-fixincludes: check-fixincludes
maybe-check-gcc: check-gcc
maybe-check-intl: check-intl
maybe-check-libbacktrace: check-libbacktrace
maybe-check-libcpp: check-libcpp
maybe-check-libdecnumber: check-libdecnumber
maybe-check-libiberty: check-libiberty
maybe-check-zlib: check-zlib
maybe-check-gnattools: check-gnattools
maybe-check-lto-plugin: check-lto-plugin
$ grep ^CHECK_TARGETS gcc/Makefile
CHECK_TARGETS = check-ada check-c check-c++ check-fortran check-java check-lto check-objc
$ export LC_ALL=C
$ make -k check-fixincludes 2>&1 | tee log_test_1_check-fixincludes
[...]
$ make -k -C gcc check-ada 2>&1 | tee log_test_2_gcc_check-ada
[...]
[reboot]
$ make -k -C gcc check-c 2>&1 | tee log_test_2_gcc_check-c
[...]
[reboot]
$ make -k -C gcc check-c++ 2>&1 | tee log_test_2_gcc_check-c++
[...]
[reboot]
$ make -k -C gcc check-fortran check-java check-lto check-objc 2>&1 | tee log_test_2_gcc_check-fortran,check-java,check-lto,check-objc
[...]
[reboot]
$ make -k check-intl check-libbacktrace check-libcpp check-libdecnumber check-libiberty check-zlib check-gnattools check-lto-plugin 2>&1 | tee log_test_3
[...]
$ make -k check-target 2>&1 | tee log_test_4_check-target
[...]
This needs roughly 7 h on kepler.SCHWINGE and 4 h (`check-fixincludes`,
`gcc/check-ada`) + 12.5 h (`gcc/check-c`) + 4.25 h (`gcc/check-c++`) + 5.5 h
(`gcc/check-fortran`, `gcc/check-java`, `gcc/check-lto`, `gcc/check-objc`) +
9 h (`check-intl`, [...], `check-lto-plugin`, `check-target`) = 35.25 h on
coulomb.SCHWINGE.
## Analysis
$ toolchain/logs/process gcc test
* PTYs
Occasionally tests FAIL due to:
spawn -open -1 failed, 1 5, The system has no more ptys. Ask your system administrator to create more.
TODO.
* As of b401cb7ed15602d244a6807835b0b9d740a302a8 (2012-11-26;
769bf18a20ee2540ca7601cdafabd62b18b9751b (2012-10-01)), all
`gcc.dg/guality` and `g++.dg/guality` and a few more are no longer tested
on coulomb.SCHWINGE and kepler.SCHWINGE.
* As of b401cb7ed15602d244a6807835b0b9d740a302a8 (2012-11-26;
769bf18a20ee2540ca7601cdafabd62b18b9751b (2012-10-01)), there are
regressions (FAILs) in libgomp execution tests on coulomb.SCHWINGE.
* 769bf18a20ee2540ca7601cdafabd62b18b9751b..be3860ba8df48cca3253da4f02fd2d42d856ce80
On GNU/Hurd:
Running [...]/hurd/master/gcc/testsuite/g++.dg/tls/tls.exp ...
+FAIL: g++.dg/tls/thread_local3.C -std=gnu++11 execution test
+FAIL: g++.dg/tls/thread_local3g.C -std=gnu++11 execution test
+FAIL: g++.dg/tls/thread_local4.C -std=gnu++11 execution test
+FAIL: g++.dg/tls/thread_local4g.C -std=gnu++11 execution test
+FAIL: g++.dg/tls/thread_local5.C -std=gnu++11 execution test
+FAIL: g++.dg/tls/thread_local5g.C -std=gnu++11 execution test
They used to PASS.
* TODO
## Enhancements
### `contrib/testsuite-management/`, `contrib/regression/`
* 35a27ee8c4b349fea44fd1fadc9614ab3cc9d578 `Add an xfail manifest for
x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu to trunk.`
### Parallel Testing
[[!message-id "20110331070322.GI11563@sunsite.ms.mff.cuni.cz"]].
### Distributed Testing
#### IRC, OFTC, #gcc, 2012-05-31
<dnovillo> jsm28: in your mentor testing, you have the source and build
tree available for make check? or it's a pure installed-tree test?
<jsm28> dnovillo: Source tree, install tree, no build tree.
<dnovillo> jsm28: so, you run make check on top of the source tree or copy
the */testsuite trees to a testing area?
<jsm28> Create a site.exp and do runtest in a temporary directory. runtest
is pointed to the source tree to find sources.
<jsm28> For cross testing for GNU/Linux targets, the temporary directory is
mounted at the same path on host and target.
<dnovillo> jsm28: thanks. i guess i'll have to find the slice of the
source tree i need to copy.
<dnovillo> jsm28: for libstdc++ do you write a different site.exp?
<dnovillo> i noticed that it generates a different site,exp there.
<jsm28> The site.exp is mostly the same for all testsuites (so includes
settings that only some testsuites use).
<dnovillo> ok, thanks.
<dnovillo> and when you say "pointed to the source tree" you mean "set
srcdir /path/to/top/of/gcc" ?
<dnovillo> (in site.exp)
<jsm28> The GDB testsuite requires that you run the GDB testsuite's
configure script in the temporary directory where you will run runtest.
I don't think any GCC testsuites we use have requirements like that.
<jsm28> dnovillo: --srcdir option to runtest.
<dnovillo> ah, yes.
<jsm28> (and --tool, --target_board etc.)
<dnovillo> right
<dnovillo> since i'm distributing the tests. i want each node to only do a
bunch of files. this means that i either use 'tool.exp=file-pattern' or
simply copy the subset of files i want tool.exp to find.
<dnovillo> i chose the second approach, but that breaks in a handful of
cases that need files from other sub-directories.
<dnovillo> like g++.dg gcc.dg using stuff from c-c++-common.
<dnovillo> for libstdc++, the possibilities for splitting are enormous as
it has many directories.
<dnovillo> but i'm not setting it right. runtest runs without even trying
to test anything.
<dnovillo> i'm not having it pick up the right driver.
<jsm28> Probably all .exp files should be copied to anywhere running
testsuites, since some read .exp files from other directories.
<dnovillo> jsm28: that could be it too. it's irritating that libstdc++
does not even error out. runtest just does nothing and returns 0.
##### IRC, OFTC, #gcc, 2012-06-06
<dnovillo> any libstdc++ maintainer around?
<dnovillo> or, does anyone know when the testsuite/data files are copied
into the running testsuite/ dir?
<dnovillo> seems to be done in advance by make.
##### [[!message-id "4FC7791E.6040407@gmail.com"]]
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