http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=12478
Chandler Carruth <[email protected]> changed: What |Removed |Added ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Status|NEW |RESOLVED Resolution| |FIXED --- Comment #3 from Chandler Carruth <[email protected]> 2012-04-06 11:34:34 CDT --- Should be fixed in r154176. I'm pasting the commit log here so that you can refer to it, as I suspect you'll want to file a bug with GCC about the same issue: Author: chandlerc Date: Fri Apr 6 11:32:06 2012 New Revision: 154176 URL: http://llvm.org/viewvc/llvm-project?rev=154176&view=rev Log: Fix using Clang as a cross compiler installed on a host machine and not inside of a sysroot targeting a system+sysroot which is "similar" or "compatible" with the host system. This shows up when trying to build system images on largely compatible hardware as-if fully cross compiled. The problem is that previously we *perfectly* mimiced GCC here, and it turns out GCC has a bug that no one has really stumbled across. GCC will try to look in thy system prefix ('/usr/local' f.ex.) into which it is instaled to find libraries installed along side GCC that should be preferred to the base system libraries ('/usr' f.ex.). This seems not unreasonable, but it has a very unfortunate consequence when combined with a '--sysroot' which does *not* contain the GCC installation we're using to complete the toolchain. That results in some of the host system's library directories being searched during the link. Now, it so happens that most folks doing stuff like this use '--with-sysroot' and '--disable-multilib' when configuring GCC. Even better, they're usually not cross-compiling to a target that is similar to the host. As a result, searching the host for libraries doesn't really matter -- most of the time weird directories get appended that don't exist (no arm triple lib directory, etc). Even if you're cross-compiling from 32-bit to 64-bit x86 or vice-versa, disabling multilib makes it less likely that you'll actually find viable libraries on the host. But that's just luck. We shouldn't rely on this, and this patch disables looking in the system prefix containing the GCC installation if that system prefix is *outside* of the sysroot. For empty sysroots, this has no effect. Similarly, when using the GCC *inside* of the sysroot, we still track wherever it is installed within the sysroot and look there for libraries. But now we can use a cross compiler GCC installation outside the system root, and only look for the crtbegin.o in the GCC installation, and look for all the other libraries inside the system root. -- Configure bugmail: http://llvm.org/bugs/userprefs.cgi?tab=email ------- You are receiving this mail because: ------- You are on the CC list for the bug. _______________________________________________ LLVMbugs mailing list [email protected] http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmbugs
