Without this patch, linking when cross-compiling fails:
Undefined symbols for architecture arm64:
"_host_hooks", referenced from:
gt_pch_save(__sFILE*) in libbackend.a(ggc-common.o)
gt_pch_restore(__sFILE*) in libbackend.a(ggc-common.o)
toplev::main(int, char**) in libbackend.a(toplev.o)
ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture arm64
This reverts commit 8e48232180.
Since pkgsStatic.stdenv.cc can only produce static binaries, there's
no reason to include that compilers e.g. libstdc++.so.
This should fix a few broken cc-wrapper tests that also check for
libasan[1][2][3]:
[...]
checking whether sanitizers are fully functional... ==243==ERROR: AddressSanitizer failed to allocate 0x0 (0) bytes of SetAlternateSignalStack (error code: 22)
[...]
The underlying issue is that `SIGSTKSZ` isn't a compile-time constant
anymore, but in this case the uninitialized `kAltStackSize` was
initialized early enough to evalute to `0`[4].
The issue is already fixed in gcc11 and there's GCC 8.5 which also
contains the patch, however the backports to v9 and v10 aren't released
yet, so we have to apply patches on our own here.
For GCC 7.5 I applied the patch from gcc8 as it doesn't seem as if
there's an official upstream backport.
[1] https://hydra.nixos.org/build/163102264
[2] https://hydra.nixos.org/build/163624687
[3] https://hydra.nixos.org/build/163619227
[4] https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=100114
linux-headers-5.13 removed <cyclades.h> along with device support.
Backport a single https://gcc.gnu.org/PR100379 upstream change to
fix gcc build.
Use local (unmodified) upstream patches to avoid fetchpatch dependency.
When upgrading from gcc 9 to 10, avr-gcc started to hit the hydra log
limit, preventing the binary cache from being populated.
This commit tries to workaround this issue by passing `-s` to make for
avr-gcc 10 and 11 which seem to exhibit this problem.
Reference #135605.
Okay, GCC might not technically support _every_ platform in
platforms.unix, but I think it would be easier to subtract those as
they're discovered, if that even matters, rather than trying to
exhaustively list every Unix it does support.
(I ran into this because I wanted to build GCC for NetBSD, which it
definitely supports.)
gcc's configure system has the nasty habit (for us) of judging for
itself if it is building a cross compiler (or cross compiling), but on
the limited information of the build, host and target platforms' config
which only contains a subset of the information we encode in
`stdenv.*Platform`. The practical consequence was that prior to this
change building `pkgsLLVM.buildPackages.gcc` actually fails because it
refuses to use `--with-headers` with something it believes to not be a
cross compiler.
As a workaround we force the appropriate variable in the configure
script to always be `yes` regardless of its own conditional check.
At some point we probably should report this issue in some capacity, so
future gcc versions don't force us into workarounds like this and
acdc783418.
Don't rely on gcc detecting from the passed platforms which prefix to
use, but always specify the prefix nixpkgs expects (or doesn't). This
allows us to work around problems where the configure script would add
prefix where nixpkgs doesn't expect one (if `--target` was specified,
but the same as `--host`) or doesn't add one if nixpkgs expects one (if
`--target` and `--host` are the same, but we are actually cross
compiling, but the relevant parts of the platform are not encoded into
the platform config.
See also ca9be0511b.
When cross compiling to the same kernel / arch combination, it is safe
to use strip of libraries. This happens when cross-compiling musl
programs. dontStrip is now set in each gcc compiler instead of in
gcc/builder.sh.
Fixes#75476
We can use use `stdenv.hostPlatform.isStatic` instead, and move the
logic per package. The least opionated benefit of this is that it makes
it much easier to replace packages with modified ones, as there is no
longer any issue of overlay order.
CC @FRidh @matthewbauer
It's supposed to be just bugfixes. I tested building some projects with
gcc10. Also gfortran10 still builds. I don't expect issues.
This causes basically no rebuilds, as we use 9 by default.
I hate the thing too even though I made it, and rather just get rid of
it. But we can't do that yet. In the meantime, this brings us more
inline with autoconf and will make it slightly easier for me to write a
pkg-config wrapper, which we need.
Everything is copied as-is from 9 (except version and hash).
Some platform-specific patches might not apply anymore;
I'm lazily leaving that for the community to fix.