From: Davin McCall Date: Mon, 5 Jun 2017 22:55:00 +0000 (+0100) Subject: Update BUILD instructions. X-Git-Tag: v0.06~98 X-Git-Url: https://git.librecmc.org/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=97a1ba819816e189d7db0bba0af8ed3b836b9b3d;p=oweals%2Fdinit.git Update BUILD instructions. --- diff --git a/BUILD b/BUILD index 2efbc57..7e040eb 100644 --- a/BUILD +++ b/BUILD @@ -1,20 +1,62 @@ Building Dinit =-=-=-=-=-=-=- -Buildingn Dinit should be a straight-forward process. It requires GNU make. +Building Dinit should be a straight-forward process. It requires GNU make. Edit the "mconfig" file to choose appropriate values for the configuration variables defined within. In particular: CXX : should be set to the name of the C++ compiler (and linker) - CXXOPTS : are options passed to the compiler during compilation + CXXOPTS : are options passed to the compiler during compilation (see note for GCC below) EXTRA_LIBS : are any extra libraries required for linking; should not normally be needed. -Defaults for Linux and OpenBSD are provided. Note that the "eg++" package must be installed -on OpenBSD as the default "g++" compiler is too old. +Defaults for Linux and OpenBSD are provided. Note that the "eg++" or "clang++" package must +be installed on OpenBSD as the default "g++" compiler is too old. Clang is part of the base +system in recent releases. Then, change into the "src" directory, and run "make" (or "gmake" if the system make is not -GNU make): +GNU make, such as on most BSD systems): cd src make + +If everything goes smoothly this will build dinit, dinitctl, and optionally the shutdown +utility. Use "make install" to install; you can specify an alternate installation by +setting the "DESTDIR" variable, eg "make DESTDIR=/tmp/temporary-install-path install". + + +Special note for GCC/Libstdc++ +=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- + +GCC 5.x onwards includes a "dual ABI" in its standard library implementation, aka Libstdc++. +Compiling against the newer (C++11 and later) ABI can be achieved by adding +-D_GLIBCXX_USE_CXX11_ABI=1 to the compiler command line; this uses a non-standard language +extension to differently mangle symbol names in order to link against the new ABI versions. + +(Some systems may be configured to build with the new ABI by default, and in that case you +build against the old ABI using D_GLIBCXX_USE_CXX11_ABI=1). + +This is problematic for several reasons. First, it prevents linking against the new ABI with +other compilers that do not understand the language extension (LLVM i.e. clang++ does so +in recent versions, so this is perhaps no longer much of a problem in practice). Secondly, +some aspects of library behavior are ABI-dependent but cannot be changed using the ABI +macro; in particular, exceptions thrown as a result of failed I/O operations are, in GCC +versions 5.x and 6.x, always "old ABI" exceptions which cannot be caught by code compiled +against the new ABI, and in GCC version 7.x they are always "new ABI" exceptions which cannot +be caught by code compiled against the old ABI. Since the one library object now supposedly +houses both ABIs, this means that at least one of the two ABIs is always broken. + +A blog post describing the dual ABI mechanism can be found here: + + https://developers.redhat.com/blog/2015/02/05/gcc5-and-the-c11-abi/ + +The bug regarding the issue with catching other-ABI exceptions is here: + + https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=66145 + +Since Dinit is affected by this bug, the unfortunate possibility exists to break Dinit by +upgrading GCC. If you have libstdc++ corresponding to GCC 5.x or 6.x, you *must* build with +the old ABI, but Dinit will be broken if you upgrade to GCC 7. If you have libstdc++ from +GCC 7, you *must* build with the new ABI. If the wrong ABI is used, Dinit may still run +successfully but any attempt to load a non-existing service, for example, will cause Dinit +to crash. diff --git a/mconfig b/mconfig index b173e19..48c8e98 100644 --- a/mconfig +++ b/mconfig @@ -1,12 +1,16 @@ -# Linux (GCC). Note with GCC 5,5.1,5.2 the new C++11 ABI is buggy. +# Linux (GCC). Note with GCC 5.x/6.x you must use the old ABI, with GCC 7.x you must use +# the new ABI. See BUILD file for more information. CXX=g++ -CXXOPTS=-D_GLIBCXX_USE_CXX11_ABI=0 -std=gnu++11 -Os -Wall -Wno-invalid-offsetof -fno-rtti +CXXOPTS=-D_GLIBCXX_USE_CXX11_ABI=1 -std=gnu++11 -Os -Wall -Wno-invalid-offsetof -fno-rtti EXTRA_LIBS= BUILD_SHUTDOWN=yes # OpenBSD, tested with GCC 4.9.3 and gmake: -#CXX=eg++ -#CXXOPTS=-D_GLIBCXX_USE_CXX11_ABI=0 -std=gnu++11 -Os -Wall -fno-rtti +#CXX=clang++ +#CXXOPTS=-std=gnu++11 -Os -Wall -fno-rtti #EXTRA_LIBS= #BUILD_SHUTDOWN=no # (shutdown command not available for OpenBSD yet). + +# MacOS: use Linux settings, but don't build shutdown: +#BUILD_SHUTDOWN=no