[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] stdbool.h -nostdinc XSA-55 trouble
>>> On 08.08.13 at 17:18, Patrick Welche <prlw1@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Thu, Aug 08, 2013 at 02:11:16PM +0100, Jan Beulich wrote: >> >>> On 08.08.13 at 13:49, Patrick Welche <prlw1@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> > I hope that this is the right list for compilation issues. >> > >> > When building libelf-tools.c with gcc 4.5.4 on NetBSD-current/amd64: >> > >> > In file included from libelf-private.h:25:0, >> > from libelf-tools.c:19: >> > /usr/src/local/xen/xen/include/xen/libelf.h:32:21: fatal >> > error: stdbool.h: > >> > No such file or directory >> > >> > I ran into this problem when trying to apply XSA-55 to xen 4.2.2, but >> > just reproduced it in -head. >> > >> > I think this issue stems from a combination of commit 7a549a6aa >> > ... >> > libelf: use C99 bool for booleans >> > ... >> > In this patch we change all the booleans in libelf to C99 bool, >> > from <stdbool.h>. >> > >> > and >> > >> > xen/arch/x86/Rules.mk: >> > ifneq ($(XEN_OS),SunOS) >> > CFLAGS-$(gcc) += -nostdinc >> > endif >> > >> > If I comment out the -nostdinc in Rules.mk, I get a successful "make xen". >> >> So perhaps NetBSD then needs a similar override as Solaris. But >> suppressing -nostdinc is a bad idea in general, and I wonder why >> this sits in a arch specific makefile instead of in xen/Rules.mk, as >> this ought to always be in effect for the hypervisor builds. > > Indeed: I wondered whether you were all working on the arm port so didn't > see it ;-) > >> > (One mystery: why aren't you all seeing this?) >> >> No mystery, but also not immediately obvious: -iwithprefix adds >> the compiler's include directory to the end of the include search >> paths, thus allowing stdbool.h and stdarg.h to be found. For >> stdarg.h (which you ought to have the same problem with in >> libelf/) xen/stdarg.h already has special treatment for >> __OpenBSD__ and __NetBSD__ (i.e. avoiding similar problems >> for all the cases where xen/stdarg.h is used instead of plain >> stdarg.h). >> >> Whether that's not the case on NetBSD, or whether that directory >> simply doesn't exist or is empty you'd need to find out on your >> installation. > > So, in xen/arch/x86/Rules.mk, there is "-iwithprefix include", > which means add "include" to the end of the directory defined > by the "-iprefix DIR" option. I just looked on an ubuntu 10 box, > and gcc -v lists "--prefix=/usr" which seems to be used as the > default value of -iprefix. The gcc compiler on the NetBSD box > doesn't list --prefix as one of its configure options, so > I don't know what directory is used as the default prefix. ""? No, according to my checking, the --prefix configure option listed does not correlate with the directory where the header is found. > --- a/xen/arch/x86/Rules.mk > +++ b/xen/arch/x86/Rules.mk > @@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ CFLAGS-$(gcc) += -nostdinc > endif > > CFLAGS += -fno-builtin -fno-common -Wredundant-decls > -CFLAGS += -iwithprefix include -Werror -Wno-pointer-arith -pipe > +CFLAGS += -iprefix /usr/ -iwithprefix include -Werror -Wno-pointer-arith > -pipe > CFLAGS += -I$(BASEDIR)/include > CFLAGS += -I$(BASEDIR)/include/asm-x86/mach-generic > CFLAGS += -I$(BASEDIR)/include/asm-x86/mach-default > > also got me a successful build. > (/usr/include/stdbool.h is what we are aiming for.) > > But is this all worthwhile? We are using the standard header file > stdbool.h, telling the preprocessor not to look in the standard > system directories with -nostdinc, and then telling the preprocessor, > via -iwithprefix, to look in /usr/include, which is the main standard > system directory, anyway. No, just go check adding -v to the compiler options. For me, the directory is underneath where the gcc binaries (cc1 et al) are. And we definitely don't want to have /usr/include or some such in our include path. Jan _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
|
Lists.xenproject.org is hosted with RackSpace, monitoring our |