6642575e29
Update i386 test-results to something more current. |
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$OpenBSD: README,v 1.7 1999/11/24 00:15:04 espie Exp $ Warning: highly experimental port. It is assumed you know what you are doing by playing with this. Some common problems: - this port has no bison/yacc dependency. post-patch DOES fix the timestamps so that the generated parser files are newer than the corresponding yacc source. If this fails for you, blame your setup. *RUN* a time protocol over NFS networks, heck, get a clue. If configuration for your favorite processor does not work, there are two possibilities: - you can send me complete bug reports, telling me what's wrong, and I will try to get a viable configuration. - you can do it yourself but, for any non-trivial change, you *MUST* file a copyright assignment with the FSF. Otherwise, your patch won't make it to the official egcs distribution, and we all lose. One point of the clean-up is to be able to trace the configuration precisely, so that it becomes easier to track newer versions of egcs, or port OpenBSD to other architectures. Accordingly, each code fragment has to be tagged with the place it originally came from, and variations from standard practice have to be thoroughly documented. For instance, if you have to change CC1_SPEC for OpenBSD, it is important to know what you changed from that default processor configuration: when egcs evolves and add new specs, it's easier to know what to pick up, and what to leave alone. From a technical point of view, part of the challenge is that some bugs may come from the compiler, some from the assembler, and from the linker. It's likely that the only way to resolve many bugs will be to finally upgrade to a recent binutils... For instance, C++ currently has to resort to substandard setjump/longjump exceptions as we don't handle dwarf2 unwind info correctly. Please read the Makefile before attempting to build this port. There might be some tweaks involved. Start with make patch, then read the documentation, and decide on changes. For instance, C++ folks may wish to play with -fsquangle: since this is an option you need to activate for building the library, you had better decide from the start. Once you get through all those caveats, and manage to build egcs, one nice point is that you get fairly good C, C++, f77, objective-C, and java compilers. Thread support -------------- I'm currently building on d's work with respect to libc_r... I've added some provisions for adding -pthread everywhere it's currently needed. Test support needs the same -pthread, e.g., you'll probably have to edit /usr/local/share/dejagnu/baseboards/unix.exp to add set_board_info cflags "-pthread" I haven't yet modified the testsuite framework for that. I'm somewhat hoping we'll find a less kludgy solution than -pthread to activate libc_r. This is tied to weak symbol support. -- Marc Espie