On Tue, Oct 3, 2017 at 8:20 PM, Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > 2017-10-04 5:48 GMT+09:00 Douglas Anderson <dianders@xxxxxxxxxxxx>: >> The main Linux Makefiles and the tools sub-Makefiles have different >> conventions for passing in CC / CFLAGS. >> >> Here's brief summary for the kernel: >> * CC: target C compiler (must be passed as an argument to make to >> override) >> * HOSTCC: host C compiler (must be passed as an argument to make to >> override) >> * CFLAGS: ignored (kernel manages its own CFLAGS) >> * KCFLAGS: extra cflags for the target (expected as an env var) >> * HOSTCFLAGS: host C compiler flags (not modifiable by the caller of >> make) >> >> Here's a brief summary for the tools: >> * CC: host C compiler (must be passed as an argument to make to >> override) >> * CFLAGS: base arguments for the host C compiler which are added to by >> sub builds (expected as an env var) >> >> When the main kernel Makefile calls into the tools Makefile, it should >> adapt things from its syntax to the tools Makefile syntax. >> >> If we don't do this, we have a few issues: >> * If someone wants to user another compiler (like clang, maybe) for >> hostcc then the tools will still be compiled with gcc. >> * If you happen to be building and you left ${CFLAGS} set to something >> random (maybe it matches ${CC}, the _target_ C compiler, not the >> _host_ C compiler) then this random value will be used to compile >> the tools. >> >> In any case, it seems like it makes sense to pass CC, CFLAGS, and >> similar properly into the tools Makefile. >> >> NOTE: in order to do this properly, we need to add some new >> definitions of HOSTAS and HOSTLD into the main kernel Makefile. If we >> don't do this and someone overrides "AS" or "LD" on the command line >> then those (which were intended for the target) will be used to build >> host side tools. We also make up some imaginary "HOSTASFLAGS" and >> "HOSTLDFLAGS". Someone could specify these, but if they don't at >> least these blank variables will properly clobber ASFLAGS and LDFLAGS >> from the kernel. >> >> This was discovered in the Chrome OS build system where CFLAGS (an >> environment variable) was accidentally left pointing to flags that >> would be an appropriate match to CC. The kernel didn't use these >> CFLAGS so it was never an issue. Turning on STACKVALIDATION, however, >> suddenly invoked a tools build that blew up. >> >> Signed-off-by: Douglas Anderson <dianders@xxxxxxxxxxxx> >> --- >> >> Makefile | 30 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-- >> 1 file changed, 28 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) >> >> diff --git a/Makefile b/Makefile >> index cf007a31d575..0d3af0677d88 100644 >> --- a/Makefile >> +++ b/Makefile >> @@ -298,7 +298,9 @@ HOST_LFS_CFLAGS := $(shell getconf LFS_CFLAGS) >> HOST_LFS_LDFLAGS := $(shell getconf LFS_LDFLAGS) >> HOST_LFS_LIBS := $(shell getconf LFS_LIBS) >> >> +HOSTAS = as >> HOSTCC = gcc >> +HOSTLD = ld >> HOSTCXX = g++ >> HOSTCFLAGS := -Wall -Wmissing-prototypes -Wstrict-prototypes -O2 \ >> -fomit-frame-pointer -std=gnu89 $(HOST_LFS_CFLAGS) >> @@ -1616,11 +1618,35 @@ image_name: >> # Clear a bunch of variables before executing the submake >> tools/: FORCE >> $(Q)mkdir -p $(objtree)/tools >> - $(Q)$(MAKE) LDFLAGS= MAKEFLAGS="$(tools_silent) $(filter --j% -j,$(MAKEFLAGS))" O=$(abspath $(objtree)) subdir=tools -C $(src)/tools/ >> + $(Q)ASFLAGS="$(HOSTASFLAGS)"\ >> + LDFLAGS="$(HOSTLDFLAGS)" \ >> + CFLAGS="$(HOSTCFLAGS)" \ >> + CXXFLAGS="$(HOSTCXXFLAGS)" \ >> + $(MAKE) \ >> + AS="$(HOSTAS)" \ >> + CC="$(HOSTCC)" \ >> + CXX="$(HOSTCXX)" \ >> + LD="$(HOSTLD)" \ >> + MAKEFLAGS="$(tools_silent) $(filter --j% -j,$(MAKEFLAGS))" \ >> + O=$(abspath $(objtree)) \ >> + subdir=tools \ >> + -C $(src)/tools/ >> >> tools/%: FORCE >> $(Q)mkdir -p $(objtree)/tools >> - $(Q)$(MAKE) LDFLAGS= MAKEFLAGS="$(tools_silent) $(filter --j% -j,$(MAKEFLAGS))" O=$(abspath $(objtree)) subdir=tools -C $(src)/tools/ $* >> + $(Q)ASFLAGS="$(HOSTASFLAGS)"\ >> + LDFLAGS="$(HOSTLDFLAGS)" \ >> + CFLAGS="$(HOSTCFLAGS)" \ >> + CXXFLAGS="$(HOSTCXXFLAGS)" \ >> + $(MAKE) \ >> + AS="$(HOSTAS)" \ >> + CC="$(HOSTCC)" \ >> + CXX="$(HOSTCXX)" \ >> + LD="$(HOSTLD)" \ >> + MAKEFLAGS="$(tools_silent) $(filter --j% -j,$(MAKEFLAGS))" \ >> + O=$(abspath $(objtree)) \ >> + subdir=tools \ >> + -C $(src)/tools/ $* >> > > Please do not do this. > > > > CC: for building tools that run on the target machine > HOSTCC: for building tools that run on the build machine > > > IMHO, this should be consistent to avoid confusion. > > > Grepping CROSS_COMPILE under tools/ directory, > I see many Makefile expect CC for the target system. > > For ex, tools/croup/Makefile > > CC = $(CROSS_COMPILE)gcc > > > > Why don't you fix tools/objtool/Makefile ? > > Interesting question. You are right, most tools are target tools, not host tools. Maybe it _would_ make sense to use HOSTCC/HOSTCFLAGS to build it. Copying Josh for input. Guenter -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kbuild" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html