On Mon, Aug 29, 2022 at 4:08 PM Jiri Slaby <jirislaby@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On 25. 08. 22, 19:19, Nick Desaulniers wrote: > > + Jiri in case this needs to be carried downstream. > > Thanks. > > > On Thu, Aug 25, 2022 at 2:15 AM Lukas Bulwahn <lukas.bulwahn@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> > >> Since commit 8564ed2b3888 ("Kbuild, lto: Add a gcc-ld script to let run gcc > >> as ld") in 2014, there was not specific work on this the gcc-ld script > >> other than treewide clean-ups. > >> > >> There are no users within the kernel tree, and probably no out-of-tree > >> users either, and there is no dedicated maintainer in MAINTAINERS. > > There are out-of-tree users. > > >> Delete this obsolete gcc-ld script. > >> > >> Signed-off-by: Lukas Bulwahn <lukas.bulwahn@xxxxxxxxx> > > > > No callers in-tree; happy to bring it back though should there later > > be. Thanks for the patch. > > I agree to have this downstream-only for the time being. We have updates > for it queued, so we'd only start tracking the full content now... > > BTW the script is not nice at all. How do the clang people cope with the > issue? (Running gcc-ld instead of ld with proper arguments when linking > using (full) LTO. For example "-z now" -> "-Wl,-z,now".) This comes from the difference in which layer LTO is implemented. GCC LTO is a feature of the GCC compiler. GNU binutils is agnostic about LTO. So, you need to use $(CC) as the linker driver. scripts/gcc-ld adds the '-Wl,' prefix to linker options. Clang LTO works in cooperation with the LLD linker. So, the direct use of $(LD) works. scripts/gcc-ld is unneeded. -- Best Regards Masahiro Yamada