- As suggested by Ingo, add libshared.a to the architecture name map.
This allows it to be linked by its short name like other frequently
used libraries.
- Adjust all Jamfiles referencing the lib accordingly.
* By setting HDRGRIST to match SOURCE_GRIST in MultiArchDirSetup, the
include scanning in Jam will work properly: the generated header will
have the same grist as what the include scan looks for.
* Remove the now unneeded workaround from netresolv Jamfile.
* The Raspberry pi 2 uses a new SoC which differs slightly
from the Raspberry Pi 1.
* Someday these two board targets could go away when we get
FDT support.
* Drop unused variables from build system that refer to the system
libraries.
* Drop unused lists of libgcc objects.
* Drop no longer used variables from configuration script.
* Remove no longer needed building of kernel-libgcc and -libsupc++ from
build_cross_tools_gcc4, only the boot-specific (32-bit) libs are
built for a x86_64 target.
* Explicitly disable threads and TLS support when building the cross
compiler, as the only libraries that are used by Haiku's build system
is the 32-bit libgcc and libsupc++ for the bootloader on x86_64 (and
for that neither is wanted).
* Instead of faking libstdc++.so from libstdc++.a, use libstdc++.so
from the gcc_syslibs build feature for everything except x86_gcc2.
* Use libgcc_s.so from the gcc_syslibs build feature for everything but
x86_gcc2 (which still carries libgcc as part of libroot.so).
* Drop filtering of libgcc objects for libroot, as that is no longer
necessary since we're only using libgcc-as-single-object for libroot
with x86_gcc2, where the filtered object file doesn't exist. Should
the objects that used to be filtered cause any problems as part of
libgcc_s.so, we can always filter them as part of the gcc build.
* Use libsupc++.so from the gcc_syslibs build feature for everything but
x86_gcc2.
* Adjust all Jamfiles accordingly.
* Deactivate building of faked libstdc++.so for non-x86-gcc2. For
x86_gcc2, we still build libstdc++.so from the sources in the Haiku
source tree as part of the Haiku build .
* Put gcc_syslibs package onto the image, when needed.
provided in the gcc_syslibs_devel build feature for building Haiku.
* Simplify declaration of c++ and gcc headers for the legacy compiler -
in the end we always use the ones living by our source tree anyway.
* Fix a couple of missing local declarations for jam variables, which
were necessary to avoid a build problem with strace. There are
probably more bugs like these hiding in our build system files, but
I'm saving the fix for those to the next commit.
* Add new gcc packages to the HaikuPorts (x86*-)repositories.
* Haiku does not currently provide crtbeginS.o and crtendS.o, so
we fall back to crtbegin.o and crtend.o.
This should not have any ill-effects, as the available compilers on
Haiku do not use __cxa_atexit() yet.
* Gcc is now using __cxa_atexit, so we need to use the crtbegin
and crtend implementations that are meant to be used for shared
libraries. This avoids crashes of servers that load add-ons
(Media-Addon-Server and Print-Server) when shutting down Haiku.
* As executable are shared on Haiku, we use crtbeginS.o and crtendS.o
for those, too.
* To simplify, we even use crtbeginS.o and crtendS.o in the kernel,
but there they don't currently make a difference, as the respective
initialization and cleanup functions are not being invoked by the
kernel.
* That change did not make any sense, as the floppy-boot images
can't be built in debug mode anyway (the result is much too large).
This reverts commit 911821275a.
* Don't assume verdex as it isn't clear this was
occurring.
* Make an educated guess on HAIKU_BOOT_PLATFORM
based on provided board (but still allow it to
be overridden)
* Error out if user doesn't populate
HAIKU_BOOT_PLATFORM or enters an unknown board
name.
* You need to add "-sHAIKU_BOOT_BOARD=xxx" to
your jam to build for the proper ARM device.
* Rename beagle to beagleboneblk as per the
documentation.
* As per the ML discussions. Bumps MIPS to tier 3.
* We've reached a unanimous descision that MIPS doesn't
target any real / valid hardware Haiku wants to pursue
at the moment. In the event that anyone wants to pursue
MIPS, feel free to fork Haiku into your own repository
(and we'll even link to it on the website ports page)
* If someone develops a viable plan for MIPS (and gets the
port working, it can be readded at a later date)
This uses a variable CLANG that should be set to the Clang version. For
now, this has to be done manually (e.g. when invoking jam using jam
-sCLANG=34), but later, this will be auto-detected.
Work towards bug #10396
The introduction of secondary arch support for kernel files disabled
-Werror for all kernel files, since the -Werror flags were moved from
{CC,C++}FLAGS to TARGET_WARNING_{CC,C++}FLAGS_<arch>, which, however,
was overwritten by the SetupKernel rule. This commit introduces new
global variables {HAIKU,HOST,TARGET}_WERROR_FLAGS[_<arch>], which
contain the additional -Werror flags to be applied for the architecture.
The config variable WARNINGS can be set to "treatAsErrors" to cause
-Werror and {HOST,TARGET}_WERROR_FLAGS[_<arch>] to be appended to the
compilation flags.
Fixes#10280.
This makes it fit again.
We can't reference in BuildSetup a variable set with the other
ones in KernelArchitectureSetup since the rule is invoked later.
Instead of listing all the objects we want from the libgcc archive
we just make a copy of it and remove those we don't want, and link
to it.
This should allow returning MAXLINE in jam to a sane value.
Latest gcc converts the old ones to the new ones anyway...
including when passing to gas, which of course is not new enough,
so we have to also force gcc to pass the old one around in one case.