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author | Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com> | 2021-04-21 15:36:51 +0100 |
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committer | Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@arm.com> | 2021-04-21 15:36:51 +0100 |
commit | f7f2165c0b0d31efd1795384c4068adc17da1729 (patch) | |
tree | 81e1e29622e282a584ce34e4ad8e5d9dab723276 /config | |
parent | 0a18305ee11e139838771f96c5a037a29606236e (diff) | |
download | gcc-f7f2165c0b0d31efd1795384c4068adc17da1729.zip gcc-f7f2165c0b0d31efd1795384c4068adc17da1729.tar.gz gcc-f7f2165c0b0d31efd1795384c4068adc17da1729.tar.bz2 |
aarch64: Always use .init/.fini_array for GNU/Linux
I was wondering why the (now fixed) c-c++-common/attr-retain-[78].c
failures were showing up in the native results for aarch64-linux-gnu
but not in the posted cross results. It turns out that .init/
.fini_array support is disabled by default for cross builds,
which in turn stops those tests from running.
The test for .init/fini_array support has two parts: one that builds
something with the assembler and linker, and another that compiles
C code and uses preprocessor macros to test the glibc version.
The first test would work with build=host but the second is only
safe for build=target.
However, AArch64 postdates glibc and binutils support for
.init/fini_array by some distance, so it's safe to hard-code the
result to "yes" for cross compilers.
This fixes the only material difference in auto-host.h between
a native and a cross build.
gcc/
* acinclude.m4 (gcc_AC_INITFINI_ARRAY): When cross-compiling,
default to yes for aarch64-linux-gnu.
* configure: Regenerate.
Diffstat (limited to 'config')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions