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135 lines
5.7 KiB
Plaintext
135 lines
5.7 KiB
Plaintext
This is a beta release of a completely rewritten binutils distribution.
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(Rewritten since binutils 1.x, that is.)
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The linker (ld) has been moved into a separate directory, which should be
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../ld. Linker-specific notes are in ../ld/README.
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As of version 2.5, the assembler (as) is also included in this package, in
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../gas. Assembler-specific notes can be found in ../gas/README.
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These programs have been tested on various architectures.
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However, since this is a beta release taken directly from an
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evolving source tree, there might be some problems. In particular,
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the programs have not been ported to as many machines as the
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old binutils. There are also features of the old versions
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that are missing on the new programs. We would appreciate
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patches to make things run on other machines; especially welcome
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are fixes for what used to work on the old programs!
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(See ./TODO, as well a ../bfd/TODO and ../ld/TODO.)
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Recent changes are in ./NEWS, ../ld/NEWS, and ../gas/NEWS.
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Unpacking and Installation -- quick overview
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==========================
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In this release, the binary utilities, the linker, the generic GNU include
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files, the BFD ("binary file description") library, gprof, and getopt all
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have directories of their own underneath the binutils-2.7 directory.
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The idea is that a variety of GNU tools can
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share a common copy of these things. Configuration scripts and
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makefiles exist to cruise up and down this directory tree and
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automatically build all the pieces in the right order.
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When you unpack the binutils-2.7.tar.gz file, you'll get a directory
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called something like `binutils-2.7', which contains:
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COPYING bfd/ configure* libiberty/
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COPYING.LIB binutils/ configure.in move-if-change*
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CYGNUS build-all.mk etc/ opcodes/
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ChangeLog config/ gprof/ test-build.mk
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Makefile.in config.guess* inc
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To build binutils, you can just do:
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cd binutils-2.7
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./configure [ --enable-targets='target1,target2...' ]
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make
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make install # copies the programs files into /usr/local/bin
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# by default.
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This will configure and build all the libraries as well as binutils
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and the linker.
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The --enable-targets option adds support for more binary file
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formats besides the default. By default, support for only the
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selected target file format is compiled in. To add support for more
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formats, list them as the argument to --enable-targets, separated by
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commas. For example:
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./configure --enable-targets=sun3,rs6000-aix,decstation
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The name 'all' compiles in support for all valid BFD targets (this was
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the default in previous releases):
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./configure --enable-targets=all
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The binutils can be used in a cross-development environment.
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The file etc/configure.texi contains more information.
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You can also specify the --enable-shared option when you run
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configure. This will build the BFD and opcodes libraries as shared
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libraries. This will only work on certain systems, and currently will
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only work when compiling with gcc. You can use arguments with the
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--enable-shared option to indicate that only certain libraries should
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be built shared; for example, --enable-shared=bfd. The only
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possibilities in a binutils release are bfd and opcodes.
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The binutils will be linked against the shared libraries. The build
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step will attempt to place the correct library in the runtime search
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path for the binaries. However, in some cases, after you install the
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binaries, you may have to set an environment variable, normally
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LD_LIBRARY_PATH, so that the system can find the installed libbfd
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shared library.
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If you specify --enable-commonbfdlib as well as --enable-shared, then
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a single shared library will be built containing the bfd, opcodes, and
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libiberty libraries. It will be installed as libbfd. This option
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will make the binutils programs as small as possible.
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If you don't have ar
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====================
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If your system does not already have an ar program, the normal
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binutils build process will not work. In this case, run configure as
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usual. Before running make, run this script:
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#!/bin/sh
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MAKE=${MAKE-make}
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${MAKE} $* AR=true all-libiberty
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${MAKE} $* AR=true all-bfd
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cd binutils
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${MAKE} $* ADDL_DEPS='$(BULIBS)' ADDL_LIBS='$(BULIBS) ../bfd/*.o `cat ../libiberty/required-list ../libiberty/needed-list | sed -e "s,\([^ ][^ ]*\),../libiberty/\1,g"`' ar
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This script will build an ar program in binutils/ar. Move binutils/ar
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into a directory on your PATH. After doing this, you can run make as
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usual to build the complete binutils distribution. You do not need
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the ranlib program in order to build the distribution.
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Porting
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=======
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Binutils-2.7 supports many different architectures, but there
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are many more not supported, including some that were supported
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by earlier versions. We are hoping for volunteers to
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improve this situation.
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The major effort in porting binutils to a new host and/or target
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architecture involves the BFD library. There is some documentation
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in ../bfd/doc. The file ../gdb/doc/gdbint.texinfo (distributed
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with gdb-4.x) may also be of help.
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If your system uses some variant of old-style a.out-format,
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you can start with a copy of bfd/newsos3.c, and edit it to fit.
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(You may also need to tweak bfd/aout-target.h.)
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Alternatively, you could use the host-aout.c target. This is a
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special kludge that only works for native (non-cross) configurations.
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Reporting bugs
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==============
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If you can't track down a bug and send suggestions/patches
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for fixes, you should probably *not* be using this release.
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We have little time to spend tracking down whatever random bugs you
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may run into (except for configurations that Cygnus supports for
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its customers). The general place to send bug reports or patches
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is to bug-gnu-utils@ai.mit.edu; you can also send them directly to
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raeburn@cygnus.com or ian@cygnus.com.
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