The previous logic would fail with common values of LD set by the user: LD="ld.lld" -> LD="ld.lld.bfd" LD="ld.gold" -> LD="ld.gold.bfd" LD="mold" -> LD="mold.bfd"
It makes more sense to ignore the user's LD setting and use the default value given by tc-getLD. If the user doesn't have binutils installed, the "type -P" check will still fail and LD will be unaltered. Closes: https://github.com/gentoo/gentoo/pull/33650 Signed-off-by: Mike Gilbert <flop...@gentoo.org> --- eclass/toolchain-funcs.eclass | 7 +++---- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/eclass/toolchain-funcs.eclass b/eclass/toolchain-funcs.eclass index 4559894ca04a..8fef764ad597 100644 --- a/eclass/toolchain-funcs.eclass +++ b/eclass/toolchain-funcs.eclass @@ -534,10 +534,9 @@ tc-ld-force-bfd() { ewarn "Forcing usage of the BFD linker" # Set up LD to point directly to bfd if it's available. - local ld=$(tc-getLD "$@") - # We need to extract the first word in case there are flags appended - # to its value (like multilib), bug #545218. - local bfd_ld="${ld%% *}.bfd" + # Unset LD first so we get the default value from tc-getLD. + local ld=$(unset LD; tc-getLD "$@") + local bfd_ld="${ld}.bfd" local path_ld=$(type -P "${bfd_ld}" 2>/dev/null) [[ -e ${path_ld} ]] && export LD=${bfd_ld} -- 2.42.0