Edit report at https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=60925&edit=1
ID: 60925 Updated by: ahar...@php.net Reported by: tg at debian dot org Summary: fpm_atomic.h says unknown processor (m68k) Status: Open Type: Bug -Package: Compile Failure +Package: FPM related Operating System: Linux PHP Version: 5.3.9 Block user comment: N Private report: N New Comment: Thanks again. It's been good to triage this down. :) I'll let Jérôme figure out what he wants to do here, since he's the FPM maintainer. I think your list of options pretty much covers it. Previous Comments: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2012-01-31 00:39:53] tg at debian dot org Heh, your comment made me go and read the old changelogs of the Debian package on a guess, and I guessed right: php5 (5.3.5-1) unstable; urgency=low * Build the FPM SAPI (Closes: #603174) So this was simply never built before. Now there are two possibilities, disable FPM on m68k (unless gcc-4.7 or up is used) or ask the m68k porters for an implementation of the atomic things. I think. If youâve got a better idea, do tell. By the way, thereâs libatomic-ops-dev, which contains a number of atomic primitives and composed operations on a number of data types (but the catch is, youâve got to use the data types of libatomic-ops-dev, not e.g. like mesa have a function atomic_dec which is passed an int32_t* so itâs not a plug-in replacement. That might be more interesting than hacking in m68k support now, and support for $next_arch later⦠m68k atomic operations apparently have another twist: the compare-and-swap operation only exists on some processors, and not in the Coldfire line, so the Linux kernel got a syscall now to ensure atomicity. GCC 4.7 uses the syscall; most âinlinedâ application code doesnât⦠------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2012-01-31 00:06:52] ahar...@php.net Ah, I didn't know that, so no, no need on the vanilla tarball front. Thanks! The fix here would be a patch for fpm_atomic.h implementing the same atomic functions for m68k as the other fallback platforms in there, such as x86 and SPARC v9. I'm not actually sure why 5.3.3-7 built at all, actually -- the only patch it had over stock 5.3.3 (which had no support at all for m68k) was implementing support for __sync_bool_compare_and_swap() if it existed, so it should have failed with the same #error. Interesting. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2012-01-30 16:52:13] tg at debian dot org configure:12302: checking if gcc supports __sync_bool_compare_and_swap configure:12319: m68k-linux-gnu-gcc -o conftest -O2 -Wall -fsigned-char -fno-strict-aliasing -D_LARGEFILE_SOURCE -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 -gstabs -fvisibility=hidden conftest.c -lrt >&5 /tmp/ccmCFUbp.o: In function `main': conftest.c:48: undefined reference to `__sync_bool_compare_and_swap_4' conftest.c:49: undefined reference to `__sync_add_and_fetch_4' collect2: ld returned 1 exit status configure:12319: $? = 1 configure: failed program was: | /* confdefs.h */ | #define PACKAGE_NAME "" | #define PACKAGE_TARNAME "" | #define PACKAGE_VERSION "" | #define PACKAGE_STRING "" | #define PACKAGE_BUGREPORT "" | #define PACKAGE_URL "" | #define STDC_HEADERS 1 | #define HAVE_SYS_TYPES_H 1 | #define HAVE_SYS_STAT_H 1 | #define HAVE_STDLIB_H 1 | #define HAVE_STRING_H 1 | #define HAVE_MEMORY_H 1 | #define HAVE_STRINGS_H 1 | #define HAVE_INTTYPES_H 1 | #define HAVE_STDINT_H 1 | #define HAVE_UNISTD_H 1 | #define __EXTENSIONS__ 1 | #define _ALL_SOURCE 1 | #define _GNU_SOURCE 1 | #define _POSIX_PTHREAD_SEMANTICS 1 | #define _TANDEM_SOURCE 1 | #define HAVE_DEV_URANDOM 1 | #define HAVE_SETENV 1 | #define HAVE_CLEARENV 1 | #define HAVE_ERRNO_H 1 | #define HAVE_FCNTL_H 1 | #define HAVE_STDIO_H 1 | #define HAVE_STDLIB_H 1 | #define HAVE_UNISTD_H 1 | #define HAVE_SYS_UIO_H 1 | #define HAVE_SYS_SELECT_H 1 | #define HAVE_SYS_SOCKET_H 1 | #define HAVE_SYS_TIME_H 1 | #define HAVE_ARPA_INET_H 1 | #define HAVE_NETINET_IN_H 1 | #define HAVE_PRCTL 1 | #define HAVE_CLOCK_GETTIME 1 | #define HAVE_PTRACE 1 | #define PROC_MEM_FILE "mem" | /* end confdefs.h. */ | | int | main () | { | | int variable = 1; | return (__sync_bool_compare_and_swap(&variable, 1, 2) | && __sync_add_and_fetch(&variable, 1)) ? 1 : 0; | | ; | return 0; | } configure:12329: result: no ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2012-01-30 16:39:04] tg at debian dot org gcc version 4.6.2 (Debian 4.6.2-12) I know for sure it does NOT support __sync_* atomic builtins; on m68k, gcc-4.7 will introduce them, and a backport is not likely (I looked at it, but it depends on mach-indep changes that arenât in 4.6 and I fear to break other things by that). Several other architectures also do not have support for them (but I can only sort-of speak for m68k at the moment). Do I still need to try building a vanilla tarball with this information? ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2012-01-30 12:24:51] ahar...@php.net This isn't a regression in PHP as such, as the Debian 5.3.3-7 package had a patch specifically to use gcc's atomic builtins where available. A modified version of that patch was brought upstream in the fix for bug #52407 and released in 5.3.4. Can you please try building a vanilla PHP tarball? It would also be helpful to get the version of gcc you're running and the bit of config.log including and immediately following the line "checking if gcc supports __sync_bool_compare_and_swap". ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The remainder of the comments for this report are too long. 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