Targets whose binutils support -shared, but that don't have a shared
libc, and that can't add PDC (non-PIC) to shared libraries, may
succeed at the effective target test for -shared, because it brings
nothing from libc, but tests that rely on -shared and that use bits
from libc, such as g++.dg/lto/pr108772, fail despite requiring the
shared effective target.
Extend the effective target test to bring malloc() from libc, that's
likely to be present in libc and bring a substantial amount of code if
no shared libc is available.
Regstrapped on x86_64-linux-gnu, also tested on aarch64-elf with gcc-13,
where the problem was observed. Ok to install?
for gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog
* lib/target-supports.exp (check_effective_target_shared):
Check for a static-only libc.
---
gcc/testsuite/lib/target-supports.exp | 10 --
1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
diff --git a/gcc/testsuite/lib/target-supports.exp
b/gcc/testsuite/lib/target-supports.exp
index 73360cd3a0d55..213dad355a6a5 100644
--- a/gcc/testsuite/lib/target-supports.exp
+++ b/gcc/testsuite/lib/target-supports.exp
@@ -1391,10 +1391,16 @@ proc check_effective_target_aarch64_tlsle32 { } {
proc check_effective_target_shared { } {
# Note that M68K has a multilib that supports -fpic but not
# -fPIC, so we need to check both. We test with a program that
-# requires GOT references.
+# requires GOT references, and with a libc symbol that would
+# bring in significant parts of a static-only libc. Absent a
+# shared libc, this would make -shared tests fail, so we don't
+# want to enable the shared effective target then.
return [check_no_compiler_messages shared executable {
+ #include
extern int foo (void); extern int bar;
- int baz (void) { return foo () + bar; }
+ char *baz (void) {
+ return foo () + (char*) malloc (bar);
+ }
} "-shared -fpic"]
}
--
Alexandre Oliva, happy hackerhttps://FSFLA.org/blogs/lxo/
Free Software Activist GNU Toolchain Engineer
More tolerance and less prejudice are key for inclusion and diversity
Excluding neuro-others for not behaving ""normal"" is *not* inclusive