Re: [patch core/stackprotector] stackprotector: Fix build whencompiler lacks support

From: Yann E. MORIN
Date: Wed Jan 01 2014 - 17:28:25 EST


Linus, All,

On 2014-01-01 11:33 -0800, Linus Torvalds spake thusly:
> On Wed, Jan 1, 2014 at 3:42 AM, Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@xxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > On 2013-12-31 16:16 -0800, Linus Torvalds spake thusly:
> >>
> >> What we really really want to do is to have some way to add config
> >> options based on shell scripts and compiler support. That would also
> >> get rid of a lot of Makefile trickery etc.
> >>
> >> Then we could just make CC_STACKPROTECTOR_STRONG depend on
> >> CC_SUPPORTS_STACKPROTECTOR_STRONG or whatever.
> >
> > Sam Ravnborg suggested somethink along those lines back in July:
> > http://marc.info/?l=linux-kbuild&m=137399785206527&w=2
> > and a tentative implementation:
> > http://marc.info/?l=linux-kbuild&m=137409581406434&w=2
>
> Ack. Looks good to me. I've wanted this for a long time for other
> reasons, we should finally just do it.
>
> That said, we should make sure that the shell execution thing gets
> access to $(CC) etc variables that we have in

This requires exporting them from the Makefiles (they are, in Makefile:391
and below).

> > Basically, that would give something like:
> >
> > config CC_SUPPORTS_STACKPROTECTOR_STRONG
> > bool
> > option exec="some/script/to/test-gcc -fstack-protector-strong"
>
> For the compiler options, it would hopefully be sufficient to just do
> something like
>
> config CC_SUPPORTS_STACKPROTECTOR_STRONG
> bool
> option exec="$CC -fstack-protector-strong -c empty.c"
>
> or something like that. No?

This is an implementation detail, but the original patch expected the
result to be 'y' or 'n' (or empty=='n') on stdout. That way, it could
also be used to fill-in config options that are strings, or ints. Hence
the use of a script.

But H. Peter suggested it should only return a boolean, which seems
entirely reasonable, given the purpose of this. In this case, using 'y'
or 'n' from stdout, or 0 or !0 from the exit code are equally easy.

Also, using a single shell script allows to fix/enhance all of those
calls in a single place, and avoids duplicating all the check logic in
every tests (eg. who is going to create empty.c in your example? Clean
up the output file?). And since kconfig is run from the top-level of the
Linux source tree (even for out-of-tree builds), we can safely use a
path relative to that to call our script(s).

I'll wait a bit until the end of the holiday season before I poke Sam
again on this.

Regards,
Yann E. MORIN.

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