On Tue, 2014-05-06 at 15:26 +0200, Samuel Thibault wrote: > Svante Signell, le Tue 06 May 2014 15:25:38 +0200, a écrit : > > On Tue, 2014-05-06 at 15:07 +0200, Samuel Thibault wrote: > > > Svante Signell, le Tue 06 May 2014 15:05:20 +0200, a écrit : > > > > On Tue, 2014-05-06 at 14:51 +0200, Samuel Thibault wrote: > > > > > Just to explicitly ask for it: > > > > > > > > > > Svante Signell, le Tue 06 May 2014 10:06:49 +0200, a écrit : > > > > > > For some (yet) unknown reason all libgo tests fails with a segfault > > > > > > when > > > > > > run in the build tree: make, sh or something else, the test > > > > > > commands are > > > > > > rather hard to track. > > > > > > > > > > Doesn't that dump a core? Do you have /servers/crash properly > > > > > pointing > > > > > to /servers/crash-dump-core and ulimit -u set to unlimited?
More good news: - Installing the modified libpthread.so.0.3 made the segfault go away. I could now run the check from the build tree :-) - Adding #define TARGET_THREAD_SSP_OFFSET 0x14 to patch1.diff and building gcc-4.9.0-2 the test results are summarised as follows :-) === libgo Summary === # of expected passes 101 # of unexpected failures 21 I think some of the remaining failures are rather easy to fix. Attached is an updated patch1.diff. Remains to solve the problem with patch8.diff: Adding arch specific code to: src/libgo/mksysinfo.sh
--- a/src/gcc/config/i386/gnu.h +++ b/src/gcc/config/i386/gnu.h @@ -37,11 +37,14 @@ #ifdef TARGET_LIBC_PROVIDES_SSP -/* Not supported yet. */ -# undef TARGET_THREAD_SSP_OFFSET - -/* Not supported yet. */ -# undef TARGET_CAN_SPLIT_STACK -# undef TARGET_THREAD_SPLIT_STACK_OFFSET +/* i386 glibc provides __stack_chk_guard in %gs:0x14. */ +#define TARGET_THREAD_SSP_OFFSET 0x14 +/* We only build the -fsplit-stack support in libgcc if the + assembler has full support for the CFI directives. */ +#if HAVE_GAS_CFI_PERSONALITY_DIRECTIVE +#define TARGET_CAN_SPLIT_STACK +#endif +/* We steal the last transactional memory word. */ +#define TARGET_THREAD_SPLIT_STACK_OFFSET 0x30 #endif