On Wed, 30 Oct 2002, Doug Rabson wrote: > On Wed, 30 Oct 2002, Terry Lambert wrote: > > > Doug Rabson wrote: > > > On Wed, 30 Oct 2002, Terry Lambert wrote: > > > > Daniel Eischen wrote: > > > > > Patch looks correct. > > > > > > > > Please commit? 8-). > > > > > > Well I made a libc with this patch and rebuilt XFree86-4-libraries without > > > libXThrStub but I ran into problems compiling the clients. The clients > > > *require* someone in the link to supply the pthread_* symbols and libc.so > > > only had _pthread_* symbols. I added some more weak references to libc.so > > > but that just gets us back to square one. > > > > > > The problem is that the sawfish configuration tools are written using some > > > extensible lisp/scheme thing called rep. The main rep binary links against > > > libc.so so that occurs early in the list. Later on stacks of libraries are > > > loaded dynamically, some of which depend on libc_r.so. Unfortunately > > > libc_r.so is far too late in the list to get a lookin and it dies in > > > exactly the same way as before, for the same reason (calling a > > > non-functional stub version of pthread_setspecific(). > > > > You need to link the library against libc_r.so instead of libXThrStub.so. > > Probably not. Doing that breaks the existing 'feature' of being able to > use X11 in entirely non-threaded programs. I'm not sure whether that is > acceptable. It also stops programs from being able to select between > several thread implementations, of which -current has two. > > I think the only sensible solution to this problem is for libraries which > provide an actual pthreads implementation (rather than a set of stubs) to > define strong symbols. Wierd debugging wrappers can still be achieved via > some dlopen/dlsym hackery.
For what its worth, doing this (defining strong pthread_* symbols in libc_r) makes everything work fine, with or without libXThrStub. -- Doug Rabson Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Phone: +44 20 8348 6160 To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message