Pieter de Goeje wrote:
Hello List,
I have these files:
--- loader.cpp ---
#include <stdio.h>
#include "tls.h"

int main() {
        tls = 0;
        printf("%d\n", tls);
}

--- tls.cpp ---
#include "tls.h"
int __thread tls;

--- tls.h ---
extern __thread int tls;

When I compile them like this:
c++ -fPIC -o tls.so tls.cpp -shared
c++ -fPIC -o loader loader.cpp tls.so

And run the resulting program, I get:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~/projects/misc/tls> ./loader
/libexec/ld-elf.so.1: ./loader: Unsupported relocation type 37 in non-PLT relocations
When I omit -fPIC, it runs fine. But I need fPIC for the shared object on 
amd64 arch. I've tried it on Linux/i386 (gcc 4.1) and it ran fine (with 
fPIC).
Much to my surprise however, a particularly large application I'm working on 
did compile & run on FreeBSD/amd64 using -fpic (lowercase) and gcc 4.3. 
Trying -fpic on FreeBSD/i386 resulted in failure.
FYI, I need tls to work because I'm using OpenMP's tls (#pragma omp 
threadprivate()) support in gcc 4.3.
The workaround I found on FreeBSD/amd64 was linking the main executable 
with -fno-PIC, or building everything with -fpic. (both workarounds didn't 
work on FreeBSD/i386)
I would be grateful if someone could shed some light on this.

Regards,
Pieter de Goeje
Pieter,
Did you know that -fPIC and -fpic aren't the same? From <http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-4.1.2/gcc/Code-Gen-Options.html#Code-Gen-Options>:
|-fpic|
   Generate position-independent code (PIC) suitable for use in a
   shared library, if supported for the target machine. Such code
   accesses all constant addresses through a global offset table (GOT).
   The dynamic loader resolves the GOT entries when the program starts
   (the dynamic loader is not part of GCC; it is part of the operating
   system). If the GOT size for the linked executable exceeds a
   machine-specific maximum size, you get an error message from the
   linker indicating that -fpic does not work; in that case, recompile
   with -fPIC instead. (These maximums are 8k on the SPARC and 32k on
   the m68k and RS/6000. The 386 has no such limit.)

   Position-independent code requires special support, and therefore
   works only on certain machines. For the 386, GCC supports PIC for
   System V but not for the Sun 386i. Code generated for the IBM
   RS/6000 is always position-independent.

|-fPIC|
   If supported for the target machine, emit position-independent code,
   suitable for dynamic linking and avoiding any limit on the size of
   the global offset table. This option makes a difference on the m68k,
   PowerPC and SPARC.

   Position-independent code requires special support, and therefore
   works only on certain machines.

Cheers,
-Garrett
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