musl/INSTALL
2012-10-26 20:14:19 -04:00

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==== Installing musl ====
musl may be installed either as an alternate C library alongside the
existing libraries on a system, or as the primary C library for a new
or existing musl-based system.
This document covers the prerequisites and procedures for compiling
and installation.
==== Build Prerequisites ====
The only build-time prerequisites for musl are GNU Make and a
freestanding C99 compiler toolchain targeting the desired instruction
set architecture and ABI, with support for gcc-style inline assembly,
weak aliases, and stand-alone assembly source files.
The system used to build musl does not need to be Linux-based, nor do
the Linux kernel headers need to be available.
If support for dynamic linking is desired, some further requriements
are placed on the compiler and linker. In particular, the linker must
support the -Bsymbolic-functions option.
At present, GCC 4.6 or later is the recommended compiler for building
musl. Any earlier version of GCC with full C99 support should also
work, but may be subject to minor floating point conformance issues on
i386 targets. Sufficiently recent versions of PCC and LLVM/clang are
also believed to work, but have not been tested as heavily; prior to
Fall 2012, both had known bugs that affected musl.
=== Supported Targets ====
musl can be built for the following CPU instruction set architecture
and ABI combinations:
- i386 (requires 387 math and 486 cmpxchg instructions)
- x86_64
- arm (EABI)
- mips (o32 ABI, requires fpu or float emulation in kernel)
- microblaze (requires a cpu with lwx/swx instructions)
For architectures with both little- and big-endian options, both are
supported unless otherwise noted.
In general, musl assumes the availability of all Linux syscall
interfaces available in Linux 2.6.0. Some programs that do not use
threads or other modern functionality may be able to run on 2.4.x
kernels. Other kernels (such as BSD) that provide a Linux-compatible
syscall ABI should also work but have not been extensively tested.
==== Option 1: Installing musl as an alternate C library ====
In this setup, musl and any third-party libraries linked to musl will
reside under an alternate prefix such as /usr/local/musl or /opt/musl.
A wrapper script for gcc, called musl-gcc, can be used in place of gcc
to compile and link programs and libraries against musl.
(Note: There are not yet corresponding wrapper scripts for other
compilers, so if you wish to compile and link against musl using
another compiler, you are responsible for providing the correct
options to override the default include and library search paths.)
To install musl as an alternate libc, follow these steps:
1. Configure musl's build with a command similar to:
./configure --prefix=/usr/local/musl --exec-prefix=/usr/local
Refer to ./configure --help for details on other options. You may
change the install prefix if you like, but DO NOT set it to a
location that contains your existing libraries based on another
libc such as glibc or uClibc. If you do not intend to use dynamic
linking, you may disable it at this point via --disable-shared and
cut the build time in half. If you wish to use dynamic linking but
do not have permissions to write to /lib, you will need to set an
alternate dynamic linker location via --syslibdir.
2. Run "make". Parallel build is fully supported, so you can instead
use "make -j3" or so on SMP systems if you like.
3. Run "make install" as a user sufficient privileges to write to the
destination.
4. Create a file named /etc/ld-musl-$ARCH.path (where $ARCH is
replaced by i386, x86_64, etc. as appropriate) containing the
correct colon-delimited search path for where you intend to install
musl-linked shared library files. If this file is missing, musl
will search the standard path, and you will encounter problems when
it attempts to load libraries linked against your host libc. Note
that this step can be skipped if you disabled dynamic linking.
After installing, you can use musl via the musl-gcc wrapper. For
example:
cat > hello.c <<EOF
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
printf("hello, world!\n");
return 0;
}
EOF
musl-gcc hello.c
./a.out
To configure autoconf-based program to compile and link against musl,
set the CC variable to musl-gcc when running configure, as in:
CC=musl-gcc ./configure ...
You will probably also want to use --prefix when building libraries to
ensure that they are installed under the musl prefix and not in the
main host system library directories.
Finally, it's worth noting that musl's include and lib directories in
the build tree are setup to be usable without installation, if
necessary. Just modify the the paths in the spec file used by musl-gcc
(it's located at $prefix/lib/musl-gcc.specs) to point to the
source/build tree.
==== Option 2: Installing musl as the primary C library ====
In this setup, you will need an existing compiler/toolchain. It
shouldnt matter whether it was configured for glibc, uClibc, musl, or
something else entirely, but sometimes gcc can be uncooperative,
especially if the system distributor has built gcc with strange
options. It probably makes the most sense to perform the following
steps inside a chroot setup or on a virtualized machine with the
filesystem containing just a minimal toolchain.
WARNING: DO NOT DO THIS ON AN EXISTING SYSTEM UNLESS YOU REALLY WANT
TO CONVERT IT TO BE A MUSL-BASED SYSTEM!!
1. If you are just upgrading an existing version of musl, you can skip
step 1 entirely. Otherwise, move the existing include and lib
directories on your system out of the way. Unless all the binaries
you will need are static-linked, you should edit /etc/ld.so.conf
(or equivalent) and put the new locations of your old libraries in
the search path before you move them, or your system will break
badly and you will not be able to continue.
2. Configure musl's build with a command similar to:
./configure --prefix=/usr --disable-gcc-wrapper
Refer to ./configure --help for details on other options.
3. Run "make" to compile musl.
4. Run "make install" with appropriate privileges.
5. If you are using gcc and wish to use dynamic linking, find the gcc
directory containing libgcc.a (it should be something like
/usr/lib/gcc/i486-linux-gnu/4.3.5, with the arch and version
possibly different) and look for a specs file there. If none
exists, use "gcc -dumpspecs > specs" to generate a specs file. Find
the dynamic linker (/lib/ld-linux.so.2 or similar) and change it to
"/lib/ld-musl-$ARCH.so.1" (with $ARCH replaced by your CPU arch).
At this point, musl should be the default libc. Compile a small test
program with gcc and verify (using readelf -a or objdump -x) that the
dynamic linker (program interpreter) is /lib/ld-musl-$ARCH.so.1. If
you're using static linking only, you might instead check the symbols
and look for anything suspicious that would indicate your old glibc or
uClibc was used.