toolchain-external: don't create gdb symlink when building host-gdb

The external-toolchain infrastructure creates symbolic links for all
tools in the host directory. However, when buildroot builds its own
version of a cross debugger (BR2_PACKAGE_HOST_GDB), and the toolchain
also provides a cross debugger, there would be two symbolic links for
gdb in the host directory, which is confusing.
An example use case is where the external toolchain only provides a
64-bit gdbserver (e.g. Cavium Networks SDK) but the target is completely
32-bit (e.g. n32 ABI). In this case, using gdbserver on target requires
copying a bunch of 64-bit libraries to the target as well, just for gdb.
In this case, one can let buildroot build both gdbserver as cross-gdb
(both in 32-bit).

This patch modifies the symlink creation so that no gdb (or gdbtui)
symlink is created if buildroot is going to build a cross-gdb.

Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de.schampheleire@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
This commit is contained in:
Thomas De Schampheleire 2013-07-30 18:32:30 +02:00 committed by Thomas Petazzoni
parent 1f3078b1cc
commit 97565866e8

View File

@ -531,8 +531,9 @@ ifeq ($(BR2_BFIN_INSTALL_FLAT_SHARED),y)
TOOLCHAIN_EXTERNAL_INSTALL += $(STAMP_DIR)/ext-toolchain-bfin-shared-flat-installed
endif
# Build toolchain wrapper for preprocessor, C and C++ compiler, and setup
# symlinks for everything else
# Build toolchain wrapper for preprocessor, C and C++ compiler and setup
# symlinks for everything else. Skip gdb symlink when we are building our
# own gdb to prevent two gdb's in output/host/usr/bin.
$(HOST_DIR)/usr/bin/ext-toolchain-wrapper: $(TOOLCHAIN_EXTERNAL_INSTALL)
$(Q)$(call MESSAGE,"Building ext-toolchain wrapper")
mkdir -p $(HOST_DIR)/usr/bin; cd $(HOST_DIR)/usr/bin; \
@ -542,6 +543,11 @@ $(HOST_DIR)/usr/bin/ext-toolchain-wrapper: $(TOOLCHAIN_EXTERNAL_INSTALL)
*cc|*cc-*|*++|*++-*|*cpp) \
ln -sf $(@F) $$base; \
;; \
*gdb|*gdbtui) \
if test "$(BR2_PACKAGE_HOST_GDB)" != "y"; then \
ln -sf $$(echo $$i | sed 's%^$(HOST_DIR)%../..%') .; \
fi \
;; \
*) \
ln -sf $$(echo $$i | sed 's%^$(HOST_DIR)%../..%') .; \
;; \