1 README for BINUTILS 2 3 These are the GNU binutils. These are utilities of use when dealing 4 with binary files, either object files or executables. These tools 5 consist of the linkers (ld and gold), the assembler (gas), and the 6 profiler (gprof and gprofng) each of which have their own 7 sub-directory named after them. There is also a collection of other 8 binary tools, including the disassembler (objdump) in this directory. 9 These tools make use of a pair of libraries (bfd and opcodes) and a 10 common set of header files (include). 11 12 There are README and NEWS files in most of the program sub-directories 13 which give more information about those specific programs. 14 15 16 Copyright Notices 17 ================= 18 19 Copyright years on binutils source files may be listed using range 20 notation, e.g., 1991-2021, indicating that every year in the range, 21 inclusive, is a copyrightable year that could otherwise be listed 22 individually. 23 24 25 Unpacking and Installation -- quick overview 26 ============================================ 27 28 When you unpack the binutils archive file, you will get a directory 29 called something like `binutils-XXX', where XXX is the number of the 30 release. (Probably 2.36 or higher). This directory contains 31 various files and sub-directories. Most of the files in the top 32 directory are for information and for configuration. The actual 33 source code is in sub-directories. 34 35 To build binutils you will need a C99 compliant compiler and library. 36 You can just do: 37 38 cd binutils-XXX 39 ./configure [options] 40 make 41 make install # copies the programs files into /usr/local/bin 42 # by default. 43 44 This will configure and build all the libraries as well as the 45 assembler, the binutils, and the linker. 46 47 Note - if you have obtained the sources by checking out a copy from 48 the git repository then you will have both the binutils and GDB 49 sources in one place. In this case you may wish to add an option to 50 the configure command line to stop it from configuring GDB. This will 51 also stop the configure script from checking the libraries that are 52 needed by GDB, but not by the binutils. 53 54 ./configure --disable-gdb 55 56 Since the configure script can be quite verbose, you may also 57 want to add the --quiet option to reduce the amount of output. ie: 58 59 ./configure --quiet 60 61 If you have GNU make, we recommend building in a different directory: 62 63 mkdir objdir 64 cd objdir 65 ../binutils-XXX/configure [options] 66 make 67 make install 68 69 This relies on the VPATH feature of GNU make. 70 71 By default, the binutils will be configured to support the system on 72 which they are built. When doing cross development, use the --target 73 configure option to specify a different target, eg: 74 75 ./configure --target=powerpc64le-linux 76 77 The --enable-targets option adds support for more binary file formats 78 besides the default. List them as the argument to --enable-targets, 79 separated by commas. For example: 80 81 ./configure --enable-targets=powerpc-linux,rs6000-aix 82 83 The name 'all' compiles in support for all valid BFD targets: 84 85 ./configure --enable-targets=all 86 87 On 32-bit hosts though, this support will be restricted to 32-bit 88 target unless the --enable-64-bit-bfd option is also used: 89 90 ./configure --enable-64-bit-bfd --enable-targets=all 91 92 You can also specify the --enable-shared option when you run 93 configure. This will build the BFD and opcodes libraries as shared 94 libraries. You can use arguments with the --enable-shared option to 95 indicate that only certain libraries should be built shared; for 96 example, --enable-shared=bfd. The only potential shared libraries in 97 a binutils release are bfd and opcodes. 98 99 The binutils will be linked against the shared libraries. The build 100 step will attempt to place the correct library in the run-time search 101 path for the binaries. However, in some cases, after you install the 102 binaries, you may have to set an environment variable, normally 103 LD_LIBRARY_PATH, so that the system can find the installed libbfd 104 shared library. 105 106 On hosts that support shared system libraries the binutils will be 107 linked against them. If you have static versions of the system 108 libraries installed as well and you wish to create static binaries 109 instead then use the LDFLAGS environment variable, like this: 110 111 ../binutils-XXX/configure LDFLAGS="--static" [more options] 112 113 Note: the two dashes are important. The binutils make use of the 114 libtool script which has a special interpretation of "-static" when it 115 is in the LDFLAGS environment variable. 116 117 To build under openVMS/AXP, see the file makefile.vms in the top level 118 directory. 119 120 121 Native Language Support 122 ======================= 123 124 By default Native Language Support will be enabled for binutils. On 125 some systems however this support is not present and can lead to error 126 messages such as "undefined reference to `libintl_gettext'" when 127 building these tools. If that happens the NLS support can be disabled 128 by adding the --disable-nls switch to the configure line like this: 129 130 ../binutils-XXX/configure --disable-nls 131 132 133 If you don't have ar 134 ==================== 135 136 If your system does not already have an 'ar' program, the normal 137 binutils build process will not work. In this case, run configure as 138 usual. Before running make, run this script: 139 140 #!/bin/sh 141 MAKE_PROG="${MAKE-make}" 142 MAKE="${MAKE_PROG} AR=true LINK=true" 143 export MAKE 144 ${MAKE} $* all-libiberty 145 ${MAKE} $* all-intl 146 ${MAKE} $* all-bfd 147 cd binutils 148 MAKE="${MAKE_PROG}" 149 export MAKE 150 ${MAKE} $* ar_DEPENDENCIES= ar_LDADD='../bfd/*.o ../libiberty/*.o `if test -f ../intl/gettext.o; then echo '../intl/*.o'; fi`' ar 151 152 This script will build an ar program in binutils/ar. Move binutils/ar 153 into a directory on your PATH. After doing this, you can run make as 154 usual to build the complete binutils distribution. You do not need 155 the ranlib program in order to build the distribution. 156 157 Porting 158 ======= 159 160 Binutils-2.36 supports many different architectures, but there 161 are many more not supported, including some that were supported 162 by earlier versions. We are hoping for volunteers to improve this 163 situation. 164 165 The major effort in porting binutils to a new host and/or target 166 architecture involves the BFD library. There is some documentation 167 in ../bfd/doc. The file ../gdb/doc/gdbint.texinfo (distributed 168 with gdb-5.x) may also be of help. 169 170 Reporting bugs 171 ============== 172 173 Please report bugs via 174 175 https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/enter_bug.cgi?product=binutils 176 177 Please include the following in bug reports: 178 179 - A description of exactly what went wrong, and exactly what should have 180 happened instead. 181 182 - The configuration name(s) given to the "configure" script. The 183 "config.status" file should have this information. This is assuming 184 you built binutils yourself. If you didn't build binutils youself, 185 then we need information regarding your machine and operating system, 186 and it may be more appropriate to report bugs to wherever you obtained 187 binutils. 188 189 - The options given to the tool (gas, objcopy, ld etc.) at run time. 190 191 - The actual input file that caused the problem. 192 193 Always mention the version number you are running; this is printed by 194 running any of the binutils with the --version option. We appreciate 195 reports about bugs, but we do not promise to fix them, particularly so 196 when the bug report is against an old version. If you are able, please 197 consider building the latest tools from git to check that your bug has 198 not already been fixed. 199 200 When reporting problems about gas and ld, it's useful to provide a 201 testcase that triggers the problem. In the case of a gas problem, we 202 want input files to gas and command line switches used. The inputs to 203 gas are _NOT_ .c or .i files, but rather .s files. If your original 204 source was a C program, you can generate the .s file and see the command 205 line options by passing -v -save-temps to gcc in addition to all the 206 usual options you use. The reason we don't want C files is that we 207 might not have a C compiler around for the target you use. While it 208 might be possible to build a compiler, that takes considerable time and 209 disk space, and we might not end up with exactly the same compiler you 210 use. 211 212 In the case of a ld problem, the input files are .o, .a and .so files, 213 and possibly a linker script specified with -T. Again, when using gcc 214 to link, you can see these files by adding options to the gcc command 215 line. Use -v -save-temps -Wl,-t, except that on targets that use gcc's 216 collect2, you would add -v -save-temps -Wl,-t,-debug. The -t option 217 tells ld to print all files and libraries used, so that, for example, 218 you can associate -lc on the ld command line with the actual libc used. 219 Note that your simple two line C program to trigger a problem typically 220 expands into several megabytes of objects by the time you include 221 libraries. 222 223 There is a limit to the size of attachments accepted by bugzilla. If 224 compressing your testcase does not result in an acceptable size tar or 225 zip file, please put large testcases somewhere on an ftp or web site. 226 Better still, try to reduce the testcase, for example, try to develop 227 a ld testcase that doesn't use system libraries. However, please be 228 sure it is a complete testcase and that it really does demonstrate the 229 problem. Also, don't bother paring it down if that will cause large 230 delays in filing the bug report. 231 232 If you expect to be contributing a large number of test cases, it would 233 be helpful if you would look at the test suite included in the release 234 (based on the Deja Gnu testing framework, available from the usual ftp 235 sites) and write test cases to fit into that framework. This is 236 certainly not required. 237 238 VMS 239 === 240 241 This section was written by Klaus K"ampf <kkaempf (a] rmi.de>. It 242 describes how to build and install the binutils on openVMS (Alpha and 243 Vax). (The BFD library only supports reading Vax object files.) 244 245 Compiling the release: 246 247 To compile the gnu binary utilities and the gnu assembler, you'll 248 need DEC C or GNU C for openVMS/Alpha. You'll need *both* compilers 249 on openVMS/Vax. 250 251 Compiling with either DEC C or GNU C works on openVMS/Alpha only. Some 252 of the opcodes and binutils files trap a bug in the DEC C optimizer, 253 so these files must be compiled with /noopt. 254 255 Compiling on openVMS/Vax is a bit complicated, as the bfd library traps 256 a bug in GNU C and the gnu assembler a bug in (my version of) DEC C. 257 258 I never tried compiling with VAX C. 259 260 261 You further need GNU Make Version 3.76 or later. This is available 262 at ftp.progis.de or any GNU archive site. The makefiles assume that 263 gmake starts gnu make as a foreign command. 264 265 If you're compiling with DEC C or VAX C, you must run 266 267 $ @setup 268 269 before starting gnu-make. This isn't needed with GNU C. 270 271 On the Alpha you can choose the compiler by editing the toplevel 272 makefile.vms. Either select CC=cc (for DEC C) or CC=gcc (for GNU C) 273 274 275 Installing the release 276 277 Provided that your directory setup conforms to the GNU on openVMS 278 standard, you already have a concealed device named 'GNU_ROOT'. 279 In this case, a simple 280 281 $ gmake install 282 283 suffices to copy all programs and libraries to the proper directories. 284 285 Define the programs as foreign commands by adding these lines to your 286 login.com: 287 288 $ gas :== $GNU_ROOT:[bin]as.exe 289 $ size :== $GNU_ROOT:[bin]size.exe 290 $ nm :== $GNU_ROOT:[bin]nm.exe 291 $ objdump :== $GNU_ROOT:[bin]objdump.exe 292 $ strings :== $GNU_ROOT:[bin]strings.exe 293 294 If you have a different directory setup, copy the binary utilities 295 ([.binutils]size.exe, [.binutils]nm.exe, [.binutils]objdump.exe, 296 and [.binutils]strings.exe) and the gnu assembler and preprocessor 297 ([.gas]as.exe and [.gas]gasp.exe]) to a directory of your choice 298 and define all programs as foreign commands. 299 300 301 If you're satisfied with the compilation, you may want to remove 302 unneeded objects and libraries: 303 304 $ gmake clean 305 306 307 If you have any problems or questions about the binutils on VMS, feel 308 free to mail me at kkaempf (a] rmi.de. 309 311 Copyright (C) 2012-2025 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 312 313 Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification, 314 are permitted in any medium without royalty provided the copyright 315 notice and this notice are preserved. 316