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bug#43513: json-c build failure (on armhf-linux) while trying to build u


From: Danny Milosavljevic
Subject: bug#43513: json-c build failure (on armhf-linux) while trying to build u-boot
Date: Fri, 25 Sep 2020 13:13:22 +0200

Hi Ludo,

On Fri, 25 Sep 2020 12:13:40 +0200
Ludovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org> wrote:

> Let’s fix CMake (and JSON-C?) in ‘core-updates’ or ‘staging’ (using a
> graft for CMake wouldn’t help because CMake is used at build time.)

Sure--cmake upstream will fix it anyway and make a new release.

But I now opened bug# 43591 on guix-patches in order to find all the OTHER
problems this causes we didn't see yet.  I already ran it on my laptop in
order to find all the users trying to stick a 64-bit value into a 32-bit
slot and it looks very bad--there are instances of this problem in libstdc++,
binutils bfd etcetc.

I suggest to delete all ARM substitutes that were built on x86_64 machines
and disable the builders using x86_64 to build ARM stuff in the mean time.
What that has built is VERY MUCH not reliable since readdir() was broken
sporadically--and compilers need that :P

> It doesn’t make sense to cross-compile from x86_64 to i686.  Instead we
> should use a native build, but an i686 one:
> 
>   (package/inherit qemu
>     (arguments `(#:system "i686-linux" ,@(package-arguments qemu))))

Sure.

I'm still hoping we can skip the workaround and do the right thing instead
(compiling everything with -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 regardless of architecture).

I thought this matter with making everyone use LFS was settled in about
2007--but no, here we go again :(

Even if we did the workaround with qemu here, that still means the kernel
(via a compatibility layer) is going to lie to qemu about file offsets and
directory entry hashes.  That doesn't sound good for reproducibility.

Also, I want to be clear that qemu is not at fault here.

It's fundamentally unsound to call getdents64 and expect a value with less
than 64 bits back.  But that is what glibc does.

Users (other packages) who use _FILE_OFFSET_BITS=32 (by not setting
_FILE_OFFSET_BITS at all) in 2020, those are at fault.

> Likewise for AArch64/ARMv7.

I do not think the X86_32 compatibility layer works on aarch64, so now we have
a problem.  That means building stuff for ARMv7 on aarch64 is not reliable at
all.

The right fix is to always use "-D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64" in user space.  Then
none of this weird stuff needs to be done.

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