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INSTALL
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INSTALL
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Quick Installation Guide for musl libc
======================================
There are many different ways to install musl depending on your usage
case. This document covers only the build and installation of musl by
itself, which is useful for upgrading an existing musl-based system or
compiler toolchain, or for using the provided musl-gcc wrapper with an
existing non-musl-based compiler.
Building complete native or cross-compiler toolchains is outside the
scope of this INSTALL file. More information can be found on the musl
website and community wiki.
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 requirements
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. Firm/cparser is
also believed to work but lacks support for producing shared
libraries.
Supported Targets
-----------------
musl can be built for the following CPU instruction set architecture
and ABI combinations:
* i386
* Minimum CPU model is actually 80486 unless kernel emulation of
the `cmpxchg` instruction is added
* x86_64
* ARM
* EABI, standard or hard-float VFP variant
* Little-endian default; big-endian variants also supported
* Compiler toolchains only support armv4t and later
* MIPS
* ABI is o32
* Big-endian default; little-endian variants also supported
* Default ABI variant uses FPU registers; alternate soft-float ABI
that does not use FPU registers or instructions is available
* MIPS2 or later, or kernel emulation of ll/sc (standard in Linux)
is required
* PowerPC
* Only 32-bit is supported
* Compiler toolchain must provide 64-bit long double, not IBM
double-double or IEEE quad
* For dynamic linking, compiler toolchain must be configured for
"secure PLT" variant
* Microblaze
* Big-endian default; little-endian variants also supported
* Soft-float
* Requires support for lwx/swx instructions
The following additional targets are available for build, but may not
work correctly and may not yet have ABI stability:
* SuperH (SH)
* Little-endian by default; big-engian variant also supported
* Full FPU ABI or soft-float ABI is supported, but the
single-precision-only FPU ABI is not supported (musl always
requires IEEE single and double to be supported)
* x32 (x86_64 ILP32 ABI)
Build and Installation Procedure
--------------------------------
To build and install musl:
1. Run the provided configure script from the top-level source
directory, passing on its command line any desired options.
2. Run "make" to compile.
3. Run "make install" with appropriate privileges to write to the
target locations.
The configure script attempts to determine automatically the correct
target architecture based on the compiler being used. For some
compilers, this may not be possible. If detection fails or selects the
wrong architecture, you can provide an explicit selection on the
configure command line.
By default, configure installs to a prefix of "/usr/local/musl". This
differs from the behavior of most configure scripts, and is chosen
specifically to avoid clashing with libraries already present on the
system. DO NOT set the prefix to "/usr", "/usr/local", or "/" unless
you're upgrading libc on an existing musl-based system. Doing so will
break your existing system when you run "make install" and it may be
difficult to recover.
Notes on Dynamic Linking
------------------------
If dynamic linking is enabled, one file needs to be installed outside
of the installation prefix: /lib/ld-musl-$ARCH.so.1. This is the
dynamic linker. Its pathname is hard-coded into all dynamic-linked
programs, so for the sake of being able to share binaries between
systems, a consistent location should be used everywhere. Note that
the same applies to glibc and its dynamic linker, which is named
/lib/ld-linux.so.2 on i386 systems.
If for some reason it is impossible to install the dynamic linker in
its standard location (for example, if you are installing without root
privileges), the --syslibdir option to configure can be used to
provide a different location
At runtime, the dynamic linker needs to know the paths to search for
shared libraries. You should create a text file named
/etc/ld-musl-$ARCH.path (where $ARCH matches the architecture name
used in the dynamic linker) containing a list of directories where you
want the dynamic linker to search for shared libraries, separated by
colons or newlines. If the dynamic linker has been installed in a
non-default location, the path file also needs to reside at that
location (../etc relative to the chosen syslibdir).
If you do not intend to use dynamic linking, you may disable it by
passing --disable-shared to configure; this also cuts the build time
in half.
Checking for Successful Installation
------------------------------------
After installing, you should be able to 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
/usr/local/musl/bin/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.