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1 Frequently Asked Questions about the GNU C Library
2
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3This document tries to answer questions a user might have when installing
4and using glibc. Please make sure you read this before sending questions or
5bug reports to the maintainers.
61952351 6
f12944ec 7The GNU C library is very complex. The installation process has not been
fdacb17d 8completely automated; there are too many variables. You can do substantial
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9damage to your system by installing the library incorrectly. Make sure you
10understand what you are undertaking before you begin.
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11
12If you have any questions you think should be answered in this document,
13please let me know.
14
15 --drepper@cygnus.com
16\f
17? Compiling glibc
18
19?? What systems does the GNU C Library run on?
20
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21{UD} This is difficult to answer. The file `README' lists the architectures
22GNU libc was known to run on *at some time*. This does not mean that it
23still can be compiled and run on them now.
61952351 24
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25The systems glibc is known to work on as of this release, and most probably
26in the future, are:
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27
28 *-*-gnu GNU Hurd
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29 i[3456]86-*-linux-gnu Linux-2.x on Intel
30 m68k-*-linux-gnu Linux-2.x on Motorola 680x0
2bbc70d5 31 alpha*-*-linux-gnu Linux-2.x on DEC Alpha
61952351 32 powerpc-*-linux-gnu Linux and MkLinux on PowerPC systems
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33 sparc-*-linux-gnu Linux-2.x on SPARC
34 sparc64-*-linux-gnu Linux-2.x on UltraSPARC
a35cb74d 35 arm-*-none ARM standalone systems
cb0509a8 36 arm-*-linux Linux-2.x on ARM
a35cb74d 37 arm-*-linuxaout Linux-2.x on ARM using a.out binaries
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38 mips*-*-linux-gnu Linux-2.x on MIPS
39 ia64-*-linux-gnu Linux-2.x on ia64
92ec318f 40 s390-*-linux-gnu Linux-2.x on IBM S/390
4a5b72ff 41 s390x-*-linux-gnu Linux-2.x on IBM S/390 64-bit
eacde9d0 42 cris-*-linux-gnu Linux-2.4+ on CRIS
61952351 43
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44Ports to other Linux platforms are in development, and may in fact work
45already, but no one has sent us success reports for them. Currently no
46ports to other operating systems are underway, although a few people have
47expressed interest.
61952351 48
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49If you have a system not listed above (or in the `README' file) and you are
50really interested in porting it, contact
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b9b49b44 52 <bug-glibc@gnu.org>
61952351 53
57b4b78a 54??binsize What compiler do I need to build GNU libc?
61952351 55
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56{UD} You must use GNU CC to compile GNU libc. A lot of extensions of GNU CC
57are used to increase portability and speed.
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58
59GNU CC is found, like all other GNU packages, on
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2eb45444 61 ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu
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2eb45444 63and the many mirror sites. ftp.gnu.org is always overloaded, so try to find
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64a local mirror first.
65
ceb27555 66You should always try to use the latest official release. Older versions
f12944ec 67may not have all the features GNU libc requires. The current releases of
7b32d065 68gcc (2.95 or newer) should work with the GNU C library (for powerpc see
92ec318f 69?powerpc; for ARM see ?arm; for MIPS see ?mips).
61952351 70
6e8afc1c 71Please note that gcc 2.95 and 2.95.x cannot compile glibc on Alpha due to
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72problems in the complex float support.
73
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74?? When I try to compile glibc I get only error messages.
75 What's wrong?
76
b1418d8f 77{UD} You definitely need GNU make to build GNU libc. No other make
f12944ec 78program has the needed functionality.
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80We recommend version GNU make version 3.79 or newer. Older versions have
81bugs and/or are missing features.
61952351 82
d89e7a96 83?? Do I need a special linker or assembler?
61952351 84
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85{ZW} If you want a shared library, you need a linker and assembler that
86understand all the features of ELF, including weak and versioned symbols.
87The static library can be compiled with less featureful tools, but lacks key
88features such as NSS.
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90For Linux or Hurd, you want binutils 2.10.1 or higher. These are the only
91versions we've tested and found reliable. Other versions may work but we
92don't recommend them, especially not when C++ is involved.
7fd18ea2 93
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94Other operating systems may come with system tools that have all the
95necessary features, but this is moot because glibc hasn't been ported to
96them.
61952351 97
8619129f 98??powerpc Which compiler should I use for powerpc?
4775243a 99
83f6a990 100{GK} You want to use at least gcc 2.95 (together with the right versions
3b019077 101of all the other tools, of course). See also ?excpt.
4775243a 102
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103??arm Which tools should I use for ARM?
104
105{PB} You should use egcs 1.1 or a later version. For ELF systems some
106changes are needed to the compiler; a patch against egcs-1.1.x can be found
107at:
108
109<ftp://ftp.netwinder.org/users/p/philb/egcs-1.1.1pre2-diff-981126>
110
b0ed91ae 111Binutils 2.10.1 or later is also required.
cb0509a8 112
d89e7a96 113?? Do I need some more things to compile the GNU C Library?
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114
115{UD} Yes, there are some more :-).
116
117* GNU gettext. This package contains the tools needed to construct
118 `message catalog' files containing translated versions of system
2eb45444 119 messages. See ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu or better any mirror
61952351 120 site. (We distribute compiled message catalogs, but they may not be
c26b4f64 121 updated in patches.)
61952351 122
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123* Some files are built with special tools. E.g., files ending in .gperf
124 need a `gperf' program. The GNU version (now available in a separate
125 package, formerly only as part of libg++) is known to work while some
126 vendor versions do not.
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127
128 You should not need these tools unless you change the source files.
129
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130* Perl 5 is needed if you wish to test an installation of GNU libc
131 as the primary C library.
bd355af0 132
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133* When compiling for Linux, the header files of the Linux kernel must
134 be available to the compiler as <linux/*.h> and <asm/*.h>.
135
02228370 136* lots of disk space (~400MB for i?86-linux; more for RISC platforms).
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137
138* plenty of time. Compiling just the shared and static libraries for
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139 35mins on a 2xPIII@550Mhz w/ 512MB RAM. On a 2xUltraSPARC-II@360Mhz
140 w/ 1GB RAM it takes about 14 minutes. Multiply this by 1.5 or 2.0
141 if you build profiling and/or the highly optimized version as well.
142 For Hurd systems times are much higher.
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143
144 You should avoid compiling in a NFS mounted filesystem. This is
145 very slow.
146
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147 James Troup <J.J.Troup@comp.brad.ac.uk> reports a compile time for
148 an earlier (and smaller!) version of glibc of 45h34m for a full build
149 (shared, static, and profiled) on Atari Falcon (Motorola 68030 @ 16 Mhz,
150 14 Mb memory) and Jan Barte <yann@plato.uni-paderborn.de> reports
151 22h48m on Atari TT030 (Motorola 68030 @ 32 Mhz, 34 Mb memory)
61952351 152
83f6a990 153 A full build of the PowerPC library took 1h on a PowerPC 750@400Mhz w/
6e8afc1c 154 64MB of RAM, and about 9h on a 601@60Mhz w/ 72Mb.
83f6a990 155
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156 If you have some more measurements let me know.
157
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158?? What version of the Linux kernel headers should be used?
159
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160{AJ,UD} The headers from the most recent Linux kernel should be used. The
161headers used while compiling the GNU C library and the kernel binary used
162when using the library do not need to match. The GNU C library runs without
163problems on kernels that are older than the kernel headers used. The other
164way round (compiling the GNU C library with old kernel headers and running
165on a recent kernel) does not necessarily work. For example you can't use
b1418d8f 166new kernel features if you used old kernel headers to compile the GNU C
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167library.
168
ceb27555 169{ZW} Even if you are using a 2.0 kernel on your machine, we recommend you
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170compile GNU libc with 2.2 kernel headers. That way you won't have to
171recompile libc if you ever upgrade to kernel 2.2. To tell libc which
ceb27555 172headers to use, give configure the --with-headers switch
440d13e2 173(e.g. --with-headers=/usr/src/linux-2.2.0/include).
ceb27555 174
440d13e2 175Note that you must configure the 2.2 kernel if you do this, otherwise libc
62595351 176will be unable to find <linux/version.h>. Just change the current directory
440d13e2 177to the root of the 2.2 tree and do `make include/linux/version.h'.
ceb27555 178
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179?? The compiler hangs while building iconvdata modules. What's
180 wrong?
181
7b32d065 182{} Removed. Does not apply anymore.
d111572f 183
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184?? When I run `nm -u libc.so' on the produced library I still
185 find unresolved symbols. Can this be ok?
186
f12944ec 187{UD} Yes, this is ok. There can be several kinds of unresolved symbols:
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188
189* magic symbols automatically generated by the linker. These have names
190 like __start_* and __stop_*
191
192* symbols starting with _dl_* come from the dynamic linker
193
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194* weak symbols, which need not be resolved at all (fabs for example)
195
196Generally, you should make sure you find a real program which produces
197errors while linking before deciding there is a problem.
198
199??addon What are these `add-ons'?
200
f12944ec 201{UD} To avoid complications with export rules or external source code some
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202optional parts of the libc are distributed as separate packages, e.g., the
203linuxthreads package.
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205To use these packages as part of GNU libc, just unpack the tarfiles in the
206libc source directory and tell the configuration script about them using the
207--enable-add-ons option. If you give just --enable-add-ons configure tries
208to find all the add-on packages in your source tree. This may not work. If
209it doesn't, or if you want to select only a subset of the add-ons, give a
210comma-separated list of the add-ons to enable:
61952351 211
c0f53cdd 212 configure --enable-add-ons=linuxthreads
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213
214for example.
215
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216Add-ons can add features (including entirely new shared libraries), override
217files, provide support for additional architectures, and just about anything
218else. The existing makefiles do most of the work; only some few stub rules
219must be written to get everything running.
61952351 220
5bb17dca 221Most add-ons are tightly coupled to a specific GNU libc version. Please
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222check that the add-ons work with the GNU libc. For example the linuxthreads
223add-on has the same numbering scheme as the libc and will in general only
224work with the corresponding libc.
225
226{AJ} With glibc 2.2 the crypt add-on and with glibc 2.1 the localedata
227add-on have been integrated into the normal glibc distribution, crypt and
228localedata are therefore not anymore add-ons.
5bb17dca 229
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230?? My XXX kernel emulates a floating-point coprocessor for me.
231 Should I enable --with-fp?
232
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233{ZW} An emulated FPU is just as good as a real one, as far as the C library
234is concerned. You only need to say --without-fp if your machine has no way
235to execute floating-point instructions.
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236
237People who are interested in squeezing the last drop of performance
238out of their machine may wish to avoid the trap overhead, but this is
239far more trouble than it's worth: you then have to compile
240*everything* this way, including the compiler's internal libraries
241(libgcc.a for GNU C), because the calling conventions change.
242
243?? When compiling GNU libc I get lots of errors saying functions
244 in glibc are duplicated in libgcc.
245
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246{EY} This is *exactly* the same problem that I was having. The problem was
247due to the fact that configure didn't correctly detect that the linker flag
248--no-whole-archive was supported in my linker. In my case it was because I
249had run ./configure with bogus CFLAGS, and the test failed.
61952351 250
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251One thing that is particularly annoying about this problem is that once this
252is misdetected, running configure again won't fix it unless you first delete
253config.cache.
61952351 254
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255{UD} Starting with glibc-2.0.3 there should be a better test to avoid some
256problems of this kind. The setting of CFLAGS is checked at the very
257beginning and if it is not usable `configure' will bark.
61952351 258
74015205 259?? Why do I get messages about missing thread functions when I use
da2d1bc5 260 librt? I don't even use threads.
74015205 261
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262{UD} In this case you probably mixed up your installation. librt uses
263threads internally and has implicit references to the thread library.
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264Normally these references are satisfied automatically but if the thread
265library is not in the expected place you must tell the linker where it is.
266When using GNU ld it works like this:
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267
268 gcc -o foo foo.c -Wl,-rpath-link=/some/other/dir -lrt
269
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270The `/some/other/dir' should contain the thread library. `ld' will use the
271given path to find the implicitly referenced library while not disturbing
272any other link path.
74015205 273
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274?? What's the problem with configure --enable-omitfp?
275
276{AJ} When --enable-omitfp is set the libraries are built without frame
fdacb17d 277pointers. Some compilers produce buggy code for this model and therefore we
f12944ec 278don't advise using it at the moment.
61952351 279
fdacb17d 280If you use --enable-omitfp, you're on your own. If you encounter problems
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281with a library that was build this way, we advise you to rebuild the library
282without --enable-omitfp. If the problem vanishes consider tracking the
283problem down and report it as compiler failure.
61952351 284
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285Since a library built with --enable-omitfp is undebuggable on most systems,
286debuggable libraries are also built - you can use them by appending "_g" to
f12944ec 287the library names.
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289The compilation of these extra libraries and the compiler optimizations slow
290down the build process and need more disk space.
61952351 291
b1418d8f 292?? I get failures during `make check'. What should I do?
b0610668 293
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294{AJ} The testsuite should compile and run cleanly on your system; every
295failure should be looked into. Depending on the failures, you probably
296should not install the library at all.
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297
298You should consider using the `glibcbug' script to report the failure,
299providing as much detail as possible. If you run a test directly, please
300remember to set up the environment correctly. You want to test the compiled
301library - and not your installed one. The best way is to copy the exact
302command line which failed and run the test from the subdirectory for this
303test in the sources.
304
305There are some failures which are not directly related to the GNU libc:
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306- Some compilers produce buggy code. No compiler gets single precision
307 complex numbers correct on Alpha. Otherwise, the egcs 1.1 release should be
308 ok; gcc 2.8.1 might cause some failures; gcc 2.7.2.x is so buggy that
309 explicit checks have been used so that you can't build with it.
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310- The kernel might have bugs. For example on Linux/Alpha 2.0.34 the
311 floating point handling has quite a number of bugs and therefore most of
440d13e2 312 the test cases in the math subdirectory will fail. Linux 2.2 has
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313 fixes for the floating point support on Alpha. The Linux/SPARC kernel has
314 also some bugs in the FPU emulation code (as of Linux 2.2.0).
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315- Other tools might have problems. For example bash 2.03 gives a
316 segmentation fault running the tst-rpmatch.sh test script.
b0610668 317
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318?? What is symbol versioning good for? Do I need it?
319
320{AJ} Symbol versioning solves problems that are related to interface
321changes. One version of an interface might have been introduced in a
322previous version of the GNU C library but the interface or the semantics of
323the function has been changed in the meantime. For binary compatibility
324with the old library, a newer library needs to still have the old interface
b1418d8f 325for old programs. On the other hand, new programs should use the new
7fd18ea2 326interface. Symbol versioning is the solution for this problem. The GNU
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327libc version 2.1 uses symbol versioning by default if the installed binutils
328supports it.
7fd18ea2 329
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330We don't advise building without symbol versioning, since you lose binary
331compatibility - forever! The binary compatibility you lose is not only
332against the previous version of the GNU libc (version 2.0) but also against
333all future versions.
7fd18ea2 334
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335?? How can I compile on my fast ix86 machine a working libc for my slow
336 i386? After installing libc, programs abort with "Illegal
337 Instruction".
338
339{AJ} glibc and gcc might generate some instructions on your machine that
340aren't available on i386. You've got to tell glibc that you're configuring
341for i386 with adding i386 as your machine, for example:
342
343 ../configure --prefix=/usr i386-pc-linux-gnu
344
345And you need to tell gcc to only generate i386 code, just add `-mcpu=i386'
346(just -m386 doesn't work) to your CFLAGS.
347
348{UD} This applies not only to the i386. Compiling on a i686 for any older
349model will also fail if the above methods are not used.
350
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351?? `make' complains about a missing dlfcn/libdl.so when building
352 malloc/libmemprof.so. How can I fix this?
353
354{AJ} Older make version (<= 3.78.90) have a bug which was hidden by a bug in
2bbc70d5 355glibc (<= 2.1.2). You need to upgrade make to a newer or fixed version.
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356
357After upgrading make, you should remove the file sysd-sorted in your build
358directory. The problem is that the broken make creates a wrong order for
359one list in that file. The list has to be recreated with the new make -
360which happens if you remove the file.
361
362You might encounter this bug also in other situations where make scans
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363directories. I strongly advise to upgrade your make version to 3.79 or
364newer.
b2b28911 365
bee1e289 366
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367??mips Which tools should I use for MIPS?
368
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369{AJ} You should use the current development version of gcc 3.0 or newer from
370CVS. gcc 2.95.x does not work correctly on mips-linux.
92ec318f 371
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372You need also recent binutils, anything before and including 2.11 will not
373work correctly. Either try the Linux binutils 2.11.90.0.5 from HJ Lu or the
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374current development version of binutils from CVS.
375
376Please note that `make check' might fail for a number of the math tests
377because of problems of the FPU emulation in the Linux kernel (the MIPS FPU
378doesn't handle all cases and needs help from the kernel).
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379
380For details check also my page <http://www.suse.de/~aj/glibc-mips.html>.
381
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382? Installation and configuration issues
383
384?? Can I replace the libc on my Linux system with GNU libc?
385
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386{UD} You cannot replace any existing libc for Linux with GNU libc. It is
387binary incompatible and therefore has a different major version. You can,
388however, install it alongside your existing libc.
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389
390For Linux there are three major libc versions:
391 libc-4 a.out libc
392 libc-5 original ELF libc
393 libc-6 GNU libc
394
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395You can have any combination of these three installed. For more information
396consult documentation for shared library handling. The Makefiles of GNU
397libc will automatically generate the needed symbolic links which the linker
398will use.
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399
400?? How do I configure GNU libc so that the essential libraries
401 like libc.so go into /lib and the other into /usr/lib?
402
403{UD,AJ} Like all other GNU packages GNU libc is designed to use a base
404directory and install all files relative to this. The default is
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405/usr/local, because this is safe (it will not damage the system if installed
406there). If you wish to install GNU libc as the primary C library on your
407system, set the base directory to /usr (i.e. run configure --prefix=/usr
408<other_options>). Note that this can damage your system; see ?safety for
409details.
410
411Some systems like Linux have a filesystem standard which makes a difference
412between essential libraries and others. Essential libraries are placed in
413/lib because this directory is required to be located on the same disk
414partition as /. The /usr subtree might be found on another
415partition/disk. If you configure for Linux with --prefix=/usr, then this
416will be done automatically.
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417
418To install the essential libraries which come with GNU libc in /lib on
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419systems other than Linux one must explicitly request it. Autoconf has no
420option for this so you have to use a `configparms' file (see the `INSTALL'
421file for details). It should contain:
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422
423slibdir=/lib
424sysconfdir=/etc
425
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426The first line specifies the directory for the essential libraries, the
427second line the directory for system configuration files.
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428
429??safety How should I avoid damaging my system when I install GNU libc?
430
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431{ZW} If you wish to be cautious, do not configure with --prefix=/usr. If
432you don't specify a prefix, glibc will be installed in /usr/local, where it
433will probably not break anything. (If you wish to be certain, set the
434prefix to something like /usr/local/glibc2 which is not used for anything.)
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435
436The dangers when installing glibc in /usr are twofold:
437
438* glibc will overwrite the headers in /usr/include. Other C libraries
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439 install a different but overlapping set of headers there, so the effect
440 will probably be that you can't compile anything. You need to rename
441 /usr/include out of the way before running `make install'. (Do not throw
442 it away; you will then lose the ability to compile programs against your
443 old libc.)
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444
445* None of your old libraries, static or shared, can be used with a
446 different C library major version. For shared libraries this is not a
447 problem, because the filenames are different and the dynamic linker
448 will enforce the restriction. But static libraries have no version
449 information. You have to evacuate all the static libraries in
450 /usr/lib to a safe location.
451
452The situation is rather similar to the move from a.out to ELF which
453long-time Linux users will remember.
454
455?? Do I need to use GNU CC to compile programs that will use the
456 GNU C Library?
457
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458{ZW} In theory, no; the linker does not care, and the headers are supposed
459to check for GNU CC before using its extensions to the C language.
61952351 460
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461However, there are currently no ports of glibc to systems where another
462compiler is the default, so no one has tested the headers extensively
463against another compiler. You may therefore encounter difficulties. If you
464do, please report them as bugs.
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465
466Also, in several places GNU extensions provide large benefits in code
467quality. For example, the library has hand-optimized, inline assembly
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468versions of some string functions. These can only be used with GCC. See
469?string for details.
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470
471??crypt When linking with the new libc I get unresolved symbols
472 `crypt' and `setkey'. Why aren't these functions in the
473 libc anymore?
474
61952351 475
6abca68d 476{} Removed. Does not apply anymore.
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477
478?? When I use GNU libc on my Linux system by linking against
479 the libc.so which comes with glibc all I get is a core dump.
480
f12944ec 481{UD} On Linux, gcc sets the dynamic linker to /lib/ld-linux.so.1 unless the
b3864d70 482user specifies a --dynamic-linker argument. This is the name of the libc5
f12944ec 483dynamic linker, which does not work with glibc.
61952351 484
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485For casual use of GNU libc you can just specify to the linker
486 --dynamic-linker=/lib/ld-linux.so.2
61952351 487
f12944ec 488which is the glibc dynamic linker, on Linux systems. On other systems the
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489name is /lib/ld.so.1. When linking via gcc, you've got to add
490 -Wl,--dynamic-linker=/lib/ld-linux.so.2
491
492to the gcc command line.
61952351 493
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494To change your environment to use GNU libc for compiling you need to change
495the `specs' file of your gcc. This file is normally found at
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496
497 /usr/lib/gcc-lib/<arch>/<version>/specs
498
499In this file you have to change a few things:
500
501- change `ld-linux.so.1' to `ld-linux.so.2'
502
503- remove all expression `%{...:-lgmon}'; there is no libgmon in glibc
504
505- fix a minor bug by changing %{pipe:-} to %|
506
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507Here is what the gcc-2.7.2 specs file should look like when GNU libc is
508installed at /usr:
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509
510-----------------------------------------------------------------------
511*asm:
512%{V} %{v:%{!V:-V}} %{Qy:} %{!Qn:-Qy} %{n} %{T} %{Ym,*} %{Yd,*} %{Wa,*:%*}
513
514*asm_final:
515%|
516
517*cpp:
518%{fPIC:-D__PIC__ -D__pic__} %{fpic:-D__PIC__ -D__pic__} %{!m386:-D__i486__} %{posix:-D_POSIX_SOURCE} %{pthread:-D_REENTRANT}
519
520*cc1:
521%{profile:-p}
522
523*cc1plus:
524
525
526*endfile:
527%{!shared:crtend.o%s} %{shared:crtendS.o%s} crtn.o%s
528
529*link:
530-m elf_i386 %{shared:-shared} %{!shared: %{!ibcs: %{!static: %{rdynamic:-export-dynamic} %{!dynamic-linker:-dynamic-linker /lib/ld-linux.so.2}} %{static:-static}}}
531
532*lib:
533%{!shared: %{pthread:-lpthread} %{profile:-lc_p} %{!profile: -lc}}
534
535*libgcc:
536-lgcc
537
538*startfile:
539%{!shared: %{pg:gcrt1.o%s} %{!pg:%{p:gcrt1.o%s} %{!p:%{profile:gcrt1.o%s} %{!profile:crt1.o%s}}}} crti.o%s %{!shared:crtbegin.o%s} %{shared:crtbeginS.o%s}
540
541*switches_need_spaces:
542
543
544*signed_char:
545%{funsigned-char:-D__CHAR_UNSIGNED__}
546
547*predefines:
548-D__ELF__ -Dunix -Di386 -Dlinux -Asystem(unix) -Asystem(posix) -Acpu(i386) -Amachine(i386)
549
550*cross_compile:
5510
552
553*multilib:
554. ;
555
556-----------------------------------------------------------------------
557
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558Things get a bit more complicated if you have GNU libc installed in some
559other place than /usr, i.e., if you do not want to use it instead of the old
560libc. In this case the needed startup files and libraries are not found in
561the regular places. So the specs file must tell the compiler and linker
562exactly what to use.
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563
564Version 2.7.2.3 does and future versions of GCC will automatically
565provide the correct specs.
566
c891b2df 567??nonsh Looking through the shared libc file I haven't found the
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568 functions `stat', `lstat', `fstat', and `mknod' and while
569 linking on my Linux system I get error messages. How is
570 this supposed to work?
571
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572{RM} Believe it or not, stat and lstat (and fstat, and mknod) are supposed
573to be undefined references in libc.so.6! Your problem is probably a missing
574or incorrect /usr/lib/libc.so file; note that this is a small text file now,
575not a symlink to libc.so.6. It should look something like this:
61952351 576
71bedb76 577GROUP ( libc.so.6 libc_nonshared.a )
61952351 578
83f6a990 579??excpt When I run an executable on one system which I compiled on
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580 another, I get dynamic linker errors. Both systems have the same
581 version of glibc installed. What's wrong?
582
583{ZW} Glibc on one of these systems was compiled with gcc 2.7 or 2.8, the
584other with egcs (any version). Egcs has functions in its internal
585`libgcc.a' to support exception handling with C++. They are linked into
586any program or dynamic library compiled with egcs, whether it needs them or
587not. Dynamic libraries then turn around and export those functions again
588unless special steps are taken to prevent them.
589
590When you link your program, it resolves its references to the exception
591functions to the ones exported accidentally by libc.so. That works fine as
592long as libc has those functions. On the other system, libc doesn't have
593those functions because it was compiled by gcc 2.8, and you get undefined
594symbol errors. The symbols in question are named things like
595`__register_frame_info'.
596
597For glibc 2.0, the workaround is to not compile libc with egcs. We've also
598incorporated a patch which should prevent the EH functions sneaking into
599libc. It doesn't matter what compiler you use to compile your program.
600
601For glibc 2.1, we've chosen to do it the other way around: libc.so
602explicitly provides the EH functions. This is to prevent other shared
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603libraries from doing it.
604
605{UD} Starting with glibc 2.1.1 you can compile glibc with gcc 2.8.1 or
606newer since we have explicitly add references to the functions causing the
607problem. But you nevertheless should use EGCS for other reasons
608(see ?binsize).
d89e7a96 609
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610{GK} On some Linux distributions for PowerPC, you can see this when you have
611built gcc or egcs from the Web sources (gcc versions 2.95 or earlier), then
612re-built glibc. This happens because in these versions of gcc, exception
613handling is implemented using an older method; the people making the
614distributions are a little ahead of their time.
615
616A quick solution to this is to find the libgcc.a file that came with the
6e8afc1c 617distribution (it would have been installed under /usr/lib/gcc-lib), do
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618`ar x libgcc.a frame.o' to get the frame.o file out, and add a line saying
619`LDLIBS-c.so += frame.o' to the file `configparms' in the directory you're
620building in. You can check you've got the right `frame.o' file by running
621`nm frame.o' and checking that it has the symbols defined that you're
622missing.
623
624This will let you build glibc with the C compiler. The C++ compiler
625will still be binary incompatible with any C++ shared libraries that
626you got with your distribution.
627
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628?? How can I compile gcc 2.7.2.1 from the gcc source code using
629 glibc 2.x?
630
f12944ec 631{AJ} There's only correct support for glibc 2.0.x in gcc 2.7.2.3 or later.
5ef50d00 632But you should get at least gcc 2.95.2.1 (or later versions) instead.
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633
634?? The `gencat' utility cannot process the catalog sources which
635 were used on my Linux libc5 based system. Why?
636
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637{UD} The `gencat' utility provided with glibc complies to the XPG standard.
638The older Linux version did not obey the standard, so they are not
639compatible.
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640
641To ease the transition from the Linux version some of the non-standard
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642features are also present in the `gencat' program of GNU libc. This mainly
643includes the use of symbols for the message number and the automatic
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644generation of header files which contain the needed #defines to map the
645symbols to integers.
646
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647Here is a simple SED script to convert at least some Linux specific catalog
648files to the XPG4 form:
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649
650-----------------------------------------------------------------------
651# Change catalog source in Linux specific format to standard XPG format.
652# Ulrich Drepper <drepper@cygnus.com>, 1996.
653#
654/^\$ #/ {
655 h
656 s/\$ #\([^ ]*\).*/\1/
657 x
658 s/\$ #[^ ]* *\(.*\)/\$ \1/
659}
660
661/^# / {
662 s/^# \(.*\)/\1/
663 G
664 s/\(.*\)\n\(.*\)/\2 \1/
665}
666-----------------------------------------------------------------------
667
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668?? Programs using libc have their messages translated, but other
669 behavior is not localized (e.g. collating order); why?
670
671{ZW} Translated messages are automatically installed, but the locale
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672database that controls other behaviors is not. You need to run localedef to
673install this database, after you have run `make install'. For example, to
674set up the French Canadian locale, simply issue the command
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675
676 localedef -i fr_CA -f ISO-8859-1 fr_CA
677
678Please see localedata/README in the source tree for further details.
679
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680?? I have set up /etc/nis.conf, and the Linux libc 5 with NYS
681 works great. But the glibc NIS+ doesn't seem to work.
682
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683{TK} The glibc NIS+ implementation uses a /var/nis/NIS_COLD_START file for
684storing information about the NIS+ server and their public keys, because the
685nis.conf file does not contain all the necessary information. You have to
686copy a NIS_COLD_START file from a Solaris client (the NIS_COLD_START file is
687byte order independent) or generate it with nisinit from the nis-tools
688package; available at
689
50f301a8 690 http://www.suse.de/~kukuk/linux/nisplus.html
61952351 691
da2d1bc5 692?? I have killed ypbind to stop using NIS, but glibc
3dcf8ea6 693 continues using NIS.
4d06461a 694
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695{TK} For faster NIS lookups, glibc uses the /var/yp/binding/ files from
696ypbind. ypbind 3.3 and older versions don't always remove these files, so
697glibc will continue to use them. Other BSD versions seem to work correctly.
698Until ypbind 3.4 is released, you can find a patch at
699
66f6a52b 700 <ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/net/NIS/ypbind-3.3-glibc4.diff.gz>
a788b6c2 701
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702?? Under Linux/Alpha, I always get "do_ypcall: clnt_call:
703 RPC: Unable to receive; errno = Connection refused" when using NIS.
a788b6c2 704
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705{TK} You need a ypbind version which is 64bit clean. Some versions are not
70664bit clean. A 64bit clean implementation is ypbind-mt. For ypbind 3.3,
707you need the patch from ftp.kernel.org (See the previous question). I don't
708know about other versions.
a788b6c2 709
4d06461a 710
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711?? After installing glibc name resolving doesn't work properly.
712
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713{AJ} You probably should read the manual section describing nsswitch.conf
714(just type `info libc "NSS Configuration File"'). The NSS configuration
715file is usually the culprit.
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717
718?? How do I create the databases for NSS?
719
720{AJ} If you have an entry "db" in /etc/nsswitch.conf you should also create
721the database files. The glibc sources contain a Makefile which does the
7fd18ea2 722necessary conversion and calls to create those files. The file is
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723`db-Makefile' in the subdirectory `nss' and you can call it with `make -f
724db-Makefile'. Please note that not all services are capable of using a
725database. Currently passwd, group, ethers, protocol, rpc, services shadow
3b019077 726and netgroup are implemented. See also ?nssdb.
3dcf8ea6 727
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728?? I have /usr/include/net and /usr/include/scsi as symlinks
729 into my Linux source tree. Is that wrong?
730
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731{PB} This was necessary for libc5, but is not correct when using glibc.
732Including the kernel header files directly in user programs usually does not
733work (see ?kerhdr). glibc provides its own <net/*> and <scsi/*> header
734files to replace them, and you may have to remove any symlink that you have
735in place before you install glibc. However, /usr/include/asm and
736/usr/include/linux should remain as they were.
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737
738?? Programs like `logname', `top', `uptime' `users', `w' and
739 `who', show incorrect information about the (number of)
740 users on my system. Why?
741
742{MK} See ?getlog.
743
744?? After upgrading to glibc 2.1 with symbol versioning I get
745 errors about undefined symbols. What went wrong?
746
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747{AJ} The problem is caused either by wrong program code or tools. In the
748versioned libc a lot of symbols are now local that were global symbols in
749previous versions. It seems that programs linked against older versions
750often accidentally used libc global variables -- something that should not
751happen.
61952351 752
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753The only way to fix this is to recompile your program. Sorry, that's the
754price you might have to pay once for quite a number of advantages with
755symbol versioning.
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756
757?? When I start the program XXX after upgrading the library
758 I get
759 XXX: Symbol `_sys_errlist' has different size in shared
760 object, consider re-linking
761 Why? What should I do?
762
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763{UD} As the message says, relink the binary. The problem is that a few
764symbols from the library can change in size and there is no way to avoid
765this. _sys_errlist is a good example. Occasionally there are new error
766numbers added to the kernel and this must be reflected at user level,
767breaking programs that refer to them directly.
61952351 768
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769Such symbols should normally not be used at all. There are mechanisms to
770avoid using them. In the case of _sys_errlist, there is the strerror()
771function which should _always_ be used instead. So the correct fix is to
772rewrite that part of the application.
61952351 773
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774In some situations (especially when testing a new library release) it might
775be possible that a symbol changed size when that should not have happened.
776So in case of doubt report such a warning message as a problem.
61952351 777
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778?? What do I need for C++ development?
779
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780{HJ,AJ} You need either egcs 1.1 which comes directly with libstdc++ or
781gcc-2.8.1 together with libstdc++ 2.8.1.1. egcs 1.1 has the better C++
782support and works directly with glibc 2.1. If you use gcc-2.8.1 with
783libstdc++ 2.8.1.1, you need to modify libstdc++ a bit. A patch is available
784as:
66f6a52b 785 <ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/libstdc++-2.8.1.1-glibc2.1-diff.gz>
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786
787Please note that libg++ 2.7.2 (and the Linux Versions 2.7.2.x) doesn't work
788very well with the GNU C library due to vtable thunks. If you're upgrading
789from glibc 2.0.x to 2.1 you have to recompile libstdc++ since the library
790compiled for 2.0 is not compatible due to the new Large File Support (LFS)
791in version 2.1.
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792
793{UD} But since in the case of a shared libstdc++ the version numbers should
794be different existing programs will continue to work.
da2d1bc5 795
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796?? Even statically linked programs need some shared libraries
797 which is not acceptable for me. What can I do?
798
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799{AJ} NSS (for details just type `info libc "Name Service Switch"') won't
800work properly without shared libraries. NSS allows using different services
801(e.g. NIS, files, db, hesiod) by just changing one configuration file
802(/etc/nsswitch.conf) without relinking any programs. The only disadvantage
803is that now static libraries need to access shared libraries. This is
804handled transparently by the GNU C library.
6ca96fe2 805
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806A solution is to configure glibc with --enable-static-nss. In this case you
807can create a static binary that will use only the services dns and files
808(change /etc/nsswitch.conf for this). You need to link explicitly against
809all these services. For example:
6ca96fe2 810
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811 gcc -static test-netdb.c -o test-netdb \
812 -Wl,--start-group -lc -lnss_files -lnss_dns -lresolv -Wl,--end-group
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813
814The problem with this approach is that you've got to link every static
815program that uses NSS routines with all those libraries.
816
817{UD} In fact, one cannot say anymore that a libc compiled with this
818option is using NSS. There is no switch anymore. Therefore it is
819*highly* recommended *not* to use --enable-static-nss since this makes
820the behaviour of the programs on the system inconsistent.
821
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822?? I just upgraded my Linux system to glibc and now I get
823 errors whenever I try to link any program.
824
825{ZW} This happens when you have installed glibc as the primary C library but
826have stray symbolic links pointing at your old C library. If the first
827`libc.so' the linker finds is libc 5, it will use that. Your program
828expects to be linked with glibc, so the link fails.
829
830The most common case is that glibc put its `libc.so' in /usr/lib, but there
831was a `libc.so' from libc 5 in /lib, which gets searched first. To fix the
832problem, just delete /lib/libc.so. You may also need to delete other
833symbolic links in /lib, such as /lib/libm.so if it points to libm.so.5.
834
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835{AJ} The perl script test-installation.pl which is run as last step during
836an installation of glibc that is configured with --prefix=/usr should help
837detect these situations. If the script reports problems, something is
838really screwed up.
839
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840?? When I use nscd the machine freezes.
841
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842{UD} You cannot use nscd with Linux 2.0.*. There is functionality missing
843in the kernel and work-arounds are not suitable. Besides, some parts of the
844kernel are too buggy when it comes to using threads.
48244d09 845
440d13e2 846If you need nscd, you have to use at least a 2.1 kernel.
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847
848Note that I have at this point no information about any other platform.
849
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850?? I need lots of open files. What do I have to do?
851
852{AJ} This is at first a kernel issue. The kernel defines limits with
853OPEN_MAX the number of simultaneous open files and with FD_SETSIZE the
854number of used file descriptors. You need to change these values in your
e8b1163e 855kernel and recompile the kernel so that the kernel allows more open
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856files. You don't necessarily need to recompile the GNU C library since the
857only place where OPEN_MAX and FD_SETSIZE is really needed in the library
858itself is the size of fd_set which is used by select.
859
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860The GNU C library is now select free. This means it internally has no
861limits imposed by the `fd_set' type. Instead all places where the
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862functionality is needed the `poll' function is used.
863
864If you increase the number of file descriptors in the kernel you don't need
6e8afc1c 865to recompile the C library.
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866
867{UD} You can always get the maximum number of file descriptors a process is
868allowed to have open at any time using
869
870 number = sysconf (_SC_OPEN_MAX);
871
872This will work even if the kernel limits change.
873
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874?? How do I get the same behavior on parsing /etc/passwd and
875 /etc/group as I have with libc5 ?
876
877{TK} The name switch setup in /etc/nsswitch.conf selected by most Linux
878distributions does not support +/- and netgroup entries in the files like
879/etc/passwd. Though this is the preferred setup some people might have
880setups coming over from the libc5 days where it was the default to recognize
881lines like this. To get back to the old behaviour one simply has to change
882the rules for passwd, group, and shadow in the nsswitch.conf file as
883follows:
884
885passwd: compat
886group: compat
887shadow: compat
888
889passwd_compat: nis
890group_compat: nis
891shadow_compat: nis
892
4f7ea427 893??libs What needs to be recompiled when upgrading from glibc 2.0 to glibc
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894 2.1?
895
896{AJ,CG} If you just upgrade the glibc from 2.0.x (x <= 7) to 2.1, binaries
897that have been linked against glibc 2.0 will continue to work.
898
899If you compile your own binaries against glibc 2.1, you also need to
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900recompile some other libraries. The problem is that libio had to be changed
901and therefore libraries that are based or depend on the libio of glibc,
902e.g. ncurses, slang and most C++ libraries, need to be recompiled. If you
903experience strange segmentation faults in your programs linked against glibc
9042.1, you might need to recompile your libraries.
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905
906Another problem is that older binaries that were linked statically against
907glibc 2.0 will reference the older nss modules (libnss_files.so.1 instead of
908libnss_files.so.2), so don't remove them. Also, the old glibc-2.0 compiled
909static libraries (libfoo.a) which happen to depend on the older libio
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910behavior will be broken by the glibc 2.1 upgrade. We plan to produce a
911compatibility library that people will be able to link in if they want
912to compile a static library generated against glibc 2.0 into a program
913on a glibc 2.1 system. You just add -lcompat and you should be fine.
914
915The glibc-compat add-on will provide the libcompat.a library, the older
916nss modules, and a few other files. Together, they should make it
917possible to do development with old static libraries on a glibc 2.1
8d8c6efa 918system. This add-on is still in development. You can get it from
df08cc56 919 <ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/glibc/glibc-compat-2.1.tar.gz>
50b65db1 920but please keep in mind that it is experimental.
0155a773 921
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922?? Why is extracting files via tar so slow?
923
924{AJ} Extracting of tar archives might be quite slow since tar has to look up
925userid and groupids and doesn't cache negative results. If you have nis or
926nisplus in your /etc/nsswitch.conf for the passwd and/or group database,
927each file extractions needs a network connection. There are two possible
928solutions:
929
930- do you really need NIS/NIS+ (some Linux distributions add by default
931 nis/nisplus even if it's not needed)? If not, just remove the entries.
932
933- if you need NIS/NIS+, use the Name Service Cache Daemon nscd that comes
934 with glibc 2.1.
935
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936?? Compiling programs I get parse errors in libio.h (e.g. "parse error
937 before `_IO_seekoff'"). How should I fix this?
938
939{AJ} You might get the following errors when upgrading to glibc 2.1:
940
941 In file included from /usr/include/stdio.h:57,
942 from ...
943 /usr/include/libio.h:335: parse error before `_IO_seekoff'
944 /usr/include/libio.h:335: parse error before `_G_off64_t'
945 /usr/include/libio.h:336: parse error before `_IO_seekpos'
946 /usr/include/libio.h:336: parse error before `_G_fpos64_t'
947
948The problem is a wrong _G_config.h file in your include path. The
949_G_config.h file that comes with glibc 2.1 should be used and not one from
950libc5 or from a compiler directory. To check which _G_config.h file the
951compiler uses, compile your program with `gcc -E ...|grep G_config.h' and
952remove that file. Your compiler should pick up the file that has been
953installed by glibc 2.1 in your include directory.
954
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955?? After upgrading to glibc 2.1, libraries that were compiled against
956 glibc 2.0.x don't work anymore.
957
958{AJ} See ?libs.
959
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960??nssdb What happened to the Berkeley DB libraries? Can I still use db
961 in /etc/nsswitch.conf?
962
963{AJ} Due to too many incompatible changes in disk layout and API of Berkeley
964DB and a too tight coupling of libc and libdb, the db library has been
965removed completely from glibc 2.2. The only place that really used the
966Berkeley DB was the NSS db module.
967
968The NSS db module has been rewritten to support a number of different
969versions of Berkeley DB for the NSS db module. Currently the releases 2.x
970and 3.x of Berkeley DB are supported. The older db 1.85 library is not
971supported. You can use the version from glibc 2.1.x or download a version
972from Sleepycat Software (http://www.sleepycat.com). The library has to be
973compiled as shared library and installed in the system lib directory
974(normally /lib). The library needs to have a special soname to be found by
975the NSS module.
976
977If public structures change in a new Berkeley db release, this needs to be
978reflected in glibc.
979
980Currently the code searches for libraries with a soname of "libdb.so.3"
981(that's the name from db 2.4.14 which comes with glibc 2.1.x) and
982"libdb-3.0.so" (the name used by db 3.0.55 as default).
983
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984The nss_db module is now in a separate package since it requires a database
985library being available.
986
987?? What has do be done when upgrading to glibc 2.2?
988
989{AJ} The upgrade to glibc 2.2 should run smoothly, there's in general no
990need to recompile programs or libraries. Nevertheless, some changes might
991be needed after upgrading:
992- The utmp daemon has been removed and is not supported by glibc anymore.
993 If it has been in use, it should be switched off.
994- Programs using IPv6 have to be recompiled due to incompatible changes in
995 sockaddr_in6 by the IPv6 working group.
64c07817 996- The Berkeley db libraries have been removed (for details see ?nssdb).
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997- The format of the locale files has changed, all locales should be
998 regenerated with localedef. All statically linked applications which use
999 i18n should be recompiled, otherwise they'll not be localized.
1000- glibc comes with a number of new applications. For example ldconfig has
1001 been implemented for glibc, the libc5 version of ldconfig is not needed
1002 anymore.
1003- There's no more K&R compatibility in the glibc headers. The GNU C library
1004 requires a C compiler that handles especially prototypes correctly.
e090caee 1005 Especially gcc -traditional will not work with glibc headers.
be5dc44c
AJ
1006
1007Please read also the NEWS file which is the authoritative source for this
1008and gives more details for some topics.
1009
4442d7e8
UD
1010?? The makefiles want to do a CVS commit.
1011
1012{UD} Only if you are not specifying the --without-cvs flag at configure
1013time. This is what you always have to use if you are checking sources
1014directly out of the public CVS repository or you have your own private
1015repository.
1016
1324affa
UD
1017?? When compiling C++ programs, I get a compilation error in streambuf.h.
1018
1019{BH} You are using g++ 2.95.2? After upgrading to glibc 2.2, you need to
1020apply a patch to the include files in /usr/include/g++, because the fpos_t
1021type has changed in glibc 2.2. The patch is at
1022http://clisp.cons.org/~haible/gccinclude-glibc-2.2-compat.diff
1023
1024?? When recompiling GCC, I get compilation errors in libio.
1025
4a5b72ff 1026{BH} You are trying to recompile gcc 2.95.2? Use gcc 2.95.3 instead.
5ef50d00 1027This version is needed because the fpos_t type and a few libio internals
4a5b72ff 1028have changed in glibc 2.2, and gcc 2.95.3 contains a corresponding patch.
1324affa 1029
4442d7e8 1030
61952351
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1031? Source and binary incompatibilities, and what to do about them
1032
1033?? I expect GNU libc to be 100% source code compatible with
1034 the old Linux based GNU libc. Why isn't it like this?
1035
f12944ec
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1036{DMT,UD} Not every extension in Linux libc's history was well thought-out.
1037In fact it had a lot of problems with standards compliance and with
1038cleanliness. With the introduction of a new version number these errors can
1039now be corrected. Here is a list of the known source code
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UD
1040incompatibilities:
1041
1042* _GNU_SOURCE: glibc does not make the GNU extensions available
1043 automatically. If a program depends on GNU extensions or some
1044 other non-standard functionality, it is necessary to compile it
1045 with the C compiler option -D_GNU_SOURCE, or better, to put
1046 `#define _GNU_SOURCE' at the beginning of your source files, before
1047 any C library header files are included. This difference normally
1048 manifests itself in the form of missing prototypes and/or data type
1049 definitions. Thus, if you get such errors, the first thing you
1050 should do is try defining _GNU_SOURCE and see if that makes the
1051 problem go away.
1052
1053 For more information consult the file `NOTES' in the GNU C library
1054 sources.
1055
1056* reboot(): GNU libc sanitizes the interface of reboot() to be more
1057 compatible with the interface used on other OSes. reboot() as
1058 implemented in glibc takes just one argument. This argument
1059 corresponds to the third argument of the Linux reboot system call.
1060 That is, a call of the form reboot(a, b, c) needs to be changed into
1061 reboot(c). Beside this the header <sys/reboot.h> defines the needed
1062 constants for the argument. These RB_* constants should be used
1063 instead of the cryptic magic numbers.
1064
1065* swapon(): the interface of this function didn't change, but the
1066 prototype is in a separate header file <sys/swap.h>. This header
1067 file also provides the SWAP_* constants defined by <linux/swap.h>;
1068 you should use them for the second argument to swapon().
1069
1070* errno: If a program uses the variable "errno", then it _must_
1071 include <errno.h>. The old libc often (erroneously) declared this
1072 variable implicitly as a side-effect of including other libc header
1073 files. glibc is careful to avoid such namespace pollution, which,
1074 in turn, means that you really need to include the header files that
1075 you depend on. This difference normally manifests itself in the
1076 form of the compiler complaining about references to an undeclared
1077 symbol "errno".
1078
1079* Linux-specific syscalls: All Linux system calls now have appropriate
1080 library wrappers and corresponding declarations in various header files.
1081 This is because the syscall() macro that was traditionally used to
1082 work around missing syscall wrappers are inherently non-portable and
1083 error-prone. The following table lists all the new syscall stubs,
1084 the header-file declaring their interface and the system call name.
1085
1086 syscall name: wrapper name: declaring header file:
1087 ------------- ------------- ----------------------
1088 bdflush bdflush <sys/kdaemon.h>
1089 syslog ksyslog_ctl <sys/klog.h>
1090
1091* lpd: Older versions of lpd depend on a routine called _validuser().
1092 The library does not provide this function, but instead provides
1093 __ivaliduser() which has a slightly different interface. Simply
1094 upgrading to a newer lpd should fix this problem (e.g., the 4.4BSD
1095 lpd is known to be working).
1096
1097* resolver functions/BIND: like on many other systems the functions of
1098 the resolver library are not included in libc itself. There is a
1099 separate library libresolv. If you get undefined symbol errors for
1100 symbols starting with `res_*' simply add -lresolv to your linker
1101 command line.
1102
1103* the `signal' function's behavior corresponds to the BSD semantic and
1104 not the SysV semantic as it was in libc-5. The interface on all GNU
1105 systems shall be the same and BSD is the semantic of choice. To use
1106 the SysV behavior simply use `sysv_signal', or define _XOPEN_SOURCE.
1107 See ?signal for details.
1108
1109??getlog Why does getlogin() always return NULL on my Linux box?
1110
f12944ec
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1111{UD} The GNU C library has a format for the UTMP and WTMP file which differs
1112from what your system currently has. It was extended to fulfill the needs
1113of the next years when IPv6 is introduced. The record size is different and
1114some fields have different positions. The files written by functions from
1115the one library cannot be read by functions from the other library. Sorry,
1116but this is what a major release is for. It's better to have a cut now than
1117having no means to support the new techniques later.
61952351 1118
61952351
UD
1119?? Where are the DST_* constants found in <sys/time.h> on many
1120 systems?
1121
f12944ec
UD
1122{UD} These constants come from the old BSD days and are not used anymore
1123(libc5 does not actually implement the handling although the constants are
1124defined).
61952351 1125
f12944ec 1126Instead GNU libc contains zone database support and compatibility code for
8b4a4715
UD
1127POSIX TZ environment variable handling. For former is very much preferred
1128(see ?tzdb).
61952351
UD
1129
1130?? The prototypes for `connect', `accept', `getsockopt',
1131 `setsockopt', `getsockname', `getpeername', `send',
1132 `sendto', and `recvfrom' are different in GNU libc from
1133 any other system I saw. This is a bug, isn't it?
1134
f12944ec
UD
1135{UD} No, this is no bug. This version of GNU libc already follows the new
1136Single Unix specifications (and I think the POSIX.1g draft which adopted the
1137solution). The type for a parameter describing a size is now `socklen_t', a
1138new type.
61952351
UD
1139
1140??kerhdr On Linux I've got problems with the declarations in Linux
1141 kernel headers.
1142
f12944ec
UD
1143{UD,AJ} On Linux, the use of kernel headers is reduced to the minimum. This
1144gives Linus the ability to change the headers more freely. Also, user
a9ddb793 1145programs are now insulated from changes in the size of kernel data
f12944ec 1146structures.
61952351 1147
f12944ec
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1148For example, the sigset_t type is 32 or 64 bits wide in the kernel. In
1149glibc it is 1024 bits wide. This guarantees that when the kernel gets a
1150bigger sigset_t (for POSIX.1e realtime support, say) user programs will not
1151have to be recompiled. Consult the header files for more information about
1152the changes.
61952351 1153
f12944ec
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1154Therefore you shouldn't include Linux kernel header files directly if glibc
1155has defined a replacement. Otherwise you might get undefined results because
1156of type conflicts.
61952351
UD
1157
1158?? I don't include any kernel headers myself but the compiler
1159 still complains about redeclarations of types in the kernel
1160 headers.
1161
f12944ec
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1162{UD} The kernel headers before Linux 2.1.61 and 2.0.32 don't work correctly
1163with glibc. Compiling C programs is possible in most cases but C++ programs
1164have (due to the change of the name lookups for `struct's) problems. One
1165prominent example is `struct fd_set'.
61952351 1166
f12944ec
UD
1167There might be some problems left but 2.1.61/2.0.32 fix most of the known
1168ones. See the BUGS file for other known problems.
61952351
UD
1169
1170??signal Why don't signals interrupt system calls anymore?
1171
f12944ec
UD
1172{ZW} By default GNU libc uses the BSD semantics for signal(), unlike Linux
1173libc 5 which used System V semantics. This is partially for compatibility
1174with other systems and partially because the BSD semantics tend to make
1175programming with signals easier.
61952351
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1176
1177There are three differences:
1178
1179* BSD-style signals that occur in the middle of a system call do not
1180 affect the system call; System V signals cause the system call to
1181 fail and set errno to EINTR.
1182
1183* BSD signal handlers remain installed once triggered. System V signal
1184 handlers work only once, so one must reinstall them each time.
1185
1186* A BSD signal is blocked during the execution of its handler. In other
1187 words, a handler for SIGCHLD (for example) does not need to worry about
1188 being interrupted by another SIGCHLD. It may, however, be interrupted
1189 by other signals.
1190
1191There is general consensus that for `casual' programming with signals, the
1192BSD semantics are preferable. You don't need to worry about system calls
1193returning EINTR, and you don't need to worry about the race conditions
1194associated with one-shot signal handlers.
1195
1196If you are porting an old program that relies on the old semantics, you can
1197quickly fix the problem by changing signal() to sysv_signal() throughout.
1198Alternatively, define _XOPEN_SOURCE before including <signal.h>.
1199
1200For new programs, the sigaction() function allows you to specify precisely
1201how you want your signals to behave. All three differences listed above are
1202individually switchable on a per-signal basis with this function.
1203
f12944ec
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1204If all you want is for one specific signal to cause system calls to fail and
1205return EINTR (for example, to implement a timeout) you can do this with
61952351
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1206siginterrupt().
1207
1208
1209??string I've got errors compiling code that uses certain string
1210 functions. Why?
1211
f12944ec 1212{AJ} glibc 2.1 has special string functions that are faster than the normal
fdacb17d 1213library functions. Some of the functions are additionally implemented as
a9d75566
UD
1214inline functions and others as macros. This might lead to problems with
1215existing codes but it is explicitly allowed by ISO C.
61952351
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1216
1217The optimized string functions are only used when compiling with
fdacb17d 1218optimizations (-O1 or higher). The behavior can be changed with two feature
f12944ec 1219macros:
61952351
UD
1220
1221* __NO_STRING_INLINES: Don't do any string optimizations.
1222* __USE_STRING_INLINES: Use assembly language inline functions (might
1223 increase code size dramatically).
1224
f12944ec
UD
1225Since some of these string functions are now additionally defined as macros,
1226code like "char *strncpy();" doesn't work anymore (and is unnecessary, since
fdacb17d 1227<string.h> has the necessary declarations). Either change your code or
f12944ec 1228define __NO_STRING_INLINES.
61952351 1229
f12944ec
UD
1230{UD} Another problem in this area is that gcc still has problems on machines
1231with very few registers (e.g., ix86). The inline assembler code can require
1232almost all the registers and the register allocator cannot always handle
1233this situation.
61952351
UD
1234
1235One can disable the string optimizations selectively. Instead of writing
1236
1237 cp = strcpy (foo, "lkj");
1238
1239one can write
1240
1241 cp = (strcpy) (foo, "lkj");
1242
1243This disables the optimization for that specific call.
1244
4775243a
UD
1245?? I get compiler messages "Initializer element not constant" with
1246 stdin/stdout/stderr. Why?
1247
1248{RM,AJ} Constructs like:
66f6a52b 1249 static FILE *InPtr = stdin;
4775243a 1250
fdacb17d
UD
1251lead to this message. This is correct behaviour with glibc since stdin is
1252not a constant expression. Please note that a strict reading of ISO C does
f12944ec 1253not allow above constructs.
4775243a 1254
f12944ec
UD
1255One of the advantages of this is that you can assign to stdin, stdout, and
1256stderr just like any other global variable (e.g. `stdout = my_stream;'),
1257which can be very useful with custom streams that you can write with libio
fdacb17d 1258(but beware this is not necessarily portable). The reason to implement it
f12944ec 1259this way were versioning problems with the size of the FILE structure.
4775243a 1260
fdacb17d
UD
1261To fix those programs you've got to initialize the variable at run time.
1262This can be done, e.g. in main, like:
1263
66f6a52b
UD
1264 static FILE *InPtr;
1265 int main(void)
1266 {
1267 InPtr = stdin;
1268 }
fdacb17d
UD
1269
1270or by constructors (beware this is gcc specific):
1271
66f6a52b
UD
1272 static FILE *InPtr;
1273 static void inPtr_construct (void) __attribute__((constructor));
1274 static void inPtr_construct (void) { InPtr = stdin; }
fdacb17d 1275
4775243a
UD
1276
1277?? I can't compile with gcc -traditional (or
1278 -traditional-cpp). Why?
1279
1280{AJ} glibc2 does break -traditional and -traditonal-cpp - and will continue
fdacb17d 1281to do so. For example constructs of the form:
f12944ec 1282
66f6a52b
UD
1283 enum {foo
1284 #define foo foo
1285 }
f12944ec
UD
1286
1287are useful for debugging purposes (you can use foo with your debugger that's
1288why we need the enum) and for compatibility (other systems use defines and
1289check with #ifdef).
4775243a
UD
1290
1291?? I get some errors with `gcc -ansi'. Isn't glibc ANSI compatible?
1292
1293{AJ} The GNU C library is compatible with the ANSI/ISO C standard. If
f12944ec 1294you're using `gcc -ansi', the glibc includes which are specified in the
fdacb17d 1295standard follow the standard. The ANSI/ISO C standard defines what has to be
f12944ec
UD
1296in the include files - and also states that nothing else should be in the
1297include files (btw. you can still enable additional standards with feature
1298flags).
4775243a 1299
f12944ec
UD
1300The GNU C library is conforming to ANSI/ISO C - if and only if you're only
1301using the headers and library functions defined in the standard.
4775243a 1302
4d42000c
UD
1303?? I can't access some functions anymore. nm shows that they do
1304 exist but linking fails nevertheless.
1305
f12944ec
UD
1306{AJ} With the introduction of versioning in glibc 2.1 it is possible to
1307export only those identifiers (functions, variables) that are really needed
1308by application programs and by other parts of glibc. This way a lot of
1309internal interfaces are now hidden. nm will still show those identifiers
1310but marking them as internal. ISO C states that identifiers beginning with
1311an underscore are internal to the libc. An application program normally
1312shouldn't use those internal interfaces (there are exceptions,
1313e.g. __ivaliduser). If a program uses these interfaces, it's broken. These
1314internal interfaces might change between glibc releases or dropped
1315completely.
4d42000c 1316
9de4e203
UD
1317?? When using the db-2 library which comes with glibc is used in
1318 the Perl db modules the testsuite is not passed. This did not
1319 happen with db-1, gdbm, or ndbm.
1320
6abca68d 1321{} Removed. Does not apply anymore.
9de4e203 1322
5148d49f
UD
1323?? The pow() inline function I get when including <math.h> is broken.
1324 I get segmentation faults when I run the program.
1325
1326{UD} Nope, the implementation is correct. The problem is with egcs version
1327prior to 1.1. I.e., egcs 1.0 to 1.0.3 are all broken (at least on Intel).
1328If you have to use this compiler you must define __NO_MATH_INLINES before
1329including <math.h> to prevent the inline functions from being used. egcs 1.1
1330fixes the problem. I don't know about gcc 2.8 and 2.8.1.
1331
05f732b3
UD
1332?? The sys/sem.h file lacks the definition of `union semun'.
1333
1334{UD} Nope. This union has to be provided by the user program. Former glibc
1335versions defined this but it was an error since it does not make much sense
1336when thinking about it. The standards describing the System V IPC functions
1337define it this way and therefore programs must be adopted.
1338
a42134a7
UD
1339?? Why has <netinet/ip_fw.h> disappeared?
1340
1341{AJ} The corresponding Linux kernel data structures and constants are
440d13e2 1342totally different in Linux 2.0 and Linux 2.2. This situation has to be
a42134a7
UD
1343taken care in user programs using the firewall structures and therefore
1344those programs (ipfw is AFAIK the only one) should deal with this problem
1345themselves.
1346
ee586e0e
UD
1347?? I get floods of warnings when I use -Wconversion and include
1348 <string.h> or <math.h>.
1349
1350{ZW} <string.h> and <math.h> intentionally use prototypes to override
1351argument promotion. -Wconversion warns about all these. You can safely
1352ignore the warnings.
1353
1354-Wconversion isn't really intended for production use, only for shakedown
1355compiles after converting an old program to standard C.
1356
4d42000c 1357
49b75f5e
UD
1358?? After upgrading to glibc 2.1, I receive errors about
1359 unresolved symbols, like `_dl_initial_searchlist' and can not
1360 execute any binaries. What went wrong?
1361
1362{AJ} This normally happens if your libc and ld (dynamic linker) are from
1363different releases of glibc. For example, the dynamic linker
1364/lib/ld-linux.so.2 comes from glibc 2.0.x, but the version of libc.so.6 is
1365from glibc 2.1.
1366
1367The path /lib/ld-linux.so.2 is hardcoded in every glibc2 binary but
1368libc.so.6 is searched via /etc/ld.so.cache and in some special directories
1369like /lib and /usr/lib. If you run configure with another prefix than /usr
1370and put this prefix before /lib in /etc/ld.so.conf, your system will break.
1371
1372So what can you do? Either of the following should work:
1373
1374* Run `configure' with the same prefix argument you've used for glibc 2.0.x
1375 so that the same paths are used.
1376* Replace /lib/ld-linux.so.2 with a link to the dynamic linker from glibc
1377 2.1.
1378
1379You can even call the dynamic linker by hand if everything fails. You've
1380got to set LD_LIBRARY_PATH so that the corresponding libc is found and also
1381need to provide an absolute path to your binary:
1382
1383 LD_LIBRARY_PATH=<path-where-libc.so.6-lives> \
1384 <path-where-corresponding-dynamic-linker-lives>/ld-linux.so.2 \
1385 <path-to-binary>/binary
1386
1387For example `LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/libold /libold/ld-linux.so.2 /bin/mv ...'
1388might be useful in fixing a broken system (if /libold contains dynamic
1389linker and corresponding libc).
1390
1391With that command line no path is used. To further debug problems with the
1392dynamic linker, use the LD_DEBUG environment variable, e.g.
1393`LD_DEBUG=help echo' for the help text.
1394
1395If you just want to test this release, don't put the lib directory in
1396/etc/ld.so.conf. You can call programs directly with full paths (as above).
1397When compiling new programs against glibc 2.1, you've got to specify the
1398correct paths to the compiler (option -I with gcc) and linker (options
1399--dynamic-linker, -L and --rpath).
1400
b74656f9 1401?? bonnie reports that char i/o with glibc 2 is much slower than with
9f6b6d8d
UD
1402 libc5. What can be done?
1403
1404{AJ} The GNU C library uses thread safe functions by default and libc5 used
1405non thread safe versions. The non thread safe functions have in glibc the
1406suffix `_unlocked', for details check <stdio.h>. Using `putc_unlocked' etc.
1407instead of `putc' should give nearly the same speed with bonnie (bonnie is a
1408benchmark program for measuring disk access).
1409
9de4e203
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1410?? Programs compiled with glibc 2.1 can't read db files made with glibc
1411 2.0. What has changed that programs like rpm break?
1412
6abca68d 1413{} Removed. Does not apply anymore.
9de4e203 1414
8a40ed68
UD
1415?? Autoconf's AC_CHECK_FUNC macro reports that a function exists, but
1416 when I try to use it, it always returns -1 and sets errno to ENOSYS.
1417
1418{ZW} You are using a 2.0 Linux kernel, and the function you are trying to
1419use is only implemented in 2.1/2.2. Libc considers this to be a function
1420which exists, because if you upgrade to a 2.2 kernel, it will work. One
1421such function is sigaltstack.
1422
1423Your program should check at runtime whether the function works, and
1424implement a fallback. Note that Autoconf cannot detect unimplemented
1425functions in other systems' C libraries, so you need to do this anyway.
1426
b5a9efcd
UD
1427?? My program segfaults when I call fclose() on the FILE* returned
1428 from setmntent(). Is this a glibc bug?
1429
1430{GK} No. Don't do this. Use endmntent(), that's what it's for.
1431
1432In general, you should use the correct deallocation routine. For instance,
1433if you open a file using fopen(), you should deallocate the FILE * using
1434fclose(), not free(), even though the FILE * is also a pointer.
1435
1436In the case of setmntent(), it may appear to work in most cases, but it
1437won't always work. Unfortunately, for compatibility reasons, we can't
1438change the return type of setmntent() to something other than FILE *.
1439
c891b2df
UD
1440?? I get "undefined reference to `atexit'"
1441
1442{UD} This means that your installation is somehow broken. The situation is
1443the same as for 'stat', 'fstat', etc (see ?nonsh). Investigate why the
1444linker does not pick up libc_nonshared.a.
1445
1446If a similar message is issued at runtime this means that the application or
1447DSO is not linked against libc. This can cause problems since 'atexit' is
1448not exported anymore.
1449
49b75f5e 1450
61952351
UD
1451? Miscellaneous
1452
1453?? After I changed configure.in I get `Autoconf version X.Y.
1454 or higher is required for this script'. What can I do?
1455
1456{UD} You have to get the specified autoconf version (or a later one)
2eb45444 1457from your favorite mirror of ftp.gnu.org.
61952351
UD
1458
1459?? When I try to compile code which uses IPv6 headers and
1460 definitions on my Linux 2.x.y system I am in trouble.
1461 Nothing seems to work.
1462
f12944ec
UD
1463{UD} The problem is that IPv6 development still has not reached a point
1464where the headers are stable. There are still lots of incompatible changes
1465made and the libc headers have to follow.
61952351 1466
cb0509a8
UD
1467{PB} The 2.1 release of GNU libc aims to comply with the current versions of
1468all the relevant standards. The IPv6 support libraries for older Linux
1469systems used a different naming convention and so code written to work with
1470them may need to be modified. If the standards make incompatible changes in
1471the future then the libc may need to change again.
1472
1473IPv6 will not work with a 2.0.x kernel. When kernel 2.2 is released it
1474should contain all the necessary support; until then you should use the
3f7b3d9b 1475latest 2.1.x release you can find. As of 98/11/26 the currently recommended
cb0509a8
UD
1476kernel for IPv6 is 2.1.129.
1477
1478Also, as of the 2.1 release the IPv6 API provided by GNU libc is not
b669ab02 1479100% complete.
61952351 1480
8b4a4715 1481??tzdb When I set the timezone by setting the TZ environment variable
73237de3
UD
1482 to EST5EDT things go wrong since glibc computes the wrong time
1483 from this information.
1484
f12944ec
UD
1485{UD} The problem is that people still use the braindamaged POSIX method to
1486select the timezone using the TZ environment variable with a format EST5EDT
8b4a4715
UD
1487or whatever. People, if you insist on using TZ instead of the timezone
1488database (see below), read the POSIX standard, the implemented behaviour is
f12944ec
UD
1489correct! What you see is in fact the result of the decisions made while
1490POSIX.1 was created. We've only implemented the handling of TZ this way to
1491be POSIX compliant. It is not really meant to be used.
1492
1493The alternative approach to handle timezones which is implemented is the
1494correct one to use: use the timezone database. This avoids all the problems
1495the POSIX method has plus it is much easier to use. Simply run the tzselect
1496shell script, answer the question and use the name printed in the end by
8b4a4715
UD
1497making a symlink /etc/localtime pointing to /usr/share/zoneinfo/NAME (NAME
1498is the returned value from tzselect). That's all. You never again have to
1499worry.
f12944ec
UD
1500
1501So, please avoid sending bug reports about time related problems if you use
1502the POSIX method and you have not verified something is really broken by
1503reading the POSIX standards.
73237de3 1504
fdacb17d
UD
1505?? What other sources of documentation about glibc are available?
1506
1507{AJ} The FSF has a page about the GNU C library at
1508<http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/>. The problem data base of open and
1509solved bugs in GNU libc is available at
1510<http://www-gnats.gnu.org:8080/cgi-bin/wwwgnats.pl>. Eric Green has written
14a6b4e4 1511a HowTo for converting from Linux libc5 to glibc2. The HowTo is accessible
fdacb17d
UD
1512via the FSF page and at <http://www.imaxx.net/~thrytis/glibc>. Frodo
1513Looijaard describes a different way installing glibc2 as secondary libc at
1514<http://huizen.dds.nl/~frodol/glibc>.
1515
1516Please note that this is not a complete list.
1517
3f7b3d9b
UD
1518?? The timezone string for Sydney/Australia is wrong since even when
1519 daylight saving time is in effect the timezone string is EST.
1520
1521{UD} The problem for some timezones is that the local authorities decided
1522to use the term "summer time" instead of "daylight saving time". In this
1523case the abbreviation character `S' is the same as the standard one. So,
1524for Sydney we have
1525
1526 Eastern Standard Time = EST
1527 Eastern Summer Time = EST
1528
1529Great! To get this bug fixed convince the authorities to change the laws
1530and regulations of the country this effects. glibc behaves correctly.
1531
eeabe877
UD
1532??make I've build make 3.77 against glibc 2.1 and now make gets
1533 segmentation faults.
1534
6abca68d 1535{} Removed. Does not apply anymore, use make 3.79 or newer.
eeabe877 1536
c63598bf
UD
1537?? Why do so many programs using math functions fail on my AlphaStation?
1538
1539{AO} The functions floor() and floorf() use an instruction that is not
1540implemented in some old PALcodes of AlphaStations. This may cause
1541`Illegal Instruction' core dumps or endless loops in programs that
1542catch these signals. Updating the firmware to a 1999 release has
1543fixed the problem on an AlphaStation 200 4/166.
1544
8892c471
UD
1545?? The conversion table for character set XX does not match with
1546what I expect.
1547
1548{UD} I don't doubt for a minute that some of the conversion tables contain
1549errors. We tried the best we can and relied on automatic generation of the
1550data to prevent human-introduced errors but this still is no guarantee. If
1551you think you found a problem please send a bug report describing it and
1552give an authoritive reference. The latter is important since otherwise
1553the current behaviour is as good as the proposed one.
1554
1555Before doing this look through the list of known problem first:
1556
1557- the GBK (simplified Chinese) encoding is based on Unicode tables. This
1558 is good. These tables, however, differ slightly from the tables used
1559 by the M$ people. The differences are these [+ Unicode, - M$]:
1560
1561 +0xA1AA 0x2015
1562 +0xA844 0x2014
1563 -0xA1AA 0x2014
1564 -0xA844 0x2015
1565
1566 In addition the Unicode tables contain mappings for the GBK characters
1567 0xA8BC, 0xA8BF, 0xA989 to 0xA995, and 0xFE50 to 0xFEA0.
1568
ffa156af
UD
1569- when mapping from EUC-CN to GBK and vice versa we ignore the fact that
1570 the coded character at position 0xA1A4 maps to different Unicode
1571 characters. Since the iconv() implementation can do whatever it wants
1572 if it cannot directly map a character this is a perfectly good solution
1573 since the semantics and appearance of the character does not change.
8892c471 1574
be76803a
UD
1575?? How can I find out which version of glibc I am using in the moment?
1576
1577{UD} If you want to find out about the version from the command line simply
1578run the libc binary. This is probably not possible on all platforms but
1579where it is simply locate the libc DSO and start it as an application. On
1580Linux like
1581
1582 /lib/libc.so.6
1583
1584This will produce all the information you need.
1585
1586What always will work is to use the API glibc provides. Compile and run the
1587following little program to get the version information:
1588
1589~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1590#include <stdio.h>
1591#include <gnu/libc-version.h>
1592int main (void) { puts (gnu_get_libc_version ()); return 0; }
1593~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1594
1595This interface can also obviously be used to perform tests at runtime if
1596this should be necessary.
1597
5e014387
UD
1598?? Context switching with setcontext() does not work from within
1599 signal handlers.
1600
1601{DMT} The Linux implementations (IA-64, S390 so far) of setcontext()
1602supports synchronous context switches only. There are several reasons for
1603this:
1604
bcd249f6
AJ
1605- UNIX provides no other (portable) way of effecting a synchronous
1606 context switch (also known as co-routine switch). Some versions
1607 support this via setjmp()/longjmp() but this does not work
1608 universally.
1609
1610- As defined by the UNIX '98 standard, the only way setcontext()
1611 could trigger an asychronous context switch is if this function
1612 were invoked on the ucontext_t pointer passed as the third argument
1613 to a signal handler. But according to draft 5, XPG6, XBD 2.4.3,
1614 setcontext() is not among the set of routines that may be called
1615 from a signal handler.
1616
1617- If setcontext() were to be used for asynchronous context switches,
1618 all kinds of synchronization and re-entrancy issues could arise and
1619 these problems have already been solved by real multi-threading
1620 libraries (e.g., POSIX threads or Linux threads).
1621
1622- Synchronous context switching can be implemented entirely in
1623 user-level and less state needs to be saved/restored than for an
1624 asynchronous context switch. It is therefore useful to distinguish
1625 between the two types of context switches. Indeed, some
1626 application vendors are known to use setcontext() to implement
1627 co-routines on top of normal (heavier-weight) pre-emptable threads.
5e014387
UD
1628
1629It should be noted that if someone was dead-bent on using setcontext()
1630on the third arg of a signal handler, then IA-64 Linux could support
1631this via a special version of sigaction() which arranges that all
1632signal handlers start executing in a shim function which takes care of
1633saving the preserved registers before calling the real signal handler
1634and restoring them afterwards. In other words, we could provide a
1635compatibility layer which would support setcontext() for asynchronous
1636context switches. However, given the arguments above, I don't think
1637that makes sense. setcontext() provides a decent co-routine interface
1638and we should just discourage any asynchronous use (which just calls
1639for trouble at any rate).
1640
1641
61952351
UD
1642\f
1643Answers were given by:
5e014387
UD
1644{UD} Ulrich Drepper, <drepper@redhat.com>
1645{DMT} David Mosberger-Tang, <davidm@hpl.hp.com>
61952351 1646{RM} Roland McGrath, <roland@gnu.org>
14a6b4e4 1647{AJ} Andreas Jaeger, <aj@suse.de>
61952351
UD
1648{EY} Eric Youngdale, <eric@andante.jic.com>
1649{PB} Phil Blundell, <Philip.Blundell@pobox.com>
1650{MK} Mark Kettenis, <kettenis@phys.uva.nl>
1651{ZW} Zack Weinberg, <zack@rabi.phys.columbia.edu>
50f301a8 1652{TK} Thorsten Kukuk, <kukuk@suse.de>
5e014387 1653{GK} Geoffrey Keating, <geoffk@redhat.com>
da2d1bc5 1654{HJ} H.J. Lu, <hjl@gnu.org>
0f6052a8 1655{CG} Cristian Gafton, <gafton@redhat.com>
5e014387 1656{AO} Alexandre Oliva, <aoliva@redhat.com>
1324affa 1657{BH} Bruno Haible, <haible@clisp.cons.org>
61952351
UD
1658\f
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