From bbea4050802a2e7e0296a21823c0925782c02b93 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Peter Maydell Date: Tue, 14 Aug 2012 15:35:34 +0100 Subject: configure: Don't override user's --cpu on MacOS and Solaris Both MacOS and Solaris have special case handling for the CPU type, because the check_define probes will return i386 even if the hardware is 64 bit and x86_64 would be preferable. Move these checks earlier in the configure probing so that we can do them only if the user didn't specify a CPU with --cpu. This fixes a bug where the user's command line argument was being ignored. Reviewed-by: Andreas F=E4rber Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori --- configure | 60 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------------------------- 1 file changed, 35 insertions(+), 25 deletions(-) (limited to 'configure') diff --git a/configure b/configure index cc774b5fd9..d08c0ce028 100755 --- a/configure +++ b/configure @@ -298,6 +298,41 @@ EOF compile_object } +if check_define __linux__ ; then + targetos="Linux" +elif check_define _WIN32 ; then + targetos='MINGW32' +elif check_define __OpenBSD__ ; then + targetos='OpenBSD' +elif check_define __sun__ ; then + targetos='SunOS' +elif check_define __HAIKU__ ; then + targetos='Haiku' +else + targetos=`uname -s` +fi + +# Some host OSes need non-standard checks for which CPU to use. +# Note that these checks are broken for cross-compilation: if you're +# cross-compiling to one of these OSes then you'll need to specify +# the correct CPU with the --cpu option. +case $targetos in +Darwin) + # on Leopard most of the system is 32-bit, so we have to ask the kernel if we can + # run 64-bit userspace code. + # If the user didn't specify a CPU explicitly and the kernel says this is + # 64 bit hw, then assume x86_64. Otherwise fall through to the usual detection code. + if test -z "$cpu" && test "$(sysctl -n hw.optional.x86_64)" = "1"; then + cpu="x86_64" + fi + ;; +SunOS) + # `uname -m` returns i86pc even on an x86_64 box, so default based on isainfo + if test -z "$cpu" && test "$(isainfo -k)" = "amd64"; then + cpu="x86_64" + fi +esac + if test ! -z "$cpu" ; then # command line argument : @@ -372,19 +407,6 @@ if test -z "$ARCH"; then fi # OS specific -if check_define __linux__ ; then - targetos="Linux" -elif check_define _WIN32 ; then - targetos='MINGW32' -elif check_define __OpenBSD__ ; then - targetos='OpenBSD' -elif check_define __sun__ ; then - targetos='SunOS' -elif check_define __HAIKU__ ; then - targetos='Haiku' -else - targetos=`uname -s` -fi case $targetos in CYGWIN*) @@ -434,12 +456,6 @@ OpenBSD) Darwin) bsd="yes" darwin="yes" - # on Leopard most of the system is 32-bit, so we have to ask the kernel it if we can - # run 64-bit userspace code - if [ "$cpu" = "i386" ] ; then - is_x86_64=`sysctl -n hw.optional.x86_64` - [ "$is_x86_64" = "1" ] && cpu=x86_64 - fi if [ "$cpu" = "x86_64" ] ; then QEMU_CFLAGS="-arch x86_64 $QEMU_CFLAGS" LDFLAGS="-arch x86_64 $LDFLAGS" @@ -460,12 +476,6 @@ SunOS) smbd="${SMBD-/usr/sfw/sbin/smbd}" needs_libsunmath="no" solarisrev=`uname -r | cut -f2 -d.` - # have to select again, because `uname -m` returns i86pc - # even on an x86_64 box. - solariscpu=`isainfo -k` - if test "${solariscpu}" = "amd64" ; then - cpu="x86_64" - fi if [ "$cpu" = "i386" -o "$cpu" = "x86_64" ] ; then if test "$solarisrev" -le 9 ; then if test -f /opt/SUNWspro/prod/lib/libsunmath.so.1; then -- cgit v1.2.3-55-g7522