From 394bdd11fc1f741c88c89f0e71571d87a29ab627 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Matt Weber Date: Mon, 17 Sep 2018 16:21:51 -0500 Subject: [PATCH] BR2_FORTIFY*: toolchain wrapper limitation note A note is added to tie off the discussion on why moving _FORTIFY_SOURCE related flags into the toolchain wrapper doesn't currently work. - Currently -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE and optimizations are passed through CFLAGS - Packages like linux-tools ignore CFLAGS entirely and some autotools toolchain testing cases dependent on not using CFLAGS. - If FORTIFY_SOURCE is passed through the wrapper, then linux-tools will no longer be able to ignore it, because it's enforced at a lower-level and since the optimization -Os/g/1/2/3 are via CFLAGS, there is no optimization flag set. Therefore linux-tools will do all its configuration tests with FORTIFY_SOURCE forcefully enabled at the wrapper level, but no optimization enabled, and consequently tests will fail. Signed-off-by: Matthew Weber Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard --- package/Makefile.in | 9 +++++++++ 1 file changed, 9 insertions(+) diff --git a/package/Makefile.in b/package/Makefile.in index dc0eecf1d5..44761b79c5 100644 --- a/package/Makefile.in +++ b/package/Makefile.in @@ -143,6 +143,15 @@ endif TARGET_LDFLAGS = $(call qstrip,$(BR2_TARGET_LDFLAGS)) +# By design, _FORTIFY_SOURCE requires gcc optimization to be enabled. +# Therefore, we need to pass _FORTIFY_SOURCE and the optimization level +# through the same mechanism, i.e currently through CFLAGS. Passing +# _FORTIFY_SOURCE through the wrapper and the optimization level +# through CFLAGS would not work, because CFLAGS are sometimes +# ignored/overridden by packages, but the flags passed by the wrapper +# are enforced: this would cause _FORTIFY_SOURCE to be used without any +# optimization level, leading to a build / configure failure. So we keep +# passing _FORTIFY_SOURCE and the optimization level both through CFLAGS. ifeq ($(BR2_FORTIFY_SOURCE_1),y) TARGET_HARDENED += -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=1 else ifeq ($(BR2_FORTIFY_SOURCE_2),y) -- 2.30.2