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2Quick Installation Guide for musl libc
3======================================
4
5There are many different ways to install musl depending on your usage
6case. This document covers only the build and installation of musl by
7itself, which is useful for upgrading an existing musl-based system or
8compiler toolchain, or for using the provided musl-gcc wrapper with an
9existing non-musl-based compiler.
10
11Building complete native or cross-compiler toolchains is outside the
12scope of this INSTALL file. More information can be found on the musl
13website and community wiki.
14
15
16Build Prerequisites
17-------------------
18
19The only build-time prerequisites for musl are GNU Make and a
20freestanding C99 compiler toolchain targeting the desired instruction
21set architecture and ABI, with support for a minimal subset of "GNU C"
22extensions consisting mainly of gcc-style inline assembly, weak
23aliases, hidden visibility, and stand-alone assembly source files.
24
25GCC, LLVM/clang, Firm/cparser, and PCC have all successfully built
26musl, but GCC is the most widely used/tested. Recent compiler (and
27binutils) versions should be used if possible since some older
28versions have bugs which affect musl.
29
30The system used to build musl does not need to be Linux-based, nor do
31the Linux kernel headers need to be available.
32
33
34
35Supported Targets
36-----------------
37
38musl can be built for the following CPU instruction set architecture
39and ABI combinations:
40
41* i386
42 * Minimum CPU model is actually 80486 unless kernel emulation of
43 the `cmpxchg` instruction is added
44
45* x86_64
46 * ILP32 ABI (x32) is available as a separate arch but is still
47 experimental
48
49* ARM
50 * EABI, standard or hard-float VFP variant
51 * Little-endian default; big-endian variants also supported
52 * Compiler toolchains only support armv4t and later
53
54* AArch64
55 * Little-endian default; big-endian variants also supported
56
57* MIPS
58 * ABI is o32
59 * Big-endian default; little-endian variants also supported
60 * Default ABI variant uses FPU registers; alternate soft-float ABI
61 that does not use FPU registers or instructions is available
62 * MIPS2 or later, or kernel emulation of ll/sc (standard in Linux)
63 is required
64
65* MIPS64
66 * ABI is n64 (LP64)
67 * Big-endian default; little-endian variants also supported
68 * Default ABI variant uses FPU registers; alternate soft-float ABI
69 that does not use FPU registers or instructions is available
70
71* PowerPC
72 * Compiler toolchain must provide 64-bit long double, not IBM
73 double-double or IEEE quad
74 * For dynamic linking, compiler toolchain must be configured for
75 "secure PLT" variant
76
77* PowerPC64
78 * Both little and big endian variants are supported
79 * Compiler toolchain must provide 64-bit long double, not IBM
80 double-double or IEEE quad
81 * Compiler toolchain must use the new (ELFv2) ABI regardless of
82 whether it is for little or big endian
83
84* S390X (64-bit S390)
85
86* SuperH (SH)
87 * Standard ELF ABI or FDPIC ABI (shared-text without MMU)
88 * Little-endian by default; big-engian variant also supported
89 * Full FPU ABI or soft-float ABI is supported, but the
90 single-precision-only FPU ABI is not
91
92* Microblaze
93 * Big-endian default; little-endian variants also supported
94 * Soft-float
95 * Requires support for lwx/swx instructions
96
97* OpenRISC 1000 (or1k)
98
99
100
101Build and Installation Procedure
102--------------------------------
103
104To build and install musl:
105
1061. Run the provided configure script from the top-level source
107 directory, passing on its command line any desired options.
108
1092. Run "make" to compile.
110
1113. Run "make install" with appropriate privileges to write to the
112 target locations.
113
114The configure script attempts to determine automatically the correct
115target architecture based on the compiler being used. For some
116compilers, this may not be possible. If detection fails or selects the
117wrong architecture, you can provide an explicit selection on the
118configure command line.
119
120By default, configure installs to a prefix of "/usr/local/musl". This
121differs from the behavior of most configure scripts, and is chosen
122specifically to avoid clashing with libraries already present on the
123system. DO NOT set the prefix to "/usr", "/usr/local", or "/" unless
124you're upgrading libc on an existing musl-based system. Doing so will
125break your existing system when you run "make install" and it may be
126difficult to recover.
127
128
129
130Notes on Dynamic Linking
131------------------------
132
133If dynamic linking is enabled, one file needs to be installed outside
134of the installation prefix: /lib/ld-musl-$ARCH.so.1. This is the
135dynamic linker. Its pathname is hard-coded into all dynamic-linked
136programs, so for the sake of being able to share binaries between
137systems, a consistent location should be used everywhere. Note that
138the same applies to glibc and its dynamic linker, which is named
139/lib/ld-linux.so.2 on i386 systems.
140
141If for some reason it is impossible to install the dynamic linker in
142its standard location (for example, if you are installing without root
143privileges), the --syslibdir option to configure can be used to
144provide a different location
145
146At runtime, the dynamic linker needs to know the paths to search for
147shared libraries. You should create a text file named
148/etc/ld-musl-$ARCH.path (where $ARCH matches the architecture name
149used in the dynamic linker) containing a list of directories where you
150want the dynamic linker to search for shared libraries, separated by
151colons or newlines. If the dynamic linker has been installed in a
152non-default location, the path file also needs to reside at that
153location (../etc relative to the chosen syslibdir).
154
155If you do not intend to use dynamic linking, you may disable it by
156passing --disable-shared to configure; this also cuts the build time
157in half.
158
159
160
161Checking for Successful Installation
162------------------------------------
163
164After installing, you should be able to use musl via the musl-gcc
165wrapper. For example:
166
167cat > hello.c <<EOF
168#include <stdio.h>
169int main()
170{
171 printf("hello, world!\n");
172 return 0;
173}
174EOF
175/usr/local/musl/bin/musl-gcc hello.c
176./a.out
177
178To configure autoconf-based program to compile and link against musl,
179set the CC variable to musl-gcc when running configure, as in:
180
181CC=musl-gcc ./configure ...
182
183You will probably also want to use --prefix when building libraries to
184ensure that they are installed under the musl prefix and not in the
185main host system library directories.
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