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We are catching a segfault on a project built using Autotools on AIX. According to gdb it is dying in startup code. The same project built with a GNUmakefile is fine. A related problem is here.

Autotools adds some unusual linker flags and we are fairly certain it is the root cause of the problem. The Autotools generated Makefile is online here.

And:

libtool: link: g++ -pthread -fdata-sections -ffunction-sections -pipe -g -O2 -pt
hread -o .libs/cryptestcwd cryptestcwd-test.o ...
yptestcwd-dlltest.o cryptestcwd-fipsalgt.o cryptestcwd-adhoc.o  -L./.libs -lcryp
topp -L/opt/freeware/lib/gcc/powerpc-ibm-aix7.2.0.0/7.2.0 -lstdc++ -lm -pthread
-Wl,-blibpath:/usr/local/lib:/opt/freeware/lib/gcc/powerpc-ibm-aix7.2.0.0/7.2.0:
/opt/freeware/lib/gcc/powerpc-ibm-aix7.2.0.0/7.2.0:/opt/freeware/lib/gcc/powerpc
-ibm-aix7.2.0.0/7.2.0/../../..:/usr/lib:/lib

The flags do not come from the environment or our configure.ac:

-bash-4.4$ echo $LDFLAGS
-bash-4.4$ echo $LDLIBS $LIBS
-bash-4.4$

And the AM_CXXFLAGS and AM_LDFLAGS we add:

AM_CXXFLAGS:  -pthread -fdata-sections -ffunction-sections
AM_LDFLAGS:  -pthread -Wl,--demangle

I've tried to make LDFLAGS="" and override the Autotools flags but the same flags are added.

My first question is, how are they overriding our LDFLAGS? GNU makefiles don't work that way. GNU always allows a user to override a makefile's flags.

My second question is, how do we stop Autotools from adding the unwanted flags during the link phase?


Here is our configure.ac. Here is the summary of options we add after running a vanilla ./configure:

Auto-configuration complete. A summary of options are below. If
something looks wrong then please modify config.h and please report
it at http://github.com/noloader/cryptopp-autotools.

   Build triplet: powerpc-ibm-aix7.2.0.0
 Compiler target: powerpc-ibm-aix7.2.0.0
Compiler version: g++ (GCC) 7.2.0

Static library: yes
Shared library: yes

CRYPTOPP_PPC_FLAG: -mcpu=power8 -maltivec
CRYPTOPP_CHAM_FLAG: -mcpu=power7 -maltivec
CRYPTOPP_CRC_FLAG: -mcpu=power8 -maltivec
CRYPTOPP_LEA_FLAG: -mcpu=power7 -maltivec
CRYPTOPP_GCM_FLAG: -mcpu=power8 -maltivec
CRYPTOPP_AES_FLAG: -mcpu=power8 -maltivec
CRYPTOPP_SHA_FLAG: -mcpu=power8 -maltivec
CRYPTOPP_SIMECK_FLAG: -mcpu=power7 -maltivec
CRYPTOPP_SIMON_FLAG: -mcpu=power7 -maltivec
CRYPTOPP_SPECK_FLAG: -mcpu=power7 -maltivec
CRYPTOPP_SM4_FLAG: -mcpu=power7 -maltivec

Automake flags (can be overridden by user flags):
AM_CXXFLAGS:  -pthread -fdata-sections -ffunction-sections
AM_LDFLAGS:  -pthread -Wl,--demangle

User flags (overrides Automake flags on conflict):
CXXFLAGS: -g -O2
LDFLAGS:
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  • Hi, what are the autotool commands you used? Aug 4, 2018 at 5:49
  • @Lorinczy - I added additional information with the Autotools command and the flags we added through AM_CXXFLAGS and AM_LDFLAGS.
    – jww
    Aug 4, 2018 at 16:02
  • @Lorinczy - Do you have any ideas? I'm stumped where these extra flags are coming from and why I can't override them.
    – jww
    Aug 13, 2018 at 16:27
  • You should find out where this LDFLAGS comes from, as it is plain wrong. Is the whole program downloadable from somewhere? Aug 13, 2018 at 17:48
  • @Lorinczy - Yes, the Autotools front-end is available as a separate project at Crypto++ | Autotools.
    – jww
    Aug 14, 2018 at 1:04

1 Answer 1

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My first question is, how are they overriding our LDFLAGS? GNU makefiles don't work that way. GNU always allow a user to override a makefile's flags.

The Autotools are not overriding your LDFLAGS. It is not within their power to do so, and it is an explicit design philosophy of the Autotools that they do not override the decisions of the person building the project.

However, LDFLAGS is not the only source of link options. The compiler flags are added too, and in particular, libraries to link in shouldn't be included in LDFLAGS (or AM_LDFLAGS or mytarget_LDFLAGS) at all, because those variables (the first and exactly one of the latter two) are expanded before the list of objects to link.

But above and beyond all that, libtool adds flags that it thinks are appropriate, and that's where the -Wl,-blibpath is coming from in your case.

My second question is, how do we stop Autotools from adding the unwanted flags during the link phase?

Not easily, I'm afraid. Your best option is probably to modify the in-project copy of the libtool shell script to suppress it. This is analogous to Fedora's packaging guidelines for suppressing generation of rpath entries in ELF binaries.

You might also want to consider digging deeper into why that option causes trouble for you. It sets a run-time shared library search path (again like rpath), and if you get different behavior with and without then that implies that different libraries are getting dynamically linked in those two cases. It looks like libtool chooses the path it does based on the compile-time library search path, and if so then it should concern you that the libraries you are linking against do not successfully support the program at runtime.

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  • Thanks John. Digging deeper to determine what is wrong is a non-starter. Symbols are not installed and the debugger only works part of the time. In fact I can't even restart the program under the debugger. Plus, I can't fix what is wrong in the startup code. That is someone else's code.
    – jww
    Aug 14, 2018 at 1:29

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