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authorathenian200 <athenian200@outlook.com>2019-10-10 15:38:27 -0500
committerathenian200 <athenian200@outlook.com>2019-10-21 04:53:44 -0500
commit2f4488521db663520c703a9a836d5549d679266c (patch)
treeafe79a621a5037846f0089f22e5b59be0a95c8d9 /xpcom/string/nsTSubstring.h
parent7d65eb2b3a345abe22f42361e00c97da2e968009 (diff)
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MoonchildProductions#1251 - Part 23: Allow AMD64 build to work.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Mozilla/Developer_guide/Build_Instructions/Compiling_32-bit_Firefox_on_a_Linux_64-bit_OS Setting this up turned out to be easier than I thought it would be. All I had to do was apply these instructions in reverse and add the following to my .mozconfig file: CC="gcc -m64" CXX="g++ -m64" AS="gas --64" ac_add_options --target=x86_64-pc-solaris2.11 export PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/usr/lib/amd64/pkgconfig ac_add_options --libdir=/usr/lib/amd64 ac_add_options --x-libraries=/usr/lib/amd64 Most of these changes were fairly trivial, just requiring me to make a few of the changes I made earlier conditional on a 32-bit build. The biggest challenge was figuring out why the JavaScript engine triggered a segfault everytime it tried to allocate memory. But this patch fixes it: https://github.com/OpenIndiana/oi-userland/blob/oi/hipster/components/web/firefox/patches/patch-js_src_gc_Memory.cpp.patch Turns out that Solaris on AMD64 handles memory management in a fairly unusual way with a segmented memory model, but it's not that different from what we see on other 64-bit processors. In fact, I saw a SPARC crash for a similar reason, and noticed that it looked just like mine except the numbers in the first segment were reversed. Having played around with hex editors before, I had a feeling I might be dealing with a little-endian version of a big-endian problem, but I didn't expect that knowledge to actually yield an easy solution. https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=577056 https://www.oracle.com/technetwork/server-storage/solaris10/solaris-memory-135224.html As far as I can tell, this was the last barrier to an AMD64 Solaris build of Pale Moon.
Diffstat (limited to 'xpcom/string/nsTSubstring.h')
-rw-r--r--xpcom/string/nsTSubstring.h9
1 files changed, 7 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/xpcom/string/nsTSubstring.h b/xpcom/string/nsTSubstring.h
index 2b0723c04..537889d5c 100644
--- a/xpcom/string/nsTSubstring.h
+++ b/xpcom/string/nsTSubstring.h
@@ -9,7 +9,12 @@
#include "mozilla/MemoryReporting.h"
#include "mozilla/IntegerTypeTraits.h"
#include "mozilla/Span.h"
-#ifdef XP_SOLARIS
+
+// Solaris defines pid_t to be long on ILP32 and int on LP64. I checked in
+// sys/types.h. AMD64 and SPARC64 builds don't need this fix at all,
+// while all 32-bit builds do.
+
+#if defined(XP_SOLARIS) && !defined(__LP64__)
#include <unistd.h>
#endif
@@ -590,7 +595,7 @@ public:
const char* fmt = aRadix == 10 ? "%d" : aRadix == 8 ? "%o" : "%x";
AppendPrintf(fmt, aInteger);
}
-#ifdef XP_SOLARIS
+#if defined(XP_SOLARIS) && !defined(__LP64__)
void AppendInt(pid_t aInteger)
{
AppendPrintf("%lu", aInteger);