commit: 14bbe0bedd3043da77268f07352edc4f0a69fc5e
Author: Michał Górny <mgorny <AT> gentoo <DOT> org>
AuthorDate: Fri Dec 2 10:07:01 2016 +0000
Commit: Michał Górny <mgorny <AT> gentoo <DOT> org>
CommitDate: Fri Dec 2 10:15:52 2016 +0000
URL: https://gitweb.gentoo.org/repo/gentoo.git/commit/?id=14bbe0be
cmake-utils.eclass: Revert "Set assembler correctly, #601292"
Revert setting ASM=${CC}. It turns out that CMake is not splitting
arguments in ASM like in CC, so this effectively broke all multilib
builds.
eclass/cmake-utils.eclass | 4 +---
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 3 deletions(-)
diff --git a/eclass/cmake-utils.eclass b/eclass/cmake-utils.eclass
index c3de622..1305ab2 100644
--- a/eclass/cmake-utils.eclass
+++ b/eclass/cmake-utils.eclass
@@ -517,7 +517,7 @@ enable_cmake-utils_src_configure() {
includes="<INCLUDES>"
fi
cat > "${build_rules}" <<- _EOF_ || die
- SET (CMAKE_ASM_COMPILE_OBJECT "<CMAKE_ASM_COMPILER> <DEFINES>
${includes} ${CPPFLAGS} <FLAGS> -o <OBJECT> -c <SOURCE>" CACHE STRING "ASM
compile command" FORCE)
+ SET (CMAKE_ASM_COMPILE_OBJECT "<CMAKE_C_COMPILER> <DEFINES>
${includes} ${CFLAGS} <FLAGS> -o <OBJECT> -c <SOURCE>" CACHE STRING "ASM
compile command" FORCE)
SET (CMAKE_C_COMPILE_OBJECT "<CMAKE_C_COMPILER> <DEFINES>
${includes} ${CPPFLAGS} <FLAGS> -o <OBJECT> -c <SOURCE>" CACHE STRING "C
compile command" FORCE)
SET (CMAKE_CXX_COMPILE_OBJECT "<CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER> <DEFINES>
${includes} ${CPPFLAGS} <FLAGS> -o <OBJECT> -c <SOURCE>" CACHE STRING "C++
compile command" FORCE)
SET (CMAKE_Fortran_COMPILE_OBJECT "<CMAKE_Fortran_COMPILER>
<DEFINES> ${includes} ${FCFLAGS} <FLAGS> -o <OBJECT> -c <SOURCE>" CACHE STRING
"Fortran compile command" FORCE)
@@ -532,8 +532,6 @@ enable_cmake-utils_src_configure() {
# Bug 542530, export those instead of setting paths in toolchain file
local -x CC=$(tc-getCC) CXX=$(tc-getCXX) FC=$(tc-getFC)
local -x PKG_CONFIG=$(tc-getPKG_CONFIG)
- # Bug 601292, set the compiler for assembly as well
- local -x ASM=$(tc-getCC) ASMFLAGS=${CFLAGS}
if tc-is-cross-compiler; then
local sysname