Hi, I’ve restarted the musl port for RISC-V based on this tree (which appeared to be the most recent): - https://github.com/lluixhi/musl-riscv I have a pull request against that tree that has some fixes and merges upstream, but is still parented against lluixhi - https://github.com/lluixhi/musl-riscv/pull/3 I also have a branch with the same changes rebased against musl upstream git. - https://github.com/rv8-io/musl-riscv/tree/musl-upstream I obviously can’t make a pull request with a rebased tree so I have two branches, one parented to musl-riscv and the other parented to musl upstream. When I started, the tree did not compile due to a change in definition of long double to float128. I got the tree to compile by bringing in the QP changes but busybox linked against the resulting lib would fail with permission denied errors. I found that the stat.h was not the asm-generic version. RISC-V does not have it’s own syscall table and just uses the version in asm-generic, likewise for the stat structure. It seems the tree might have imported stat.h from another arch or been based on an earlier riscv-linux. I’ve brought in the generic versions from aarch64. The tree can now build a working busybox on a relatively recent riscv-linux tree i.e. Jan-2017, and it should work on latest riscv-linux as I don’t believe there have been any recent ABI breaks. So the port now passes the "busybox will run” test. Next on the list is to review the atomics. I have a commit I am preparing that defines a_cas similarly to aarch64 with load reserved store conditional. I’d also like to learn how to use the libc test suite. BTW Some of the RISC-V developers have asked why musl doesn’t use GCC atomic builtins? e.g. - https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/_005f_005fatomic-Builtins.html Regards, Michael > On 9 Dec 2016, at 1:36 PM, Alan Pillay wrote: > > What is the current status of musl on RISC-V? > This was the last time I heard about it, but it has been many months since. > Regards. > >> Hello, >> >> Thanks to the folks, I passed the mid-term evaluation. Now it is about >> time to publish the fifth progress report on porting musl on RISC-V. >> >> Last week, the toolchain itself has been built for RISC-V and running >> on Spike, and libc-test [1] can be executed with it now. I posted the >> result of tests on [2]. The REPORT.txt file contains all error >> messages of failed tests, both run-time ones and compile-time ones. >> >> Some failures are expected since musl on x86_64 also does the same >> ones (e.g. errors in src/api/fcntl.c), but there are some unexpected >> errors too. I guess that the "warning: is >> shorter than expected" warning indicates bugs in arch-dependent part >> of I/O functions or system calls (or kernel?) and it causes syntax >> errors in the same compilation unit. >> >> Moreover, some tests triggers a "signal 11" error (segmentation fault) >> in libc. I added some logs to [2]. They are bugs in the port, >> obviously. I am working on them. >> >> The good news is, anyway, some results are *better than x86_64*, >> especially in math functions :-) >> (probably the cause is the difference in the floating-point precision, >> though. it is usual in float tests...) >> >> It takes long, long time to get but finally I have a (seems-to-be) >> working test suite for the port. I will continue to debug and fix the >> port using the result. Stay tuned! >> >> >> [1]: http://nsz.repo.hu/git/?p=libc-test >> [2]: https://gist.github.com/omasanori/ee828369aea844ac7fdfdc8362953299 >> >> -- >> Masanori Ogino >