configure: Don't claim 'unsupported host OS' when better message available

The change in commit 898be3e041 which made completely
unrecognized OSes cause an error_exit "Unsupported host OS"
has some unfortunate unintended effects:
 * if you run 'configure --help' on an unsupported host OS
   (eg if intending to use it as a build machine for a
   cross compile to a supported host) then the message
   is printed instead of --help
 * if the C compiler doesn't work or is missing (eg if
   you passed an incorrect --cross-prefix by mistake)
   the message is printed instead of the more useful
   'compiler does not exist or does not work' message

Fix this by postponing the error_exit in this situation
until later, when we have already identified the more
useful cases for this.

The long term fix for this would be to move handling
of --help much further up in the configure script,
and make its output not dependent on checks that configure
runs. However for 2.9 this would be too invasive.

Reported-by: Stefan Weil <sw@weilnetz.de>
Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Weil <sw@weilnetz.de>
Tested-by: Stefan Weil <sw@weilnetz.de>
This commit is contained in:
Peter Maydell 2017-03-28 14:01:52 +01:00
parent b529aec1ee
commit fb59dabd4f
1 changed files with 13 additions and 1 deletions

14
configure vendored
View File

@ -323,6 +323,7 @@ replication="yes"
supported_cpu="no"
supported_os="no"
bogus_os="no"
# parse CC options first
for opt do
@ -694,7 +695,10 @@ Linux)
supported_os="yes"
;;
*)
error_exit "Unsupported host OS $targetos"
# This is a fatal error, but don't report it yet, because we
# might be going to just print the --help text, or it might
# be the result of a missing compiler.
bogus_os="yes"
;;
esac
@ -1460,6 +1464,14 @@ if ! compile_prog ; then
error_exit "\"$cc\" cannot build an executable (is your linker broken?)"
fi
if test "$bogus_os" = "yes"; then
# Now that we know that we're not printing the help and that
# the compiler works (so the results of the check_defines we used
# to identify the OS are reliable), if we didn't recognize the
# host OS we should stop now.
error_exit "Unrecognized host OS $targetos"
fi
# Check that the C++ compiler exists and works with the C compiler
if has $cxx; then
cat > $TMPC <<EOF