On 10/31/07, Kris Kennaway <kris_at_freebsd.org> wrote: > Stephan F. Yaraghchi wrote: > > On 10/31/07, Kris Kennaway <kris_at_freebsd.org> wrote: > >> Stephan F. Yaraghchi wrote: > >>> After making world on a freshly installed 7.0-BETA1 > >>> the system does not boot anymore due to a broken loader: > >>> > >>> > >>> FreeBSD/i386 bootstrap loader, Revision 1.1 > >>> (root_at_bigblue, Tue Oct 30 11:26:32 CET 2007) > >>> Can't work out which disk we are booting from. > >>> Guessed BIOS device 0xffffffff not found by probes defaulting to disk0: > >>> > >>> panic: free: guard1 fail_at_ 0x6ded4 from > >>> /usr/src/sys/boot/i386/loader/../../common/module.c:959 > >>> > >>> --> Press a key on the console to reboot <-- > >>> > >>> > >>> I found out that the following line in my make.conf causes > >>> the problem: > >>> > >>> CFLAGS= -O2 -funroll-loops -pipe > >>> > >>> > >>> After changing down to -O1 and making /usr/src/sys/boot again > >>> the systems behaves properly at boot. > >>> > >>> Is this behavior intended? > >> Maybe, what happens if you use just -O2 -pipe? -funroll-loops is not an > >> appropriate thing to be using globally anyway, unless your intention is > >> to randomly make some code slower. > >> > >> Kris > >> > > > > Hi Kris, > > > > I tried all possible combinations of these switches -- only -O2 led to > > the described > > behaviour. > > Presumably you mean -O2 -funroll-loops, not -O2. Or are you saying the > latter also breaks the loader? > > > Anyway, it's very interesting to hear that adding these optimizations > > to make.conf > > is not recommended, even that -funroll-loops is possibly slowing down > > certain code. > > > > I'm sure many people use it since it's a common tuning tip found on the web. > > I read about it in Dru Lavigne's "BSD Hacks" (O'Reilly)... > > Yes, unfortunately it's bogus advice. What does she say this option is > good for? > > Kris > Hi Kris, you are right: It's the combination of both that causes loader to break. Oliver suggested the defaults (-O2 -fno-strict-aliasing -pipe) and it works. By the way: "BSD Hacks" is a collection of hacks compiled by Dru. Hack #69 deals with tuning and is authored by Avleen Vig. It says: "The -funroll-loops saves one CPU register that would otherwise be tied up in tracking the iteration of the loop, but at the expense of making a slightly larger binary." -- Stephan www.deine-stimme-gegen-armut.deReceived on Thu Nov 01 2007 - 06:34:06 UTC
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