Many packages use GNU autotools (automake and autoconf) to build, to the point that "./configure && make" represents one of the most common build procedures for Free Software packages. Libraries using autotools typically use GNU Libtool, partly because it works on almost any system and partly because autotools makes it difficult to do otherwise. Packages which use these libraries sometimes use libtool as well. Yet for many of these libraries and other packages, more than half of the build time goes into running the libtool shell script. Libtool knows how to handle libraries for umpteen different systems, including many ancient systems that have terrible shared library support. It has some extensive shell script logic to figure out how to build libraries for your system, and how to compile objects that go in those libraries. This logic does an amazingly impressive job of coping with adverse conditions. However, this logic all lives in an ~8500 line, ~250kB shell script, which runs *every single time you compile a source file*. This does not do wonders for performance. Meanwhile, modern systems such as GNU/Linux have reasonable library mechanisms, and need relatively little of the machinery in libtool. On these common systems, it would significantly improve build times to avoid running that libtool machinery for every compilation. Thus, I wrote Dolt, a drop-in replacement for libtool's compilation mode. Dolt runs any necessary system-specific or configuration-specific logic as part of configure, writes out a simple shell script "doltcompile"[1], and substitutes it for libtool in the automake variables LTCOMPILE and LTCXXCOMPILE. If you use automake, autoconf, and libtool, then using Dolt just requires two steps: 1) add "DOLT" after the call to LT_INIT, AC_PATH_LIBTOOL, or AM_PATH_LIBTOOL in your configure.ac or configure.in script, and 2) append dolt.m4 to your project's acinclude.m4. For any system Dolt does not support, it will transparently fall back to libtool. dolt.m4 takes up less than 4kB; it writes out a minimal doltcompile script which never forks except to run the compiler or to mkdir the .libs directory if it doesn't already exist. I have tested it with various projects, and benchmarked[2] its performance against the same projects using only libtool. Results: kdelibs without dolt: 8m6.115s kdelibs with dolt: 3m50.065s gtk+-2.0 without dolt: 2m31.825s gtk+-2.0 with dolt: 1m33.858s libx11 without dolt: 1m50.163s libx11 with dolt: 0m53.417s libxml2 without dolt: 0m25.722s libxml2 with dolt: 0m19.576s dbus without dolt: 0m20.062s dbus with dolt: 0m8.940s I have attached a snapshot of dolt.m4 for convenience. You can also obtain the current version of Dolt from Git with: git clone git://svcs.cs.pdx.edu/git/dolt or download a snapshot tarball from <http://svcs.cs.pdx.edu/gitweb?p=dolt.git;a=snapshot;h=master;sf=tgz>. Please try Dolt with your project, and see if you get comparable performance improvements. If you want to make Dolt replace libtool on your system, feel free to send me a patch to dolt.m4; just remember the basic tenet that any logic must run at configure time, not build time. You can figure out what compiler flags libtool uses by running "touch dummy.c && libtool --mode=compile gcc -c dummy.c -o dummy.lo"; that will print two compiler command lines, one for the shared object and one for the static object. Future directions: * Support GNU/Linux on architectures other than x86 and x86-64. I think most will work with exactly the same compiler flags, but I didn't want to add any architecture I couldn't test. * Support other systems. * Possibly try to run libtool on a dummy source file at configure time to figure out the necessary flags to use when building library objects, but that seems error-prone. * Replace libtool --mode=link. * Replace libtool --mode=install. * Optionally stop installing .la files. * Make dolt.m4's output of doltcompile cleaner. - Josh Triplett [1] "doltcompile" stands for "do ltcompile"; the alternate reading "dolt compile" led to the name "dolt". [2] General testing methodology: * Run ./configure && make && make clean, to make sure it builds and to get everything cached. * Get the "before" time: time make >/dev/null 2>&1 * Remove and re-extract the source. * Add dolt.m4 to acinclude.m4 and add DOLT to configure.in or configure.ac. * autoreconf -v -f -i && ./configure && make && make clean, to make sure it still builds and to get everything cached again. * Get the "after" time: time make >/dev/null 2>&1
dnl dolt, a replacement for libtool dnl Copyright © 2007-2008 Josh Triplett <josh@freedesktop.org> dnl Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification, dnl are permitted in any medium without royalty provided the copyright dnl notice and this notice are preserved. dnl dnl To use dolt, invoke the DOLT macro immediately after the libtool macros. dnl Optionally, copy this file into acinclude.m4, to avoid the need to have it dnl installed when running autoconf on your project. AC_DEFUN([DOLT], [ AC_REQUIRE([AC_CANONICAL_HOST]) # dolt, a replacement for libtool # Josh Triplett <josh@freedesktop.org> AC_PATH_PROG(DOLT_BASH, bash) AC_MSG_CHECKING([if libtool sucks]) AC_MSG_RESULT([yup, it does]) AC_MSG_CHECKING([if dolt supports this host]) dolt_supported=yes if test x$DOLT_BASH = x; then dolt_supported=no fi if test x$GCC != xyes; then dolt_supported=no fi case $host in i?86-*-linux*|x86_64-*-linux*) ;; *) dolt_supported=no ;; esac if test x$dolt_supported = xno ; then AC_MSG_RESULT([no, falling back to libtool]) else AC_MSG_RESULT([yes, replacing libtool]) dnl Start writing out doltcompile. cat <<__DOLTCOMPILE__EOF__ >doltcompile #!$DOLT_BASH __DOLTCOMPILE__EOF__ cat <<'__DOLTCOMPILE__EOF__' >>doltcompile args=("$[]@") for ((arg=0; arg<${#args@<:@@@:>@}; arg++)) ; do if test x"${args@<:@$arg@:>@}" = x-o ; then objarg=$((arg+1)) break fi done if test x$objarg = x ; then echo 'Error: no -o on compiler command line' 1>&2 exit 1 fi lo="${args@<:@$objarg@:>@}" obj="${lo%.lo}" if test x"$lo" = x"$obj" ; then echo "Error: libtool object file name \"$lo\" does not end in .lo" 1>&2 exit 1 fi objbase="${obj##*/}" __DOLTCOMPILE__EOF__ dnl Write out shared compilation code. if test x$enable_shared = xyes; then cat <<'__DOLTCOMPILE__EOF__' >>doltcompile libobjdir="${obj%$objbase}.libs" if test ! -d "$libobjdir" ; then mkdir "$libobjdir" mkdir_ret=$? if test "$mkdir_ret" -ne 0 && test ! -d "$libobjdir" ; then exit $mkdir_ret fi fi pic_object="$libobjdir/$objbase.o" args@<:@$objarg@:>@="$pic_object" "${args@<:@@@:>@}" -fPIC -DPIC __DOLTCOMPILE__EOF__ fi dnl Write out static compilation code. dnl Avoid duplicate compiler output if also building shared objects. if test x$enable_static = xyes; then cat <<'__DOLTCOMPILE__EOF__' >>doltcompile non_pic_object="$obj.o" args@<:@$objarg@:>@="$non_pic_object" __DOLTCOMPILE__EOF__ if test x$enable_shared = xyes; then cat <<'__DOLTCOMPILE__EOF__' >>doltcompile "${args@<:@@@:>@}" >/dev/null 2>&1 __DOLTCOMPILE__EOF__ else cat <<'__DOLTCOMPILE__EOF__' >>doltcompile "${args@<:@@@:>@}" __DOLTCOMPILE__EOF__ fi fi dnl Write out the code to write the .lo file. dnl The second line of the .lo file must match "^# Generated by .*libtool" cat <<'__DOLTCOMPILE__EOF__' >>doltcompile { echo "# $lo - a libtool object file" echo "# Generated by doltcompile, not libtool" __DOLTCOMPILE__EOF__ if test x$enable_shared = xyes; then cat <<'__DOLTCOMPILE__EOF__' >>doltcompile echo "pic_object='$pic_object'" __DOLTCOMPILE__EOF__ else cat <<'__DOLTCOMPILE__EOF__' >>doltcompile echo pic_object=none __DOLTCOMPILE__EOF__ fi if test x$enable_static = xyes; then cat <<'__DOLTCOMPILE__EOF__' >>doltcompile echo "non_pic_object='$non_pic_object'" __DOLTCOMPILE__EOF__ else cat <<'__DOLTCOMPILE__EOF__' >>doltcompile echo non_pic_object=none __DOLTCOMPILE__EOF__ fi cat <<'__DOLTCOMPILE__EOF__' >>doltcompile } > "$lo" __DOLTCOMPILE__EOF__ dnl Done writing out doltcompile; substitute it for libtool compilation. chmod +x doltcompile LTCOMPILE='$(top_builddir)/doltcompile $(COMPILE)' AC_SUBST(LTCOMPILE) LTCXXCOMPILE='$(top_builddir)/doltcompile $(CXXCOMPILE)' AC_SUBST(LTCXXCOMPILE) fi # end dolt ])
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