I have found in my actual program for ARM CortexA8 with linux a following issue:
´*** glibc detected *** ./PRUssExternal: double free or corruption (top): 0x00024fe8 ***´
I`m searching for that in the web and I found that the most usefull program to manage this is issue is Valgrind.
How to track down a double free or corruption error in C++ with gdb
Then I try to compile to my system in a cross compilation, with the following options in the configuration. I´m using Valgrind 3.8.1
@-virtual-machine:~/valgrind-3.8.1$ CC=arm-cortexa8-linux-gnueabi-gcc CFLAGS="-pipe -Os -mtune=cortex-a8 -march=armv7-a -mabi=aapcs-linux -msoft-float -I/opt/OSELAS.Toolchain-2011.11.3/arm-cortexa8-linux-gnueabi/gcc-4.6.2-glibc-2.14.1-binutils-2.21.1a-kernel-2.6.39-sanitez/sysroot-arm-cortexa8-linux-gnueabi/usr/include" LDFLAGS="-L/opt/OSELAS.Toolchain-2011.11.3/arm-cortexa8-linux-gnueabi/gcc-4.6.2-glibc-2.14.1-binutils-2.21.1a-kernel-2.6.39-sanitez/sysroot-arm-cortexa8-linux-gnueabi/usr/lib" ./configure -prefix=/opt/valgrid -host=arm-cortexa8-linux-gnueabi -target=arm-none-linux-gnueabi -build=x86_64-ubuntu-linux
And the output of this configuration is:
checking for a BSD-compatible install... /usr/bin/install -c
checking whether build environment is sane... yes
checking for arm-cortexa8-linux-gnueabi-strip... arm-cortexa8-linux-gnueabi-strip
checking for a thread-safe mkdir -p... /bin/mkdir -p
checking for gawk... gawk
checking whether make sets $(MAKE)... yes
checking whether to enable maintainer-specific portions of Makefiles... no
checking whether ln -s works... yes
checking for arm-cortexa8-linux-gnueabi-gcc... arm-cortexa8-linux-gnueabi-gcc
checking whether the C compiler works... yes
checking for C compiler default output file name... a.out
checking for suffix of executables...
checking whether we are cross compiling... yes
checking for suffix of object files... o
checking whether we are using the GNU C compiler... yes
checking whether arm-cortexa8-linux-gnueabi-gcc accepts -g... yes
checking for arm-cortexa8-linux-gnueabi-gcc option to accept ISO C89... none needed
checking for style of include used by make... GNU
checking dependency style of arm-cortexa8-linux-gnueabi-gcc... gcc3
checking whether arm-cortexa8-linux-gnueabi-gcc and cc understand -c and -o together... yes
checking how to run the C preprocessor... arm-cortexa8-linux-gnueabi-gcc -E
checking for arm-cortexa8-linux-gnueabi-g++... arm-cortexa8-linux-gnueabi-g++
checking whether we are using the GNU C++ compiler... yes
checking whether arm-cortexa8-linux-gnueabi-g++ accepts -g... yes
checking dependency style of arm-cortexa8-linux-gnueabi-g++... gcc3
checking for arm-cortexa8-linux-gnueabi-ranlib... arm-cortexa8-linux-gnueabi-ranlib
checking for a sed that does not truncate output... /bin/sed
checking for ar... /usr/bin/ar
checking for perl... /usr/bin/perl
checking for gdb... /usr/bin/gdb
checking dependency style of arm-cortexa8-linux-gnueabi-gcc... gcc3
checking for diff -u... yes
checking for a supported version of gcc... ok (4.6.2)
checking build system type... x86_64-ubuntu-linux-gnu
checking host system type... arm-cortexa8-linux-gnueabi
checking for a supported CPU... no (arm)
configure: error: Unsupported host architecture. Sorry
In the last line of this output, My Issue is appeared although I looked for some information and the Cortexa8 it is one of the supported plattaforms.
For that reason my question is whether my board is not supported because the libraries that I use are not compatible or it could be other reason. Or in other hand I could compile the valgrind without fear and jump this checking.
Thanks for your time
-Regards
Breci01010...
You should edit configure file. Find a line "armv7*" and change it to "arm*" - this would be enough.