Some of our scripts are passed $objdump and then call it as
"$objdump". This doesn't work if it contains spaces because we're
using ccache, for example you get errors such as:
./arch/powerpc/tools/relocs_check.sh: line 48: ccache ppc64le-objdump: No such file or directory
./arch/powerpc/tools/unrel_branch_check.sh: line 26: ccache ppc64le-objdump: No such file or directory
Fix it by not quoting the string when we expand it, allowing the shell
to do the right thing for us.
Fixes: a71aa05e1416 ("powerpc: Convert relocs_check to a shell script using grep")
Fixes: 4ea80652dc75 ("powerpc/64s: Tool to flag direct branches from unrelocated interrupt vectors")
Signed-off-by: Michael Ellerman <mpe@ellerman.id.au>
Signed-off-by: Michael Ellerman <mpe@ellerman.id.au>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20191024004730.32135-1-mpe@ellerman.id.au
vmlinux="$2"
bad_relocs=$(
-"$objdump" -R "$vmlinux" |
+$objdump -R "$vmlinux" |
# Only look at relocation lines.
grep -E '\<R_' |
# These relocations are okay
#__end_interrupts should be located within the first 64K
end_intr=0x$(
-"$objdump" -R "$vmlinux" -d --start-address=0xc000000000000000 \
+$objdump -R "$vmlinux" -d --start-address=0xc000000000000000 \
--stop-address=0xc000000000010000 |
grep '\<__end_interrupts>:' |
awk '{print $1}'
)
BRANCHES=$(
-"$objdump" -R "$vmlinux" -D --start-address=0xc000000000000000 \
+$objdump -R "$vmlinux" -D --start-address=0xc000000000000000 \
--stop-address=${end_intr} |
grep -e "^c[0-9a-f]*:[[:space:]]*\([0-9a-f][0-9a-f][[:space:]]\)\{4\}[[:space:]]*b" |
grep -v '\<__start_initialization_multiplatform>' |