1 This is doc/gccinstall.info, produced by makeinfo version 4.13 from 2 /tmp/build-mingw64-toolchain-digit/src/gcc-4.8.3/gcc/doc/install.texi. 3 4 Copyright (C) 1988-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 5 6 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document 7 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or 8 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no 9 Invariant Sections, the Front-Cover texts being (a) (see below), and 10 with the Back-Cover Texts being (b) (see below). A copy of the license 11 is included in the section entitled "GNU Free Documentation License". 12 13 (a) The FSF's Front-Cover Text is: 14 15 A GNU Manual 16 17 (b) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: 18 19 You have freedom to copy and modify this GNU Manual, like GNU 20 software. Copies published by the Free Software Foundation raise 21 funds for GNU development. 22 23 Copyright (C) 1988-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 24 25 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document 26 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or 27 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no 28 Invariant Sections, the Front-Cover texts being (a) (see below), and 29 with the Back-Cover Texts being (b) (see below). A copy of the license 30 is included in the section entitled "GNU Free Documentation License". 31 32 (a) The FSF's Front-Cover Text is: 33 34 A GNU Manual 35 36 (b) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: 37 38 You have freedom to copy and modify this GNU Manual, like GNU 39 software. Copies published by the Free Software Foundation raise 40 funds for GNU development. 41 42 INFO-DIR-SECTION Software development 43 START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY 44 * gccinstall: (gccinstall). Installing the GNU Compiler Collection. 45 END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY 46 47 48 File: gccinstall.info, Node: Top, Up: (dir) 49 50 * Menu: 51 52 * Installing GCC:: This document describes the generic installation 53 procedure for GCC as well as detailing some target 54 specific installation instructions. 55 56 * Specific:: Host/target specific installation notes for GCC. 57 * Binaries:: Where to get pre-compiled binaries. 58 59 * Old:: Old installation documentation. 60 61 * GNU Free Documentation License:: How you can copy and share this manual. 62 * Concept Index:: This index has two entries. 63 64 65 File: gccinstall.info, Node: Installing GCC, Next: Binaries, Up: Top 66 67 1 Installing GCC 68 **************** 69 70 The latest version of this document is always available at 71 http://gcc.gnu.org/install/. It refers to the current development 72 sources, instructions for specific released versions are included with 73 the sources. 74 75 This document describes the generic installation procedure for GCC 76 as well as detailing some target specific installation instructions. 77 78 GCC includes several components that previously were separate 79 distributions with their own installation instructions. This document 80 supersedes all package-specific installation instructions. 81 82 _Before_ starting the build/install procedure please check the *note 83 host/target specific installation notes: Specific. We recommend you 84 browse the entire generic installation instructions before you proceed. 85 86 Lists of successful builds for released versions of GCC are 87 available at `http://gcc.gnu.org/buildstat.html'. These lists are 88 updated as new information becomes available. 89 90 The installation procedure itself is broken into five steps. 91 92 * Menu: 93 94 * Prerequisites:: 95 * Downloading the source:: 96 * Configuration:: 97 * Building:: 98 * Testing:: (optional) 99 * Final install:: 100 101 Please note that GCC does not support `make uninstall' and probably 102 won't do so in the near future as this would open a can of worms. 103 Instead, we suggest that you install GCC into a directory of its own 104 and simply remove that directory when you do not need that specific 105 version of GCC any longer, and, if shared libraries are installed there 106 as well, no more binaries exist that use them. 107 108 109 File: gccinstall.info, Node: Prerequisites, Next: Downloading the source, Up: Installing GCC 110 111 2 Prerequisites 112 *************** 113 114 GCC requires that various tools and packages be available for use in 115 the build procedure. Modifying GCC sources requires additional tools 116 described below. 117 118 Tools/packages necessary for building GCC 119 ========================================= 120 121 ISO C++98 compiler 122 Necessary to bootstrap GCC, although versions of GCC prior to 4.8 123 also allow bootstrapping with a ISO C89 compiler and versions of 124 GCC prior to 3.4 also allow bootstrapping with a traditional (K&R) 125 C compiler. 126 127 To build all languages in a cross-compiler or other configuration 128 where 3-stage bootstrap is not performed, you need to start with 129 an existing GCC binary (version 3.4 or later) because source code 130 for language frontends other than C might use GCC extensions. 131 132 Note that to bootstrap GCC with versions of GCC earlier than 3.4, 133 you may need to use `--disable-stage1-checking', though 134 bootstrapping the compiler with such earlier compilers is strongly 135 discouraged. 136 137 GNAT 138 In order to build the Ada compiler (GNAT) you must already have 139 GNAT installed because portions of the Ada frontend are written in 140 Ada (with GNAT extensions.) Refer to the Ada installation 141 instructions for more specific information. 142 143 A "working" POSIX compatible shell, or GNU bash 144 Necessary when running `configure' because some `/bin/sh' shells 145 have bugs and may crash when configuring the target libraries. In 146 other cases, `/bin/sh' or `ksh' have disastrous corner-case 147 performance problems. This can cause target `configure' runs to 148 literally take days to complete in some cases. 149 150 So on some platforms `/bin/ksh' is sufficient, on others it isn't. 151 See the host/target specific instructions for your platform, or 152 use `bash' to be sure. Then set `CONFIG_SHELL' in your 153 environment to your "good" shell prior to running 154 `configure'/`make'. 155 156 `zsh' is not a fully compliant POSIX shell and will not work when 157 configuring GCC. 158 159 A POSIX or SVR4 awk 160 Necessary for creating some of the generated source files for GCC. 161 If in doubt, use a recent GNU awk version, as some of the older 162 ones are broken. GNU awk version 3.1.5 is known to work. 163 164 GNU binutils 165 Necessary in some circumstances, optional in others. See the 166 host/target specific instructions for your platform for the exact 167 requirements. 168 169 gzip version 1.2.4 (or later) or 170 bzip2 version 1.0.2 (or later) 171 Necessary to uncompress GCC `tar' files when source code is 172 obtained via FTP mirror sites. 173 174 GNU make version 3.80 (or later) 175 You must have GNU make installed to build GCC. 176 177 GNU tar version 1.14 (or later) 178 Necessary (only on some platforms) to untar the source code. Many 179 systems' `tar' programs will also work, only try GNU `tar' if you 180 have problems. 181 182 Perl version 5.6.1 (or later) 183 Necessary when targeting Darwin, building `libstdc++', and not 184 using `--disable-symvers'. Necessary when targeting Solaris 2 185 with Sun `ld' and not using `--disable-symvers'. The bundled 186 `perl' in Solaris 8 and up works. 187 188 Necessary when regenerating `Makefile' dependencies in libiberty. 189 Necessary when regenerating `libiberty/functions.texi'. Necessary 190 when generating manpages from Texinfo manuals. Used by various 191 scripts to generate some files included in SVN (mainly 192 Unicode-related and rarely changing) from source tables. 193 194 `jar', or InfoZIP (`zip' and `unzip') 195 Necessary to build libgcj, the GCJ runtime. 196 197 198 Several support libraries are necessary to build GCC, some are 199 required, others optional. While any sufficiently new version of 200 required tools usually work, library requirements are generally 201 stricter. Newer versions may work in some cases, but it's safer to use 202 the exact versions documented. We appreciate bug reports about 203 problems with newer versions, though. If your OS vendor provides 204 packages for the support libraries then using those packages may be the 205 simplest way to install the libraries. 206 207 GNU Multiple Precision Library (GMP) version 4.3.2 (or later) 208 Necessary to build GCC. If a GMP source distribution is found in a 209 subdirectory of your GCC sources named `gmp', it will be built 210 together with GCC. Alternatively, if GMP is already installed but 211 it is not in your library search path, you will have to configure 212 with the `--with-gmp' configure option. See also `--with-gmp-lib' 213 and `--with-gmp-include'. 214 215 MPFR Library version 2.4.2 (or later) 216 Necessary to build GCC. It can be downloaded from 217 `http://www.mpfr.org/'. If an MPFR source distribution is found 218 in a subdirectory of your GCC sources named `mpfr', it will be 219 built together with GCC. Alternatively, if MPFR is already 220 installed but it is not in your default library search path, the 221 `--with-mpfr' configure option should be used. See also 222 `--with-mpfr-lib' and `--with-mpfr-include'. 223 224 MPC Library version 0.8.1 (or later) 225 Necessary to build GCC. It can be downloaded from 226 `http://www.multiprecision.org/'. If an MPC source distribution 227 is found in a subdirectory of your GCC sources named `mpc', it 228 will be built together with GCC. Alternatively, if MPC is already 229 installed but it is not in your default library search path, the 230 `--with-mpc' configure option should be used. See also 231 `--with-mpc-lib' and `--with-mpc-include'. 232 233 ISL Library version 0.11.1 234 Necessary to build GCC with the Graphite loop optimizations. It 235 can be downloaded from `ftp://gcc.gnu.org/pub/gcc/infrastructure/' 236 as `isl-0.11.1.tar.bz2'. 237 238 The `--with-isl' configure option should be used if ISL is not 239 installed in your default library search path. 240 241 CLooG 0.18.0 242 Necessary to build GCC with the Graphite loop optimizations. It 243 can be downloaded from `ftp://gcc.gnu.org/pub/gcc/infrastructure/' 244 as `cloog-0.18.0.tar.gz'. The `--with-cloog' configure option 245 should be used if CLooG is not installed in your default library 246 search path. CLooG needs to be built against ISL 0.11.1. Use 247 `--with-isl=system' to direct CLooG to pick up an already 248 installed ISL, otherwise it will use ISL 0.11.1 as bundled with 249 CLooG. CLooG needs to be configured to use GMP internally, use 250 `--with-bits=gmp' to direct it to do that. 251 252 253 Tools/packages necessary for modifying GCC 254 ========================================== 255 256 autoconf version 2.64 257 GNU m4 version 1.4.6 (or later) 258 Necessary when modifying `configure.ac', `aclocal.m4', etc. to 259 regenerate `configure' and `config.in' files. 260 261 automake version 1.11.1 262 Necessary when modifying a `Makefile.am' file to regenerate its 263 associated `Makefile.in'. 264 265 Much of GCC does not use automake, so directly edit the 266 `Makefile.in' file. Specifically this applies to the `gcc', 267 `intl', `libcpp', `libiberty', `libobjc' directories as well as 268 any of their subdirectories. 269 270 For directories that use automake, GCC requires the latest release 271 in the 1.11 series, which is currently 1.11.1. When regenerating 272 a directory to a newer version, please update all the directories 273 using an older 1.11 to the latest released version. 274 275 gettext version 0.14.5 (or later) 276 Needed to regenerate `gcc.pot'. 277 278 gperf version 2.7.2 (or later) 279 Necessary when modifying `gperf' input files, e.g. 280 `gcc/cp/cfns.gperf' to regenerate its associated header file, e.g. 281 `gcc/cp/cfns.h'. 282 283 DejaGnu 1.4.4 284 Expect 285 Tcl 286 Necessary to run the GCC testsuite; see the section on testing for 287 details. 288 289 autogen version 5.5.4 (or later) and 290 guile version 1.4.1 (or later) 291 Necessary to regenerate `fixinc/fixincl.x' from 292 `fixinc/inclhack.def' and `fixinc/*.tpl'. 293 294 Necessary to run `make check' for `fixinc'. 295 296 Necessary to regenerate the top level `Makefile.in' file from 297 `Makefile.tpl' and `Makefile.def'. 298 299 Flex version 2.5.4 (or later) 300 Necessary when modifying `*.l' files. 301 302 Necessary to build GCC during development because the generated 303 output files are not included in the SVN repository. They are 304 included in releases. 305 306 Texinfo version 4.7 (or later) 307 Necessary for running `makeinfo' when modifying `*.texi' files to 308 test your changes. 309 310 Necessary for running `make dvi' or `make pdf' to create printable 311 documentation in DVI or PDF format. Texinfo version 4.8 or later 312 is required for `make pdf'. 313 314 Necessary to build GCC documentation during development because the 315 generated output files are not included in the SVN repository. 316 They are included in releases. 317 318 TeX (any working version) 319 Necessary for running `texi2dvi' and `texi2pdf', which are used 320 when running `make dvi' or `make pdf' to create DVI or PDF files, 321 respectively. 322 323 SVN (any version) 324 SSH (any version) 325 Necessary to access the SVN repository. Public releases and weekly 326 snapshots of the development sources are also available via FTP. 327 328 GNU diffutils version 2.7 (or later) 329 Useful when submitting patches for the GCC source code. 330 331 patch version 2.5.4 (or later) 332 Necessary when applying patches, created with `diff', to one's own 333 sources. 334 335 ecj1 336 gjavah 337 If you wish to modify `.java' files in libjava, you will need to 338 configure with `--enable-java-maintainer-mode', and you will need 339 to have executables named `ecj1' and `gjavah' in your path. The 340 `ecj1' executable should run the Eclipse Java compiler via the 341 GCC-specific entry point. You can download a suitable jar from 342 `ftp://sourceware.org/pub/java/', or by running the script 343 `contrib/download_ecj'. 344 345 antlr.jar version 2.7.1 (or later) 346 antlr binary 347 If you wish to build the `gjdoc' binary in libjava, you will need 348 to have an `antlr.jar' library available. The library is searched 349 for in system locations but can be specified with 350 `--with-antlr-jar=' instead. When configuring with 351 `--enable-java-maintainer-mode', you will need to have one of the 352 executables named `cantlr', `runantlr' or `antlr' in your path. 353 354 355 356 File: gccinstall.info, Node: Downloading the source, Next: Configuration, Prev: Prerequisites, Up: Installing GCC 357 358 3 Downloading GCC 359 ***************** 360 361 GCC is distributed via SVN and FTP tarballs compressed with `gzip' or 362 `bzip2'. 363 364 Please refer to the releases web page for information on how to 365 obtain GCC. 366 367 The source distribution includes the C, C++, Objective-C, Fortran, 368 Java, and Ada (in the case of GCC 3.1 and later) compilers, as well as 369 runtime libraries for C++, Objective-C, Fortran, and Java. For 370 previous versions these were downloadable as separate components such 371 as the core GCC distribution, which included the C language front end 372 and shared components, and language-specific distributions including the 373 language front end and the language runtime (where appropriate). 374 375 If you also intend to build binutils (either to upgrade an existing 376 installation or for use in place of the corresponding tools of your 377 OS), unpack the binutils distribution either in the same directory or a 378 separate one. In the latter case, add symbolic links to any components 379 of the binutils you intend to build alongside the compiler (`bfd', 380 `binutils', `gas', `gprof', `ld', `opcodes', ...) to the directory 381 containing the GCC sources. 382 383 Likewise the GMP, MPFR and MPC libraries can be automatically built 384 together with GCC. Unpack the GMP, MPFR and/or MPC source 385 distributions in the directory containing the GCC sources and rename 386 their directories to `gmp', `mpfr' and `mpc', respectively (or use 387 symbolic links with the same name). 388 389 390 File: gccinstall.info, Node: Configuration, Next: Building, Prev: Downloading the source, Up: Installing GCC 391 392 4 Installing GCC: Configuration 393 ******************************* 394 395 Like most GNU software, GCC must be configured before it can be 396 built. This document describes the recommended configuration procedure 397 for both native and cross targets. 398 399 We use SRCDIR to refer to the toplevel source directory for GCC; we 400 use OBJDIR to refer to the toplevel build/object directory. 401 402 If you obtained the sources via SVN, SRCDIR must refer to the top 403 `gcc' directory, the one where the `MAINTAINERS' file can be found, and 404 not its `gcc' subdirectory, otherwise the build will fail. 405 406 If either SRCDIR or OBJDIR is located on an automounted NFS file 407 system, the shell's built-in `pwd' command will return temporary 408 pathnames. Using these can lead to various sorts of build problems. 409 To avoid this issue, set the `PWDCMD' environment variable to an 410 automounter-aware `pwd' command, e.g., `pawd' or `amq -w', during the 411 configuration and build phases. 412 413 First, we *highly* recommend that GCC be built into a separate 414 directory from the sources which does *not* reside within the source 415 tree. This is how we generally build GCC; building where SRCDIR == 416 OBJDIR should still work, but doesn't get extensive testing; building 417 where OBJDIR is a subdirectory of SRCDIR is unsupported. 418 419 If you have previously built GCC in the same directory for a 420 different target machine, do `make distclean' to delete all files that 421 might be invalid. One of the files this deletes is `Makefile'; if 422 `make distclean' complains that `Makefile' does not exist or issues a 423 message like "don't know how to make distclean" it probably means that 424 the directory is already suitably clean. However, with the recommended 425 method of building in a separate OBJDIR, you should simply use a 426 different OBJDIR for each target. 427 428 Second, when configuring a native system, either `cc' or `gcc' must 429 be in your path or you must set `CC' in your environment before running 430 configure. Otherwise the configuration scripts may fail. 431 432 To configure GCC: 433 434 % mkdir OBJDIR 435 % cd OBJDIR 436 % SRCDIR/configure [OPTIONS] [TARGET] 437 438 Distributor options 439 =================== 440 441 If you will be distributing binary versions of GCC, with modifications 442 to the source code, you should use the options described in this 443 section to make clear that your version contains modifications. 444 445 `--with-pkgversion=VERSION' 446 Specify a string that identifies your package. You may wish to 447 include a build number or build date. This version string will be 448 included in the output of `gcc --version'. This suffix does not 449 replace the default version string, only the `GCC' part. 450 451 The default value is `GCC'. 452 453 `--with-bugurl=URL' 454 Specify the URL that users should visit if they wish to report a 455 bug. You are of course welcome to forward bugs reported to you to 456 the FSF, if you determine that they are not bugs in your 457 modifications. 458 459 The default value refers to the FSF's GCC bug tracker. 460 461 462 Target specification 463 ==================== 464 465 * GCC has code to correctly determine the correct value for TARGET 466 for nearly all native systems. Therefore, we highly recommend you 467 do not provide a configure target when configuring a native 468 compiler. 469 470 * TARGET must be specified as `--target=TARGET' when configuring a 471 cross compiler; examples of valid targets would be m68k-elf, 472 sh-elf, etc. 473 474 * Specifying just TARGET instead of `--target=TARGET' implies that 475 the host defaults to TARGET. 476 477 Options specification 478 ===================== 479 480 Use OPTIONS to override several configure time options for GCC. A list 481 of supported OPTIONS follows; `configure --help' may list other 482 options, but those not listed below may not work and should not 483 normally be used. 484 485 Note that each `--enable' option has a corresponding `--disable' 486 option and that each `--with' option has a corresponding `--without' 487 option. 488 489 `--prefix=DIRNAME' 490 Specify the toplevel installation directory. This is the 491 recommended way to install the tools into a directory other than 492 the default. The toplevel installation directory defaults to 493 `/usr/local'. 494 495 We *highly* recommend against DIRNAME being the same or a 496 subdirectory of OBJDIR or vice versa. If specifying a directory 497 beneath a user's home directory tree, some shells will not expand 498 DIRNAME correctly if it contains the `~' metacharacter; use 499 `$HOME' instead. 500 501 The following standard `autoconf' options are supported. Normally 502 you should not need to use these options. 503 `--exec-prefix=DIRNAME' 504 Specify the toplevel installation directory for 505 architecture-dependent files. The default is `PREFIX'. 506 507 `--bindir=DIRNAME' 508 Specify the installation directory for the executables called 509 by users (such as `gcc' and `g++'). The default is 510 `EXEC-PREFIX/bin'. 511 512 `--libdir=DIRNAME' 513 Specify the installation directory for object code libraries 514 and internal data files of GCC. The default is 515 `EXEC-PREFIX/lib'. 516 517 `--libexecdir=DIRNAME' 518 Specify the installation directory for internal executables 519 of GCC. The default is `EXEC-PREFIX/libexec'. 520 521 `--with-slibdir=DIRNAME' 522 Specify the installation directory for the shared libgcc 523 library. The default is `LIBDIR'. 524 525 `--datarootdir=DIRNAME' 526 Specify the root of the directory tree for read-only 527 architecture-independent data files referenced by GCC. The 528 default is `PREFIX/share'. 529 530 `--infodir=DIRNAME' 531 Specify the installation directory for documentation in info 532 format. The default is `DATAROOTDIR/info'. 533 534 `--datadir=DIRNAME' 535 Specify the installation directory for some 536 architecture-independent data files referenced by GCC. The 537 default is `DATAROOTDIR'. 538 539 `--docdir=DIRNAME' 540 Specify the installation directory for documentation files 541 (other than Info) for GCC. The default is `DATAROOTDIR/doc'. 542 543 `--htmldir=DIRNAME' 544 Specify the installation directory for HTML documentation 545 files. The default is `DOCDIR'. 546 547 `--pdfdir=DIRNAME' 548 Specify the installation directory for PDF documentation 549 files. The default is `DOCDIR'. 550 551 `--mandir=DIRNAME' 552 Specify the installation directory for manual pages. The 553 default is `DATAROOTDIR/man'. (Note that the manual pages 554 are only extracts from the full GCC manuals, which are 555 provided in Texinfo format. The manpages are derived by an 556 automatic conversion process from parts of the full manual.) 557 558 `--with-gxx-include-dir=DIRNAME' 559 Specify the installation directory for G++ header files. The 560 default depends on other configuration options, and differs 561 between cross and native configurations. 562 563 `--with-specs=SPECS' 564 Specify additional command line driver SPECS. This can be 565 useful if you need to turn on a non-standard feature by 566 default without modifying the compiler's source code, for 567 instance 568 `--with-specs=%{!fcommon:%{!fno-common:-fno-common}}'. *Note 569 Specifying subprocesses and the switches to pass to them: 570 (gcc)Spec Files, 571 572 573 `--program-prefix=PREFIX' 574 GCC supports some transformations of the names of its programs when 575 installing them. This option prepends PREFIX to the names of 576 programs to install in BINDIR (see above). For example, specifying 577 `--program-prefix=foo-' would result in `gcc' being installed as 578 `/usr/local/bin/foo-gcc'. 579 580 `--program-suffix=SUFFIX' 581 Appends SUFFIX to the names of programs to install in BINDIR (see 582 above). For example, specifying `--program-suffix=-3.1' would 583 result in `gcc' being installed as `/usr/local/bin/gcc-3.1'. 584 585 `--program-transform-name=PATTERN' 586 Applies the `sed' script PATTERN to be applied to the names of 587 programs to install in BINDIR (see above). PATTERN has to consist 588 of one or more basic `sed' editing commands, separated by 589 semicolons. For example, if you want the `gcc' program name to be 590 transformed to the installed program `/usr/local/bin/myowngcc' and 591 the `g++' program name to be transformed to 592 `/usr/local/bin/gspecial++' without changing other program names, 593 you could use the pattern 594 `--program-transform-name='s/^gcc$/myowngcc/; s/^g++$/gspecial++/'' 595 to achieve this effect. 596 597 All three options can be combined and used together, resulting in 598 more complex conversion patterns. As a basic rule, PREFIX (and 599 SUFFIX) are prepended (appended) before further transformations 600 can happen with a special transformation script PATTERN. 601 602 As currently implemented, this option only takes effect for native 603 builds; cross compiler binaries' names are not transformed even 604 when a transformation is explicitly asked for by one of these 605 options. 606 607 For native builds, some of the installed programs are also 608 installed with the target alias in front of their name, as in 609 `i686-pc-linux-gnu-gcc'. All of the above transformations happen 610 before the target alias is prepended to the name--so, specifying 611 `--program-prefix=foo-' and `program-suffix=-3.1', the resulting 612 binary would be installed as 613 `/usr/local/bin/i686-pc-linux-gnu-foo-gcc-3.1'. 614 615 As a last shortcoming, none of the installed Ada programs are 616 transformed yet, which will be fixed in some time. 617 618 `--with-local-prefix=DIRNAME' 619 Specify the installation directory for local include files. The 620 default is `/usr/local'. Specify this option if you want the 621 compiler to search directory `DIRNAME/include' for locally 622 installed header files _instead_ of `/usr/local/include'. 623 624 You should specify `--with-local-prefix' *only* if your site has a 625 different convention (not `/usr/local') for where to put 626 site-specific files. 627 628 The default value for `--with-local-prefix' is `/usr/local' 629 regardless of the value of `--prefix'. Specifying `--prefix' has 630 no effect on which directory GCC searches for local header files. 631 This may seem counterintuitive, but actually it is logical. 632 633 The purpose of `--prefix' is to specify where to _install GCC_. 634 The local header files in `/usr/local/include'--if you put any in 635 that directory--are not part of GCC. They are part of other 636 programs--perhaps many others. (GCC installs its own header files 637 in another directory which is based on the `--prefix' value.) 638 639 Both the local-prefix include directory and the GCC-prefix include 640 directory are part of GCC's "system include" directories. 641 Although these two directories are not fixed, they need to be 642 searched in the proper order for the correct processing of the 643 include_next directive. The local-prefix include directory is 644 searched before the GCC-prefix include directory. Another 645 characteristic of system include directories is that pedantic 646 warnings are turned off for headers in these directories. 647 648 Some autoconf macros add `-I DIRECTORY' options to the compiler 649 command line, to ensure that directories containing installed 650 packages' headers are searched. When DIRECTORY is one of GCC's 651 system include directories, GCC will ignore the option so that 652 system directories continue to be processed in the correct order. 653 This may result in a search order different from what was 654 specified but the directory will still be searched. 655 656 GCC automatically searches for ordinary libraries using 657 `GCC_EXEC_PREFIX'. Thus, when the same installation prefix is 658 used for both GCC and packages, GCC will automatically search for 659 both headers and libraries. This provides a configuration that is 660 easy to use. GCC behaves in a manner similar to that when it is 661 installed as a system compiler in `/usr'. 662 663 Sites that need to install multiple versions of GCC may not want to 664 use the above simple configuration. It is possible to use the 665 `--program-prefix', `--program-suffix' and 666 `--program-transform-name' options to install multiple versions 667 into a single directory, but it may be simpler to use different 668 prefixes and the `--with-local-prefix' option to specify the 669 location of the site-specific files for each version. It will 670 then be necessary for users to specify explicitly the location of 671 local site libraries (e.g., with `LIBRARY_PATH'). 672 673 The same value can be used for both `--with-local-prefix' and 674 `--prefix' provided it is not `/usr'. This can be used to avoid 675 the default search of `/usr/local/include'. 676 677 *Do not* specify `/usr' as the `--with-local-prefix'! The 678 directory you use for `--with-local-prefix' *must not* contain any 679 of the system's standard header files. If it did contain them, 680 certain programs would be miscompiled (including GNU Emacs, on 681 certain targets), because this would override and nullify the 682 header file corrections made by the `fixincludes' script. 683 684 Indications are that people who use this option use it based on 685 mistaken ideas of what it is for. People use it as if it 686 specified where to install part of GCC. Perhaps they make this 687 assumption because installing GCC creates the directory. 688 689 `--with-native-system-header-dir=DIRNAME' 690 Specifies that DIRNAME is the directory that contains native system 691 header files, rather than `/usr/include'. This option is most 692 useful if you are creating a compiler that should be isolated from 693 the system as much as possible. It is most commonly used with the 694 `--with-sysroot' option and will cause GCC to search DIRNAME 695 inside the system root specified by that option. 696 697 `--enable-shared[=PACKAGE[,...]]' 698 Build shared versions of libraries, if shared libraries are 699 supported on the target platform. Unlike GCC 2.95.x and earlier, 700 shared libraries are enabled by default on all platforms that 701 support shared libraries. 702 703 If a list of packages is given as an argument, build shared 704 libraries only for the listed packages. For other packages, only 705 static libraries will be built. Package names currently 706 recognized in the GCC tree are `libgcc' (also known as `gcc'), 707 `libstdc++' (not `libstdc++-v3'), `libffi', `zlib', `boehm-gc', 708 `ada', `libada', `libjava', `libgo', and `libobjc'. Note 709 `libiberty' does not support shared libraries at all. 710 711 Use `--disable-shared' to build only static libraries. Note that 712 `--disable-shared' does not accept a list of package names as 713 argument, only `--enable-shared' does. 714 715 `--with-gnu-as' 716 Specify that the compiler should assume that the assembler it 717 finds is the GNU assembler. However, this does not modify the 718 rules to find an assembler and will result in confusion if the 719 assembler found is not actually the GNU assembler. (Confusion may 720 also result if the compiler finds the GNU assembler but has not 721 been configured with `--with-gnu-as'.) If you have more than one 722 assembler installed on your system, you may want to use this 723 option in connection with `--with-as=PATHNAME' or 724 `--with-build-time-tools=PATHNAME'. 725 726 The following systems are the only ones where it makes a difference 727 whether you use the GNU assembler. On any other system, 728 `--with-gnu-as' has no effect. 729 730 * `hppa1.0-ANY-ANY' 731 732 * `hppa1.1-ANY-ANY' 733 734 * `sparc-sun-solaris2.ANY' 735 736 * `sparc64-ANY-solaris2.ANY' 737 738 `--with-as=PATHNAME' 739 Specify that the compiler should use the assembler pointed to by 740 PATHNAME, rather than the one found by the standard rules to find 741 an assembler, which are: 742 * Unless GCC is being built with a cross compiler, check the 743 `LIBEXEC/gcc/TARGET/VERSION' directory. LIBEXEC defaults to 744 `EXEC-PREFIX/libexec'; EXEC-PREFIX defaults to PREFIX, which 745 defaults to `/usr/local' unless overridden by the 746 `--prefix=PATHNAME' switch described above. TARGET is the 747 target system triple, such as `sparc-sun-solaris2.7', and 748 VERSION denotes the GCC version, such as 3.0. 749 750 * If the target system is the same that you are building on, 751 check operating system specific directories (e.g. 752 `/usr/ccs/bin' on Sun Solaris 2). 753 754 * Check in the `PATH' for a tool whose name is prefixed by the 755 target system triple. 756 757 * Check in the `PATH' for a tool whose name is not prefixed by 758 the target system triple, if the host and target system 759 triple are the same (in other words, we use a host tool if it 760 can be used for the target as well). 761 762 You may want to use `--with-as' if no assembler is installed in 763 the directories listed above, or if you have multiple assemblers 764 installed and want to choose one that is not found by the above 765 rules. 766 767 `--with-gnu-ld' 768 Same as `--with-gnu-as' but for the linker. 769 770 `--with-ld=PATHNAME' 771 Same as `--with-as' but for the linker. 772 773 `--with-stabs' 774 Specify that stabs debugging information should be used instead of 775 whatever format the host normally uses. Normally GCC uses the 776 same debug format as the host system. 777 778 On MIPS based systems and on Alphas, you must specify whether you 779 want GCC to create the normal ECOFF debugging format, or to use 780 BSD-style stabs passed through the ECOFF symbol table. The normal 781 ECOFF debug format cannot fully handle languages other than C. 782 BSD stabs format can handle other languages, but it only works 783 with the GNU debugger GDB. 784 785 Normally, GCC uses the ECOFF debugging format by default; if you 786 prefer BSD stabs, specify `--with-stabs' when you configure GCC. 787 788 No matter which default you choose when you configure GCC, the user 789 can use the `-gcoff' and `-gstabs+' options to specify explicitly 790 the debug format for a particular compilation. 791 792 `--with-stabs' is meaningful on the ISC system on the 386, also, if 793 `--with-gas' is used. It selects use of stabs debugging 794 information embedded in COFF output. This kind of debugging 795 information supports C++ well; ordinary COFF debugging information 796 does not. 797 798 `--with-stabs' is also meaningful on 386 systems running SVR4. It 799 selects use of stabs debugging information embedded in ELF output. 800 The C++ compiler currently (2.6.0) does not support the DWARF 801 debugging information normally used on 386 SVR4 platforms; stabs 802 provide a workable alternative. This requires gas and gdb, as the 803 normal SVR4 tools can not generate or interpret stabs. 804 805 `--with-tls=DIALECT' 806 Specify the default TLS dialect, for systems were there is a 807 choice. For ARM targets, possible values for DIALECT are `gnu' or 808 `gnu2', which select between the original GNU dialect and the GNU 809 TLS descriptor-based dialect. 810 811 `--enable-multiarch' 812 Specify whether to enable or disable multiarch support. The 813 default is to check for glibc start files in a multiarch location, 814 and enable it if the files are found. The auto detection is 815 enabled for native builds, and for cross builds configured with 816 `--with-sysroot', and without `--with-native-system-header-dir'. 817 More documentation about multiarch can be found at 818 `http://wiki.debian.org/Multiarch'. 819 820 `--disable-multilib' 821 Specify that multiple target libraries to support different target 822 variants, calling conventions, etc. should not be built. The 823 default is to build a predefined set of them. 824 825 Some targets provide finer-grained control over which multilibs 826 are built (e.g., `--disable-softfloat'): 827 `arm-*-*' 828 fpu, 26bit, underscore, interwork, biendian, nofmult. 829 830 `m68*-*-*' 831 softfloat, m68881, m68000, m68020. 832 833 `mips*-*-*' 834 single-float, biendian, softfloat. 835 836 `powerpc*-*-*, rs6000*-*-*' 837 aix64, pthread, softfloat, powercpu, powerpccpu, powerpcos, 838 biendian, sysv, aix. 839 840 841 `--with-multilib-list=LIST' 842 `--without-multilib-list' 843 Specify what multilibs to build. Currently only implemented for 844 sh*-*-* and x86-64-*-linux*. 845 846 `sh*-*-*' 847 LIST is a comma separated list of CPU names. These must be 848 of the form `sh*' or `m*' (in which case they match the 849 compiler option for that processor). The list should not 850 contain any endian options - these are handled by 851 `--with-endian'. 852 853 If LIST is empty, then there will be no multilibs for extra 854 processors. The multilib for the secondary endian remains 855 enabled. 856 857 As a special case, if an entry in the list starts with a `!' 858 (exclamation point), then it is added to the list of excluded 859 multilibs. Entries of this sort should be compatible with 860 `MULTILIB_EXCLUDES' (once the leading `!' has been stripped). 861 862 If `--with-multilib-list' is not given, then a default set of 863 multilibs is selected based on the value of `--target'. This 864 is usually the complete set of libraries, but some targets 865 imply a more specialized subset. 866 867 Example 1: to configure a compiler for SH4A only, but 868 supporting both endians, with little endian being the default: 869 --with-cpu=sh4a --with-endian=little,big --with-multilib-list= 870 871 Example 2: to configure a compiler for both SH4A and 872 SH4AL-DSP, but with only little endian SH4AL: 873 --with-cpu=sh4a --with-endian=little,big \ 874 --with-multilib-list=sh4al,!mb/m4al 875 876 `x86-64-*-linux*' 877 LIST is a comma separated list of `m32', `m64' and `mx32' to 878 enable 32-bit, 64-bit and x32 run-time libraries, 879 respectively. If LIST is empty, then there will be no 880 multilibs and only the default run-time library will be 881 enabled. 882 883 If `--with-multilib-list' is not given, then only 32-bit and 884 64-bit run-time libraries will be enabled. 885 886 `--with-endian=ENDIANS' 887 Specify what endians to use. Currently only implemented for 888 sh*-*-*. 889 890 ENDIANS may be one of the following: 891 `big' 892 Use big endian exclusively. 893 894 `little' 895 Use little endian exclusively. 896 897 `big,little' 898 Use big endian by default. Provide a multilib for little 899 endian. 900 901 `little,big' 902 Use little endian by default. Provide a multilib for big 903 endian. 904 905 `--enable-threads' 906 Specify that the target supports threads. This affects the 907 Objective-C compiler and runtime library, and exception handling 908 for other languages like C++ and Java. On some systems, this is 909 the default. 910 911 In general, the best (and, in many cases, the only known) threading 912 model available will be configured for use. Beware that on some 913 systems, GCC has not been taught what threading models are 914 generally available for the system. In this case, 915 `--enable-threads' is an alias for `--enable-threads=single'. 916 917 `--disable-threads' 918 Specify that threading support should be disabled for the system. 919 This is an alias for `--enable-threads=single'. 920 921 `--enable-threads=LIB' 922 Specify that LIB is the thread support library. This affects the 923 Objective-C compiler and runtime library, and exception handling 924 for other languages like C++ and Java. The possibilities for LIB 925 are: 926 927 `aix' 928 AIX thread support. 929 930 `dce' 931 DCE thread support. 932 933 `lynx' 934 LynxOS thread support. 935 936 `mipssde' 937 MIPS SDE thread support. 938 939 `no' 940 This is an alias for `single'. 941 942 `posix' 943 Generic POSIX/Unix98 thread support. 944 945 `rtems' 946 RTEMS thread support. 947 948 `single' 949 Disable thread support, should work for all platforms. 950 951 `tpf' 952 TPF thread support. 953 954 `vxworks' 955 VxWorks thread support. 956 957 `win32' 958 Microsoft Win32 API thread support. 959 960 `--enable-tls' 961 Specify that the target supports TLS (Thread Local Storage). 962 Usually configure can correctly determine if TLS is supported. In 963 cases where it guesses incorrectly, TLS can be explicitly enabled 964 or disabled with `--enable-tls' or `--disable-tls'. This can 965 happen if the assembler supports TLS but the C library does not, 966 or if the assumptions made by the configure test are incorrect. 967 968 `--disable-tls' 969 Specify that the target does not support TLS. This is an alias 970 for `--enable-tls=no'. 971 972 `--with-cpu=CPU' 973 `--with-cpu-32=CPU' 974 `--with-cpu-64=CPU' 975 Specify which cpu variant the compiler should generate code for by 976 default. CPU will be used as the default value of the `-mcpu=' 977 switch. This option is only supported on some targets, including 978 ARM, i386, M68k, PowerPC, and SPARC. The `--with-cpu-32' and 979 `--with-cpu-64' options specify separate default CPUs for 32-bit 980 and 64-bit modes; these options are only supported for i386, 981 x86-64 and PowerPC. 982 983 `--with-schedule=CPU' 984 `--with-arch=CPU' 985 `--with-arch-32=CPU' 986 `--with-arch-64=CPU' 987 `--with-tune=CPU' 988 `--with-tune-32=CPU' 989 `--with-tune-64=CPU' 990 `--with-abi=ABI' 991 `--with-fpu=TYPE' 992 `--with-float=TYPE' 993 These configure options provide default values for the 994 `-mschedule=', `-march=', `-mtune=', `-mabi=', and `-mfpu=' 995 options and for `-mhard-float' or `-msoft-float'. As with 996 `--with-cpu', which switches will be accepted and acceptable values 997 of the arguments depend on the target. 998 999 `--with-mode=MODE' 1000 Specify if the compiler should default to `-marm' or `-mthumb'. 1001 This option is only supported on ARM targets. 1002 1003 `--with-stack-offset=NUM' 1004 This option sets the default for the -mstack-offset=NUM option, 1005 and will thus generally also control the setting of this option for 1006 libraries. This option is only supported on Epiphany targets. 1007 1008 `--with-fpmath=ISA' 1009 This options sets `-mfpmath=sse' by default and specifies the 1010 default ISA for floating-point arithmetics. You can select either 1011 `sse' which enables `-msse2' or `avx' which enables `-mavx' by 1012 default. This option is only supported on i386 and x86-64 targets. 1013 1014 `--with-divide=TYPE' 1015 Specify how the compiler should generate code for checking for 1016 division by zero. This option is only supported on the MIPS 1017 target. The possibilities for TYPE are: 1018 `traps' 1019 Division by zero checks use conditional traps (this is the 1020 default on systems that support conditional traps). 1021 1022 `breaks' 1023 Division by zero checks use the break instruction. 1024 1025 `--with-llsc' 1026 On MIPS targets, make `-mllsc' the default when no `-mno-llsc' 1027 option is passed. This is the default for Linux-based targets, as 1028 the kernel will emulate them if the ISA does not provide them. 1029 1030 `--without-llsc' 1031 On MIPS targets, make `-mno-llsc' the default when no `-mllsc' 1032 option is passed. 1033 1034 `--with-synci' 1035 On MIPS targets, make `-msynci' the default when no `-mno-synci' 1036 option is passed. 1037 1038 `--without-synci' 1039 On MIPS targets, make `-mno-synci' the default when no `-msynci' 1040 option is passed. This is the default. 1041 1042 `--with-mips-plt' 1043 On MIPS targets, make use of copy relocations and PLTs. These 1044 features are extensions to the traditional SVR4-based MIPS ABIs 1045 and require support from GNU binutils and the runtime C library. 1046 1047 `--enable-__cxa_atexit' 1048 Define if you want to use __cxa_atexit, rather than atexit, to 1049 register C++ destructors for local statics and global objects. 1050 This is essential for fully standards-compliant handling of 1051 destructors, but requires __cxa_atexit in libc. This option is 1052 currently only available on systems with GNU libc. When enabled, 1053 this will cause `-fuse-cxa-atexit' to be passed by default. 1054 1055 `--enable-gnu-indirect-function' 1056 Define if you want to enable the `ifunc' attribute. This option is 1057 currently only available on systems with GNU libc on certain 1058 targets. 1059 1060 `--enable-target-optspace' 1061 Specify that target libraries should be optimized for code space 1062 instead of code speed. This is the default for the m32r platform. 1063 1064 `--with-cpp-install-dir=DIRNAME' 1065 Specify that the user visible `cpp' program should be installed in 1066 `PREFIX/DIRNAME/cpp', in addition to BINDIR. 1067 1068 `--enable-comdat' 1069 Enable COMDAT group support. This is primarily used to override 1070 the automatically detected value. 1071 1072 `--enable-initfini-array' 1073 Force the use of sections `.init_array' and `.fini_array' (instead 1074 of `.init' and `.fini') for constructors and destructors. Option 1075 `--disable-initfini-array' has the opposite effect. If neither 1076 option is specified, the configure script will try to guess 1077 whether the `.init_array' and `.fini_array' sections are supported 1078 and, if they are, use them. 1079 1080 `--enable-maintainer-mode' 1081 The build rules that regenerate the Autoconf and Automake output 1082 files as well as the GCC master message catalog `gcc.pot' are 1083 normally disabled. This is because it can only be rebuilt if the 1084 complete source tree is present. If you have changed the sources 1085 and want to rebuild the catalog, configuring with 1086 `--enable-maintainer-mode' will enable this. Note that you need a 1087 recent version of the `gettext' tools to do so. 1088 1089 `--disable-bootstrap' 1090 For a native build, the default configuration is to perform a 1091 3-stage bootstrap of the compiler when `make' is invoked, testing 1092 that GCC can compile itself correctly. If you want to disable 1093 this process, you can configure with `--disable-bootstrap'. 1094 1095 `--enable-bootstrap' 1096 In special cases, you may want to perform a 3-stage build even if 1097 the target and host triplets are different. This is possible when 1098 the host can run code compiled for the target (e.g. host is 1099 i686-linux, target is i486-linux). Starting from GCC 4.2, to do 1100 this you have to configure explicitly with `--enable-bootstrap'. 1101 1102 `--enable-generated-files-in-srcdir' 1103 Neither the .c and .h files that are generated from Bison and flex 1104 nor the info manuals and man pages that are built from the .texi 1105 files are present in the SVN development tree. When building GCC 1106 from that development tree, or from one of our snapshots, those 1107 generated files are placed in your build directory, which allows 1108 for the source to be in a readonly directory. 1109 1110 If you configure with `--enable-generated-files-in-srcdir' then 1111 those generated files will go into the source directory. This is 1112 mainly intended for generating release or prerelease tarballs of 1113 the GCC sources, since it is not a requirement that the users of 1114 source releases to have flex, Bison, or makeinfo. 1115 1116 `--enable-version-specific-runtime-libs' 1117 Specify that runtime libraries should be installed in the compiler 1118 specific subdirectory (`LIBDIR/gcc') rather than the usual places. 1119 In addition, `libstdc++''s include files will be installed into 1120 `LIBDIR' unless you overruled it by using 1121 `--with-gxx-include-dir=DIRNAME'. Using this option is 1122 particularly useful if you intend to use several versions of GCC in 1123 parallel. This is currently supported by `libgfortran', 1124 `libjava', `libmudflap', `libstdc++', and `libobjc'. 1125 1126 `--enable-languages=LANG1,LANG2,...' 1127 Specify that only a particular subset of compilers and their 1128 runtime libraries should be built. For a list of valid values for 1129 LANGN you can issue the following command in the `gcc' directory 1130 of your GCC source tree: 1131 grep language= */config-lang.in 1132 Currently, you can use any of the following: `all', `ada', `c', 1133 `c++', `fortran', `go', `java', `objc', `obj-c++'. Building the 1134 Ada compiler has special requirements, see below. If you do not 1135 pass this flag, or specify the option `all', then all default 1136 languages available in the `gcc' sub-tree will be configured. 1137 Ada, Go and Objective-C++ are not default languages; the rest are. 1138 1139 `--enable-stage1-languages=LANG1,LANG2,...' 1140 Specify that a particular subset of compilers and their runtime 1141 libraries should be built with the system C compiler during stage 1142 1 of the bootstrap process, rather than only in later stages with 1143 the bootstrapped C compiler. The list of valid values is the same 1144 as for `--enable-languages', and the option `all' will select all 1145 of the languages enabled by `--enable-languages'. This option is 1146 primarily useful for GCC development; for instance, when a 1147 development version of the compiler cannot bootstrap due to 1148 compiler bugs, or when one is debugging front ends other than the 1149 C front end. When this option is used, one can then build the 1150 target libraries for the specified languages with the stage-1 1151 compiler by using `make stage1-bubble all-target', or run the 1152 testsuite on the stage-1 compiler for the specified languages 1153 using `make stage1-start check-gcc'. 1154 1155 `--disable-libada' 1156 Specify that the run-time libraries and tools used by GNAT should 1157 not be built. This can be useful for debugging, or for 1158 compatibility with previous Ada build procedures, when it was 1159 required to explicitly do a `make -C gcc gnatlib_and_tools'. 1160 1161 `--disable-libssp' 1162 Specify that the run-time libraries for stack smashing protection 1163 should not be built. 1164 1165 `--disable-libquadmath' 1166 Specify that the GCC quad-precision math library should not be 1167 built. On some systems, the library is required to be linkable 1168 when building the Fortran front end, unless 1169 `--disable-libquadmath-support' is used. 1170 1171 `--disable-libquadmath-support' 1172 Specify that the Fortran front end and `libgfortran' do not add 1173 support for `libquadmath' on systems supporting it. 1174 1175 `--disable-libgomp' 1176 Specify that the run-time libraries used by GOMP should not be 1177 built. 1178 1179 `--with-dwarf2' 1180 Specify that the compiler should use DWARF 2 debugging information 1181 as the default. 1182 1183 `--enable-targets=all' 1184 `--enable-targets=TARGET_LIST' 1185 Some GCC targets, e.g. powerpc64-linux, build bi-arch compilers. 1186 These are compilers that are able to generate either 64-bit or 1187 32-bit code. Typically, the corresponding 32-bit target, e.g. 1188 powerpc-linux for powerpc64-linux, only generates 32-bit code. 1189 This option enables the 32-bit target to be a bi-arch compiler, 1190 which is useful when you want a bi-arch compiler that defaults to 1191 32-bit, and you are building a bi-arch or multi-arch binutils in a 1192 combined tree. On mips-linux, this will build a tri-arch compiler 1193 (ABI o32/n32/64), defaulted to o32. Currently, this option only 1194 affects sparc-linux, powerpc-linux, x86-linux, mips-linux and 1195 s390-linux. 1196 1197 `--enable-secureplt' 1198 This option enables `-msecure-plt' by default for powerpc-linux. 1199 *Note RS/6000 and PowerPC Options: (gcc)RS/6000 and PowerPC 1200 Options, 1201 1202 `--enable-cld' 1203 This option enables `-mcld' by default for 32-bit x86 targets. 1204 *Note i386 and x86-64 Options: (gcc)i386 and x86-64 Options, 1205 1206 `--enable-win32-registry' 1207 `--enable-win32-registry=KEY' 1208 `--disable-win32-registry' 1209 The `--enable-win32-registry' option enables Microsoft 1210 Windows-hosted GCC to look up installations paths in the registry 1211 using the following key: 1212 1213 `HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Free Software Foundation\KEY' 1214 1215 KEY defaults to GCC version number, and can be overridden by the 1216 `--enable-win32-registry=KEY' option. Vendors and distributors 1217 who use custom installers are encouraged to provide a different 1218 key, perhaps one comprised of vendor name and GCC version number, 1219 to avoid conflict with existing installations. This feature is 1220 enabled by default, and can be disabled by 1221 `--disable-win32-registry' option. This option has no effect on 1222 the other hosts. 1223 1224 `--nfp' 1225 Specify that the machine does not have a floating point unit. This 1226 option only applies to `m68k-sun-sunosN'. On any other system, 1227 `--nfp' has no effect. 1228 1229 `--enable-werror' 1230 `--disable-werror' 1231 `--enable-werror=yes' 1232 `--enable-werror=no' 1233 When you specify this option, it controls whether certain files in 1234 the compiler are built with `-Werror' in bootstrap stage2 and 1235 later. If you don't specify it, `-Werror' is turned on for the 1236 main development trunk. However it defaults to off for release 1237 branches and final releases. The specific files which get 1238 `-Werror' are controlled by the Makefiles. 1239 1240 `--enable-checking' 1241 `--enable-checking=LIST' 1242 When you specify this option, the compiler is built to perform 1243 internal consistency checks of the requested complexity. This 1244 does not change the generated code, but adds error checking within 1245 the compiler. This will slow down the compiler and may only work 1246 properly if you are building the compiler with GCC. This is `yes' 1247 by default when building from SVN or snapshots, but `release' for 1248 releases. The default for building the stage1 compiler is `yes'. 1249 More control over the checks may be had by specifying LIST. The 1250 categories of checks available are `yes' (most common checks 1251 `assert,misc,tree,gc,rtlflag,runtime'), `no' (no checks at all), 1252 `all' (all but `valgrind'), `release' (cheapest checks 1253 `assert,runtime') or `none' (same as `no'). Individual checks can 1254 be enabled with these flags `assert', `df', `fold', `gc', `gcac' 1255 `misc', `rtl', `rtlflag', `runtime', `tree', and `valgrind'. 1256 1257 The `valgrind' check requires the external `valgrind' simulator, 1258 available from `http://valgrind.org/'. The `df', `rtl', `gcac' 1259 and `valgrind' checks are very expensive. To disable all 1260 checking, `--disable-checking' or `--enable-checking=none' must be 1261 explicitly requested. Disabling assertions will make the compiler 1262 and runtime slightly faster but increase the risk of undetected 1263 internal errors causing wrong code to be generated. 1264 1265 `--disable-stage1-checking' 1266 `--enable-stage1-checking' 1267 `--enable-stage1-checking=LIST' 1268 If no `--enable-checking' option is specified the stage1 compiler 1269 will be built with `yes' checking enabled, otherwise the stage1 1270 checking flags are the same as specified by `--enable-checking'. 1271 To build the stage1 compiler with different checking options use 1272 `--enable-stage1-checking'. The list of checking options is the 1273 same as for `--enable-checking'. If your system is too slow or 1274 too small to bootstrap a released compiler with checking for 1275 stage1 enabled, you can use `--disable-stage1-checking' to disable 1276 checking for the stage1 compiler. 1277 1278 `--enable-coverage' 1279 `--enable-coverage=LEVEL' 1280 With this option, the compiler is built to collect self coverage 1281 information, every time it is run. This is for internal 1282 development purposes, and only works when the compiler is being 1283 built with gcc. The LEVEL argument controls whether the compiler 1284 is built optimized or not, values are `opt' and `noopt'. For 1285 coverage analysis you want to disable optimization, for 1286 performance analysis you want to enable optimization. When 1287 coverage is enabled, the default level is without optimization. 1288 1289 `--enable-gather-detailed-mem-stats' 1290 When this option is specified more detailed information on memory 1291 allocation is gathered. This information is printed when using 1292 `-fmem-report'. 1293 1294 `--enable-nls' 1295 `--disable-nls' 1296 The `--enable-nls' option enables Native Language Support (NLS), 1297 which lets GCC output diagnostics in languages other than American 1298 English. Native Language Support is enabled by default if not 1299 doing a canadian cross build. The `--disable-nls' option disables 1300 NLS. 1301 1302 `--with-included-gettext' 1303 If NLS is enabled, the `--with-included-gettext' option causes the 1304 build procedure to prefer its copy of GNU `gettext'. 1305 1306 `--with-catgets' 1307 If NLS is enabled, and if the host lacks `gettext' but has the 1308 inferior `catgets' interface, the GCC build procedure normally 1309 ignores `catgets' and instead uses GCC's copy of the GNU `gettext' 1310 library. The `--with-catgets' option causes the build procedure 1311 to use the host's `catgets' in this situation. 1312 1313 `--with-libiconv-prefix=DIR' 1314 Search for libiconv header files in `DIR/include' and libiconv 1315 library files in `DIR/lib'. 1316 1317 `--enable-obsolete' 1318 Enable configuration for an obsoleted system. If you attempt to 1319 configure GCC for a system (build, host, or target) which has been 1320 obsoleted, and you do not specify this flag, configure will halt 1321 with an error message. 1322 1323 All support for systems which have been obsoleted in one release 1324 of GCC is removed entirely in the next major release, unless 1325 someone steps forward to maintain the port. 1326 1327 `--enable-decimal-float' 1328 `--enable-decimal-float=yes' 1329 `--enable-decimal-float=no' 1330 `--enable-decimal-float=bid' 1331 `--enable-decimal-float=dpd' 1332 `--disable-decimal-float' 1333 Enable (or disable) support for the C decimal floating point 1334 extension that is in the IEEE 754-2008 standard. This is enabled 1335 by default only on PowerPC, i386, and x86_64 GNU/Linux systems. 1336 Other systems may also support it, but require the user to 1337 specifically enable it. You can optionally control which decimal 1338 floating point format is used (either `bid' or `dpd'). The `bid' 1339 (binary integer decimal) format is default on i386 and x86_64 1340 systems, and the `dpd' (densely packed decimal) format is default 1341 on PowerPC systems. 1342 1343 `--enable-fixed-point' 1344 `--disable-fixed-point' 1345 Enable (or disable) support for C fixed-point arithmetic. This 1346 option is enabled by default for some targets (such as MIPS) which 1347 have hardware-support for fixed-point operations. On other 1348 targets, you may enable this option manually. 1349 1350 `--with-long-double-128' 1351 Specify if `long double' type should be 128-bit by default on 1352 selected GNU/Linux architectures. If using 1353 `--without-long-double-128', `long double' will be by default 1354 64-bit, the same as `double' type. When neither of these 1355 configure options are used, the default will be 128-bit `long 1356 double' when built against GNU C Library 2.4 and later, 64-bit 1357 `long double' otherwise. 1358 1359 `--with-gmp=PATHNAME' 1360 `--with-gmp-include=PATHNAME' 1361 `--with-gmp-lib=PATHNAME' 1362 `--with-mpfr=PATHNAME' 1363 `--with-mpfr-include=PATHNAME' 1364 `--with-mpfr-lib=PATHNAME' 1365 `--with-mpc=PATHNAME' 1366 `--with-mpc-include=PATHNAME' 1367 `--with-mpc-lib=PATHNAME' 1368 If you want to build GCC but do not have the GMP library, the MPFR 1369 library and/or the MPC library installed in a standard location and 1370 do not have their sources present in the GCC source tree then you 1371 can explicitly specify the directory where they are installed 1372 (`--with-gmp=GMPINSTALLDIR', `--with-mpfr=MPFRINSTALLDIR', 1373 `--with-mpc=MPCINSTALLDIR'). The `--with-gmp=GMPINSTALLDIR' 1374 option is shorthand for `--with-gmp-lib=GMPINSTALLDIR/lib' and 1375 `--with-gmp-include=GMPINSTALLDIR/include'. Likewise the 1376 `--with-mpfr=MPFRINSTALLDIR' option is shorthand for 1377 `--with-mpfr-lib=MPFRINSTALLDIR/lib' and 1378 `--with-mpfr-include=MPFRINSTALLDIR/include', also the 1379 `--with-mpc=MPCINSTALLDIR' option is shorthand for 1380 `--with-mpc-lib=MPCINSTALLDIR/lib' and 1381 `--with-mpc-include=MPCINSTALLDIR/include'. If these shorthand 1382 assumptions are not correct, you can use the explicit include and 1383 lib options directly. You might also need to ensure the shared 1384 libraries can be found by the dynamic linker when building and 1385 using GCC, for example by setting the runtime shared library path 1386 variable (`LD_LIBRARY_PATH' on GNU/Linux and Solaris systems). 1387 1388 These flags are applicable to the host platform only. When 1389 building a cross compiler, they will not be used to configure 1390 target libraries. 1391 1392 `--with-isl=PATHNAME' 1393 `--with-isl-include=PATHNAME' 1394 `--with-isl-lib=PATHNAME' 1395 `--with-cloog=PATHNAME' 1396 `--with-cloog-include=PATHNAME' 1397 `--with-cloog-lib=PATHNAME' 1398 If you do not have ISL and the CLooG libraries installed in a 1399 standard location and you want to build GCC, you can explicitly 1400 specify the directory where they are installed 1401 (`--with-isl=ISLINSTALLDIR', `--with-cloog=CLOOGINSTALLDIR'). The 1402 `--with-isl=ISLINSTALLDIR' option is shorthand for 1403 `--with-isl-lib=ISLINSTALLDIR/lib' and 1404 `--with-isl-include=ISLINSTALLDIR/include'. Likewise the 1405 `--with-cloog=CLOOGINSTALLDIR' option is shorthand for 1406 `--with-cloog-lib=CLOOGINSTALLDIR/lib' and 1407 `--with-cloog-include=CLOOGINSTALLDIR/include'. If these 1408 shorthand assumptions are not correct, you can use the explicit 1409 include and lib options directly. 1410 1411 These flags are applicable to the host platform only. When 1412 building a cross compiler, they will not be used to configure 1413 target libraries. 1414 1415 `--with-host-libstdcxx=LINKER-ARGS' 1416 If you are linking with a static copy of PPL, you can use this 1417 option to specify how the linker should find the standard C++ 1418 library used internally by PPL. Typical values of LINKER-ARGS 1419 might be `-lstdc++' or `-Wl,-Bstatic,-lstdc++,-Bdynamic -lm'. If 1420 you are linking with a shared copy of PPL, you probably do not 1421 need this option; shared library dependencies will cause the 1422 linker to search for the standard C++ library automatically. 1423 1424 `--with-stage1-ldflags=FLAGS' 1425 This option may be used to set linker flags to be used when linking 1426 stage 1 of GCC. These are also used when linking GCC if 1427 configured with `--disable-bootstrap'. By default no special 1428 flags are used. 1429 1430 `--with-stage1-libs=LIBS' 1431 This option may be used to set libraries to be used when linking 1432 stage 1 of GCC. These are also used when linking GCC if 1433 configured with `--disable-bootstrap'. The default is the 1434 argument to `--with-host-libstdcxx', if specified. 1435 1436 `--with-boot-ldflags=FLAGS' 1437 This option may be used to set linker flags to be used when linking 1438 stage 2 and later when bootstrapping GCC. If neither 1439 -with-boot-libs nor -with-host-libstdcxx is set to a value, then 1440 the default is `-static-libstdc++ -static-libgcc'. 1441 1442 `--with-boot-libs=LIBS' 1443 This option may be used to set libraries to be used when linking 1444 stage 2 and later when bootstrapping GCC. The default is the 1445 argument to `--with-host-libstdcxx', if specified. 1446 1447 `--with-debug-prefix-map=MAP' 1448 Convert source directory names using `-fdebug-prefix-map' when 1449 building runtime libraries. `MAP' is a space-separated list of 1450 maps of the form `OLD=NEW'. 1451 1452 `--enable-linker-build-id' 1453 Tells GCC to pass `--build-id' option to the linker for all final 1454 links (links performed without the `-r' or `--relocatable' 1455 option), if the linker supports it. If you specify 1456 `--enable-linker-build-id', but your linker does not support 1457 `--build-id' option, a warning is issued and the 1458 `--enable-linker-build-id' option is ignored. The default is off. 1459 1460 `--with-linker-hash-style=CHOICE' 1461 Tells GCC to pass `--hash-style=CHOICE' option to the linker for 1462 all final links. CHOICE can be one of `sysv', `gnu', and `both' 1463 where `sysv' is the default. 1464 1465 `--enable-gnu-unique-object' 1466 `--disable-gnu-unique-object' 1467 Tells GCC to use the gnu_unique_object relocation for C++ template 1468 static data members and inline function local statics. Enabled by 1469 default for a native toolchain with an assembler that accepts it 1470 and GLIBC 2.11 or above, otherwise disabled. 1471 1472 `--enable-lto' 1473 `--disable-lto' 1474 Enable support for link-time optimization (LTO). This is enabled 1475 by default, and may be disabled using `--disable-lto'. 1476 1477 `--with-plugin-ld=PATHNAME' 1478 Enable an alternate linker to be used at link-time optimization 1479 (LTO) link time when `-fuse-linker-plugin' is enabled. This 1480 linker should have plugin support such as gold starting with 1481 version 2.20 or GNU ld starting with version 2.21. See 1482 `-fuse-linker-plugin' for details. 1483 1484 `--enable-canonical-system-headers' 1485 `--disable-canonical-system-headers' 1486 Enable system header path canonicalization for `libcpp'. This can 1487 produce shorter header file paths in diagnostics and dependency 1488 output files, but these changed header paths may conflict with 1489 some compilation environments. Enabled by default, and may be 1490 disabled using `--disable-canonical-system-headers'. 1491 1492 Cross-Compiler-Specific Options 1493 ------------------------------- 1494 1495 The following options only apply to building cross compilers. 1496 1497 `--with-sysroot' 1498 `--with-sysroot=DIR' 1499 Tells GCC to consider DIR as the root of a tree that contains (a 1500 subset of) the root filesystem of the target operating system. 1501 Target system headers, libraries and run-time object files will be 1502 searched for in there. More specifically, this acts as if 1503 `--sysroot=DIR' was added to the default options of the built 1504 compiler. The specified directory is not copied into the install 1505 tree, unlike the options `--with-headers' and `--with-libs' that 1506 this option obsoletes. The default value, in case 1507 `--with-sysroot' is not given an argument, is 1508 `${gcc_tooldir}/sys-root'. If the specified directory is a 1509 subdirectory of `${exec_prefix}', then it will be found relative to 1510 the GCC binaries if the installation tree is moved. 1511 1512 This option affects the system root for the compiler used to build 1513 target libraries (which runs on the build system) and the compiler 1514 newly installed with `make install'; it does not affect the 1515 compiler which is used to build GCC itself. 1516 1517 If you specify the `--with-native-system-header-dir=DIRNAME' 1518 option then the compiler will search that directory within DIRNAME 1519 for native system headers rather than the default `/usr/include'. 1520 1521 `--with-build-sysroot' 1522 `--with-build-sysroot=DIR' 1523 Tells GCC to consider DIR as the system root (see 1524 `--with-sysroot') while building target libraries, instead of the 1525 directory specified with `--with-sysroot'. This option is only 1526 useful when you are already using `--with-sysroot'. You can use 1527 `--with-build-sysroot' when you are configuring with `--prefix' 1528 set to a directory that is different from the one in which you are 1529 installing GCC and your target libraries. 1530 1531 This option affects the system root for the compiler used to build 1532 target libraries (which runs on the build system); it does not 1533 affect the compiler which is used to build GCC itself. 1534 1535 If you specify the `--with-native-system-header-dir=DIRNAME' 1536 option then the compiler will search that directory within DIRNAME 1537 for native system headers rather than the default `/usr/include'. 1538 1539 `--with-headers' 1540 `--with-headers=DIR' 1541 Deprecated in favor of `--with-sysroot'. Specifies that target 1542 headers are available when building a cross compiler. The DIR 1543 argument specifies a directory which has the target include files. 1544 These include files will be copied into the `gcc' install 1545 directory. _This option with the DIR argument is required_ when 1546 building a cross compiler, if `PREFIX/TARGET/sys-include' doesn't 1547 pre-exist. If `PREFIX/TARGET/sys-include' does pre-exist, the DIR 1548 argument may be omitted. `fixincludes' will be run on these files 1549 to make them compatible with GCC. 1550 1551 `--without-headers' 1552 Tells GCC not use any target headers from a libc when building a 1553 cross compiler. When crossing to GNU/Linux, you need the headers 1554 so GCC can build the exception handling for libgcc. 1555 1556 `--with-libs' 1557 `--with-libs="DIR1 DIR2 ... DIRN"' 1558 Deprecated in favor of `--with-sysroot'. Specifies a list of 1559 directories which contain the target runtime libraries. These 1560 libraries will be copied into the `gcc' install directory. If the 1561 directory list is omitted, this option has no effect. 1562 1563 `--with-newlib' 1564 Specifies that `newlib' is being used as the target C library. 1565 This causes `__eprintf' to be omitted from `libgcc.a' on the 1566 assumption that it will be provided by `newlib'. 1567 1568 `--with-avrlibc' 1569 Specifies that `AVR-Libc' is being used as the target C library. 1570 This causes float support functions like `__addsf3' to be omitted 1571 from `libgcc.a' on the assumption that it will be provided by 1572 `libm.a'. For more technical details, cf. PR54461. This option 1573 is only supported for the AVR target. It is not supported for 1574 RTEMS configurations, which currently use newlib. The option is 1575 supported since version 4.7.2 and is the default in 4.8.0 and 1576 newer. 1577 1578 `--with-build-time-tools=DIR' 1579 Specifies where to find the set of target tools (assembler, 1580 linker, etc.) that will be used while building GCC itself. This 1581 option can be useful if the directory layouts are different 1582 between the system you are building GCC on, and the system where 1583 you will deploy it. 1584 1585 For example, on an `ia64-hp-hpux' system, you may have the GNU 1586 assembler and linker in `/usr/bin', and the native tools in a 1587 different path, and build a toolchain that expects to find the 1588 native tools in `/usr/bin'. 1589 1590 When you use this option, you should ensure that DIR includes 1591 `ar', `as', `ld', `nm', `ranlib' and `strip' if necessary, and 1592 possibly `objdump'. Otherwise, GCC may use an inconsistent set of 1593 tools. 1594 1595 Java-Specific Options 1596 --------------------- 1597 1598 The following option applies to the build of the Java front end. 1599 1600 `--disable-libgcj' 1601 Specify that the run-time libraries used by GCJ should not be 1602 built. This is useful in case you intend to use GCJ with some 1603 other run-time, or you're going to install it separately, or it 1604 just happens not to build on your particular machine. In general, 1605 if the Java front end is enabled, the GCJ libraries will be 1606 enabled too, unless they're known to not work on the target 1607 platform. If GCJ is enabled but `libgcj' isn't built, you may 1608 need to port it; in this case, before modifying the top-level 1609 `configure.in' so that `libgcj' is enabled by default on this 1610 platform, you may use `--enable-libgcj' to override the default. 1611 1612 1613 The following options apply to building `libgcj'. 1614 1615 General Options 1616 ............... 1617 1618 `--enable-java-maintainer-mode' 1619 By default the `libjava' build will not attempt to compile the 1620 `.java' source files to `.class'. Instead, it will use the 1621 `.class' files from the source tree. If you use this option you 1622 must have executables named `ecj1' and `gjavah' in your path for 1623 use by the build. You must use this option if you intend to 1624 modify any `.java' files in `libjava'. 1625 1626 `--with-java-home=DIRNAME' 1627 This `libjava' option overrides the default value of the 1628 `java.home' system property. It is also used to set 1629 `sun.boot.class.path' to `DIRNAME/lib/rt.jar'. By default 1630 `java.home' is set to `PREFIX' and `sun.boot.class.path' to 1631 `DATADIR/java/libgcj-VERSION.jar'. 1632 1633 `--with-ecj-jar=FILENAME' 1634 This option can be used to specify the location of an external jar 1635 file containing the Eclipse Java compiler. A specially modified 1636 version of this compiler is used by `gcj' to parse `.java' source 1637 files. If this option is given, the `libjava' build will create 1638 and install an `ecj1' executable which uses this jar file at 1639 runtime. 1640 1641 If this option is not given, but an `ecj.jar' file is found in the 1642 topmost source tree at configure time, then the `libgcj' build 1643 will create and install `ecj1', and will also install the 1644 discovered `ecj.jar' into a suitable place in the install tree. 1645 1646 If `ecj1' is not installed, then the user will have to supply one 1647 on his path in order for `gcj' to properly parse `.java' source 1648 files. A suitable jar is available from 1649 `ftp://sourceware.org/pub/java/'. 1650 1651 `--disable-getenv-properties' 1652 Don't set system properties from `GCJ_PROPERTIES'. 1653 1654 `--enable-hash-synchronization' 1655 Use a global hash table for monitor locks. Ordinarily, `libgcj''s 1656 `configure' script automatically makes the correct choice for this 1657 option for your platform. Only use this if you know you need the 1658 library to be configured differently. 1659 1660 `--enable-interpreter' 1661 Enable the Java interpreter. The interpreter is automatically 1662 enabled by default on all platforms that support it. This option 1663 is really only useful if you want to disable the interpreter 1664 (using `--disable-interpreter'). 1665 1666 `--disable-java-net' 1667 Disable java.net. This disables the native part of java.net only, 1668 using non-functional stubs for native method implementations. 1669 1670 `--disable-jvmpi' 1671 Disable JVMPI support. 1672 1673 `--disable-libgcj-bc' 1674 Disable BC ABI compilation of certain parts of libgcj. By default, 1675 some portions of libgcj are compiled with `-findirect-dispatch' 1676 and `-fno-indirect-classes', allowing them to be overridden at 1677 run-time. 1678 1679 If `--disable-libgcj-bc' is specified, libgcj is built without 1680 these options. This allows the compile-time linker to resolve 1681 dependencies when statically linking to libgcj. However it makes 1682 it impossible to override the affected portions of libgcj at 1683 run-time. 1684 1685 `--enable-reduced-reflection' 1686 Build most of libgcj with `-freduced-reflection'. This reduces 1687 the size of libgcj at the expense of not being able to do accurate 1688 reflection on the classes it contains. This option is safe if you 1689 know that code using libgcj will never use reflection on the 1690 standard runtime classes in libgcj (including using serialization, 1691 RMI or CORBA). 1692 1693 `--with-ecos' 1694 Enable runtime eCos target support. 1695 1696 `--without-libffi' 1697 Don't use `libffi'. This will disable the interpreter and JNI 1698 support as well, as these require `libffi' to work. 1699 1700 `--enable-libgcj-debug' 1701 Enable runtime debugging code. 1702 1703 `--enable-libgcj-multifile' 1704 If specified, causes all `.java' source files to be compiled into 1705 `.class' files in one invocation of `gcj'. This can speed up 1706 build time, but is more resource-intensive. If this option is 1707 unspecified or disabled, `gcj' is invoked once for each `.java' 1708 file to compile into a `.class' file. 1709 1710 `--with-libiconv-prefix=DIR' 1711 Search for libiconv in `DIR/include' and `DIR/lib'. 1712 1713 `--enable-sjlj-exceptions' 1714 Force use of the `setjmp'/`longjmp'-based scheme for exceptions. 1715 `configure' ordinarily picks the correct value based on the 1716 platform. Only use this option if you are sure you need a 1717 different setting. 1718 1719 `--with-system-zlib' 1720 Use installed `zlib' rather than that included with GCC. 1721 1722 `--with-win32-nlsapi=ansi, unicows or unicode' 1723 Indicates how MinGW `libgcj' translates between UNICODE characters 1724 and the Win32 API. 1725 1726 `--enable-java-home' 1727 If enabled, this creates a JPackage compatible SDK environment 1728 during install. Note that if -enable-java-home is used, 1729 -with-arch-directory=ARCH must also be specified. 1730 1731 `--with-arch-directory=ARCH' 1732 Specifies the name to use for the `jre/lib/ARCH' directory in the 1733 SDK environment created when -enable-java-home is passed. Typical 1734 names for this directory include i386, amd64, ia64, etc. 1735 1736 `--with-os-directory=DIR' 1737 Specifies the OS directory for the SDK include directory. This is 1738 set to auto detect, and is typically 'linux'. 1739 1740 `--with-origin-name=NAME' 1741 Specifies the JPackage origin name. This defaults to the 'gcj' in 1742 java-1.5.0-gcj. 1743 1744 `--with-arch-suffix=SUFFIX' 1745 Specifies the suffix for the sdk directory. Defaults to the empty 1746 string. Examples include '.x86_64' in 1747 'java-1.5.0-gcj-1.5.0.0.x86_64'. 1748 1749 `--with-jvm-root-dir=DIR' 1750 Specifies where to install the SDK. Default is $(prefix)/lib/jvm. 1751 1752 `--with-jvm-jar-dir=DIR' 1753 Specifies where to install jars. Default is 1754 $(prefix)/lib/jvm-exports. 1755 1756 `--with-python-dir=DIR' 1757 Specifies where to install the Python modules used for 1758 aot-compile. DIR should not include the prefix used in 1759 installation. For example, if the Python modules are to be 1760 installed in /usr/lib/python2.5/site-packages, then 1761 -with-python-dir=/lib/python2.5/site-packages should be passed. If 1762 this is not specified, then the Python modules are installed in 1763 $(prefix)/share/python. 1764 1765 `--enable-aot-compile-rpm' 1766 Adds aot-compile-rpm to the list of installed scripts. 1767 1768 `--enable-browser-plugin' 1769 Build the gcjwebplugin web browser plugin. 1770 1771 `--enable-static-libjava' 1772 Build static libraries in libjava. The default is to only build 1773 shared libraries. 1774 1775 `ansi' 1776 Use the single-byte `char' and the Win32 A functions natively, 1777 translating to and from UNICODE when using these functions. 1778 If unspecified, this is the default. 1779 1780 `unicows' 1781 Use the `WCHAR' and Win32 W functions natively. Adds 1782 `-lunicows' to `libgcj.spec' to link with `libunicows'. 1783 `unicows.dll' needs to be deployed on Microsoft Windows 9X 1784 machines running built executables. `libunicows.a', an 1785 open-source import library around Microsoft's `unicows.dll', 1786 is obtained from `http://libunicows.sourceforge.net/', which 1787 also gives details on getting `unicows.dll' from Microsoft. 1788 1789 `unicode' 1790 Use the `WCHAR' and Win32 W functions natively. Does _not_ 1791 add `-lunicows' to `libgcj.spec'. The built executables will 1792 only run on Microsoft Windows NT and above. 1793 1794 AWT-Specific Options 1795 .................... 1796 1797 `--with-x' 1798 Use the X Window System. 1799 1800 `--enable-java-awt=PEER(S)' 1801 Specifies the AWT peer library or libraries to build alongside 1802 `libgcj'. If this option is unspecified or disabled, AWT will be 1803 non-functional. Current valid values are `gtk' and `xlib'. 1804 Multiple libraries should be separated by a comma (i.e. 1805 `--enable-java-awt=gtk,xlib'). 1806 1807 `--enable-gtk-cairo' 1808 Build the cairo Graphics2D implementation on GTK. 1809 1810 `--enable-java-gc=TYPE' 1811 Choose garbage collector. Defaults to `boehm' if unspecified. 1812 1813 `--disable-gtktest' 1814 Do not try to compile and run a test GTK+ program. 1815 1816 `--disable-glibtest' 1817 Do not try to compile and run a test GLIB program. 1818 1819 `--with-libart-prefix=PFX' 1820 Prefix where libart is installed (optional). 1821 1822 `--with-libart-exec-prefix=PFX' 1823 Exec prefix where libart is installed (optional). 1824 1825 `--disable-libarttest' 1826 Do not try to compile and run a test libart program. 1827 1828 1829 Overriding `configure' test results 1830 ................................... 1831 1832 Sometimes, it might be necessary to override the result of some 1833 `configure' test, for example in order to ease porting to a new system 1834 or work around a bug in a test. The toplevel `configure' script 1835 provides three variables for this: 1836 1837 `build_configargs' 1838 The contents of this variable is passed to all build `configure' 1839 scripts. 1840 1841 `host_configargs' 1842 The contents of this variable is passed to all host `configure' 1843 scripts. 1844 1845 `target_configargs' 1846 The contents of this variable is passed to all target `configure' 1847 scripts. 1848 1849 1850 In order to avoid shell and `make' quoting issues for complex 1851 overrides, you can pass a setting for `CONFIG_SITE' and set variables 1852 in the site file. 1853 1854 1855 File: gccinstall.info, Node: Building, Next: Testing, Prev: Configuration, Up: Installing GCC 1856 1857 5 Building 1858 ********** 1859 1860 Now that GCC is configured, you are ready to build the compiler and 1861 runtime libraries. 1862 1863 Some commands executed when making the compiler may fail (return a 1864 nonzero status) and be ignored by `make'. These failures, which are 1865 often due to files that were not found, are expected, and can safely be 1866 ignored. 1867 1868 It is normal to have compiler warnings when compiling certain files. 1869 Unless you are a GCC developer, you can generally ignore these warnings 1870 unless they cause compilation to fail. Developers should attempt to fix 1871 any warnings encountered, however they can temporarily continue past 1872 warnings-as-errors by specifying the configure flag `--disable-werror'. 1873 1874 On certain old systems, defining certain environment variables such 1875 as `CC' can interfere with the functioning of `make'. 1876 1877 If you encounter seemingly strange errors when trying to build the 1878 compiler in a directory other than the source directory, it could be 1879 because you have previously configured the compiler in the source 1880 directory. Make sure you have done all the necessary preparations. 1881 1882 If you build GCC on a BSD system using a directory stored in an old 1883 System V file system, problems may occur in running `fixincludes' if the 1884 System V file system doesn't support symbolic links. These problems 1885 result in a failure to fix the declaration of `size_t' in 1886 `sys/types.h'. If you find that `size_t' is a signed type and that 1887 type mismatches occur, this could be the cause. 1888 1889 The solution is not to use such a directory for building GCC. 1890 1891 Similarly, when building from SVN or snapshots, or if you modify 1892 `*.l' files, you need the Flex lexical analyzer generator installed. 1893 If you do not modify `*.l' files, releases contain the Flex-generated 1894 files and you do not need Flex installed to build them. There is still 1895 one Flex-based lexical analyzer (part of the build machinery, not of 1896 GCC itself) that is used even if you only build the C front end. 1897 1898 When building from SVN or snapshots, or if you modify Texinfo 1899 documentation, you need version 4.7 or later of Texinfo installed if you 1900 want Info documentation to be regenerated. Releases contain Info 1901 documentation pre-built for the unmodified documentation in the release. 1902 1903 5.1 Building a native compiler 1904 ============================== 1905 1906 For a native build, the default configuration is to perform a 3-stage 1907 bootstrap of the compiler when `make' is invoked. This will build the 1908 entire GCC system and ensure that it compiles itself correctly. It can 1909 be disabled with the `--disable-bootstrap' parameter to `configure', 1910 but bootstrapping is suggested because the compiler will be tested more 1911 completely and could also have better performance. 1912 1913 The bootstrapping process will complete the following steps: 1914 1915 * Build tools necessary to build the compiler. 1916 1917 * Perform a 3-stage bootstrap of the compiler. This includes 1918 building three times the target tools for use by the compiler such 1919 as binutils (bfd, binutils, gas, gprof, ld, and opcodes) if they 1920 have been individually linked or moved into the top level GCC 1921 source tree before configuring. 1922 1923 * Perform a comparison test of the stage2 and stage3 compilers. 1924 1925 * Build runtime libraries using the stage3 compiler from the 1926 previous step. 1927 1928 1929 If you are short on disk space you might consider `make 1930 bootstrap-lean' instead. The sequence of compilation is the same 1931 described above, but object files from the stage1 and stage2 of the 1932 3-stage bootstrap of the compiler are deleted as soon as they are no 1933 longer needed. 1934 1935 If you wish to use non-default GCC flags when compiling the stage2 1936 and stage3 compilers, set `BOOT_CFLAGS' on the command line when doing 1937 `make'. For example, if you want to save additional space during the 1938 bootstrap and in the final installation as well, you can build the 1939 compiler binaries without debugging information as in the following 1940 example. This will save roughly 40% of disk space both for the 1941 bootstrap and the final installation. (Libraries will still contain 1942 debugging information.) 1943 1944 make BOOT_CFLAGS='-O' bootstrap 1945 1946 You can place non-default optimization flags into `BOOT_CFLAGS'; they 1947 are less well tested here than the default of `-g -O2', but should 1948 still work. In a few cases, you may find that you need to specify 1949 special flags such as `-msoft-float' here to complete the bootstrap; or, 1950 if the native compiler miscompiles the stage1 compiler, you may need to 1951 work around this, by choosing `BOOT_CFLAGS' to avoid the parts of the 1952 stage1 compiler that were miscompiled, or by using `make bootstrap4' to 1953 increase the number of stages of bootstrap. 1954 1955 `BOOT_CFLAGS' does not apply to bootstrapped target libraries. 1956 Since these are always compiled with the compiler currently being 1957 bootstrapped, you can use `CFLAGS_FOR_TARGET' to modify their 1958 compilation flags, as for non-bootstrapped target libraries. Again, if 1959 the native compiler miscompiles the stage1 compiler, you may need to 1960 work around this by avoiding non-working parts of the stage1 compiler. 1961 Use `STAGE1_TFLAGS' to this end. 1962 1963 If you used the flag `--enable-languages=...' to restrict the 1964 compilers to be built, only those you've actually enabled will be 1965 built. This will of course only build those runtime libraries, for 1966 which the particular compiler has been built. Please note, that 1967 re-defining `LANGUAGES' when calling `make' *does not* work anymore! 1968 1969 If the comparison of stage2 and stage3 fails, this normally indicates 1970 that the stage2 compiler has compiled GCC incorrectly, and is therefore 1971 a potentially serious bug which you should investigate and report. (On 1972 a few systems, meaningful comparison of object files is impossible; they 1973 always appear "different". If you encounter this problem, you will 1974 need to disable comparison in the `Makefile'.) 1975 1976 If you do not want to bootstrap your compiler, you can configure with 1977 `--disable-bootstrap'. In particular cases, you may want to bootstrap 1978 your compiler even if the target system is not the same as the one you 1979 are building on: for example, you could build a 1980 `powerpc-unknown-linux-gnu' toolchain on a 1981 `powerpc64-unknown-linux-gnu' host. In this case, pass 1982 `--enable-bootstrap' to the configure script. 1983 1984 `BUILD_CONFIG' can be used to bring in additional customization to 1985 the build. It can be set to a whitespace-separated list of names. For 1986 each such `NAME', top-level `config/`NAME'.mk' will be included by the 1987 top-level `Makefile', bringing in any settings it contains. The 1988 default `BUILD_CONFIG' can be set using the configure option 1989 `--with-build-config=`NAME'...'. Some examples of supported build 1990 configurations are: 1991 1992 `bootstrap-O1' 1993 Removes any `-O'-started option from `BOOT_CFLAGS', and adds `-O1' 1994 to it. `BUILD_CONFIG=bootstrap-O1' is equivalent to 1995 `BOOT_CFLAGS='-g -O1''. 1996 1997 `bootstrap-O3' 1998 Analogous to `bootstrap-O1'. 1999 2000 `bootstrap-lto' 2001 Enables Link-Time Optimization for host tools during bootstrapping. 2002 `BUILD_CONFIG=bootstrap-lto' is equivalent to adding `-flto' to 2003 `BOOT_CFLAGS'. 2004 2005 `bootstrap-debug' 2006 Verifies that the compiler generates the same executable code, 2007 whether or not it is asked to emit debug information. To this 2008 end, this option builds stage2 host programs without debug 2009 information, and uses `contrib/compare-debug' to compare them with 2010 the stripped stage3 object files. If `BOOT_CFLAGS' is overridden 2011 so as to not enable debug information, stage2 will have it, and 2012 stage3 won't. This option is enabled by default when GCC 2013 bootstrapping is enabled, if `strip' can turn object files 2014 compiled with and without debug info into identical object files. 2015 In addition to better test coverage, this option makes default 2016 bootstraps faster and leaner. 2017 2018 `bootstrap-debug-big' 2019 Rather than comparing stripped object files, as in 2020 `bootstrap-debug', this option saves internal compiler dumps 2021 during stage2 and stage3 and compares them as well, which helps 2022 catch additional potential problems, but at a great cost in terms 2023 of disk space. It can be specified in addition to 2024 `bootstrap-debug'. 2025 2026 `bootstrap-debug-lean' 2027 This option saves disk space compared with `bootstrap-debug-big', 2028 but at the expense of some recompilation. Instead of saving the 2029 dumps of stage2 and stage3 until the final compare, it uses 2030 `-fcompare-debug' to generate, compare and remove the dumps during 2031 stage3, repeating the compilation that already took place in 2032 stage2, whose dumps were not saved. 2033 2034 `bootstrap-debug-lib' 2035 This option tests executable code invariance over debug information 2036 generation on target libraries, just like `bootstrap-debug-lean' 2037 tests it on host programs. It builds stage3 libraries with 2038 `-fcompare-debug', and it can be used along with any of the 2039 `bootstrap-debug' options above. 2040 2041 There aren't `-lean' or `-big' counterparts to this option because 2042 most libraries are only build in stage3, so bootstrap compares 2043 would not get significant coverage. Moreover, the few libraries 2044 built in stage2 are used in stage3 host programs, so we wouldn't 2045 want to compile stage2 libraries with different options for 2046 comparison purposes. 2047 2048 `bootstrap-debug-ckovw' 2049 Arranges for error messages to be issued if the compiler built on 2050 any stage is run without the option `-fcompare-debug'. This is 2051 useful to verify the full `-fcompare-debug' testing coverage. It 2052 must be used along with `bootstrap-debug-lean' and 2053 `bootstrap-debug-lib'. 2054 2055 `bootstrap-time' 2056 Arranges for the run time of each program started by the GCC 2057 driver, built in any stage, to be logged to `time.log', in the top 2058 level of the build tree. 2059 2060 2061 5.2 Building a cross compiler 2062 ============================= 2063 2064 When building a cross compiler, it is not generally possible to do a 2065 3-stage bootstrap of the compiler. This makes for an interesting 2066 problem as parts of GCC can only be built with GCC. 2067 2068 To build a cross compiler, we recommend first building and 2069 installing a native compiler. You can then use the native GCC compiler 2070 to build the cross compiler. The installed native compiler needs to be 2071 GCC version 2.95 or later. 2072 2073 If the cross compiler is to be built with support for the Java 2074 programming language and the ability to compile .java source files is 2075 desired, the installed native compiler used to build the cross compiler 2076 needs to be the same GCC version as the cross compiler. In addition 2077 the cross compiler needs to be configured with `--with-ecj-jar=...'. 2078 2079 Assuming you have already installed a native copy of GCC and 2080 configured your cross compiler, issue the command `make', which 2081 performs the following steps: 2082 2083 * Build host tools necessary to build the compiler. 2084 2085 * Build target tools for use by the compiler such as binutils (bfd, 2086 binutils, gas, gprof, ld, and opcodes) if they have been 2087 individually linked or moved into the top level GCC source tree 2088 before configuring. 2089 2090 * Build the compiler (single stage only). 2091 2092 * Build runtime libraries using the compiler from the previous step. 2093 2094 Note that if an error occurs in any step the make process will exit. 2095 2096 If you are not building GNU binutils in the same source tree as GCC, 2097 you will need a cross-assembler and cross-linker installed before 2098 configuring GCC. Put them in the directory `PREFIX/TARGET/bin'. Here 2099 is a table of the tools you should put in this directory: 2100 2101 `as' 2102 This should be the cross-assembler. 2103 2104 `ld' 2105 This should be the cross-linker. 2106 2107 `ar' 2108 This should be the cross-archiver: a program which can manipulate 2109 archive files (linker libraries) in the target machine's format. 2110 2111 `ranlib' 2112 This should be a program to construct a symbol table in an archive 2113 file. 2114 2115 The installation of GCC will find these programs in that directory, 2116 and copy or link them to the proper place to for the cross-compiler to 2117 find them when run later. 2118 2119 The easiest way to provide these files is to build the Binutils 2120 package. Configure it with the same `--host' and `--target' options 2121 that you use for configuring GCC, then build and install them. They 2122 install their executables automatically into the proper directory. 2123 Alas, they do not support all the targets that GCC supports. 2124 2125 If you are not building a C library in the same source tree as GCC, 2126 you should also provide the target libraries and headers before 2127 configuring GCC, specifying the directories with `--with-sysroot' or 2128 `--with-headers' and `--with-libs'. Many targets also require "start 2129 files" such as `crt0.o' and `crtn.o' which are linked into each 2130 executable. There may be several alternatives for `crt0.o', for use 2131 with profiling or other compilation options. Check your target's 2132 definition of `STARTFILE_SPEC' to find out what start files it uses. 2133 2134 5.3 Building in parallel 2135 ======================== 2136 2137 GNU Make 3.80 and above, which is necessary to build GCC, support 2138 building in parallel. To activate this, you can use `make -j 2' 2139 instead of `make'. You can also specify a bigger number, and in most 2140 cases using a value greater than the number of processors in your 2141 machine will result in fewer and shorter I/O latency hits, thus 2142 improving overall throughput; this is especially true for slow drives 2143 and network filesystems. 2144 2145 5.4 Building the Ada compiler 2146 ============================= 2147 2148 In order to build GNAT, the Ada compiler, you need a working GNAT 2149 compiler (GCC version 4.0 or later). This includes GNAT tools such as 2150 `gnatmake' and `gnatlink', since the Ada front end is written in Ada and 2151 uses some GNAT-specific extensions. 2152 2153 In order to build a cross compiler, it is suggested to install the 2154 new compiler as native first, and then use it to build the cross 2155 compiler. 2156 2157 `configure' does not test whether the GNAT installation works and 2158 has a sufficiently recent version; if too old a GNAT version is 2159 installed, the build will fail unless `--enable-languages' is used to 2160 disable building the Ada front end. 2161 2162 `ADA_INCLUDE_PATH' and `ADA_OBJECT_PATH' environment variables must 2163 not be set when building the Ada compiler, the Ada tools, or the Ada 2164 runtime libraries. You can check that your build environment is clean 2165 by verifying that `gnatls -v' lists only one explicit path in each 2166 section. 2167 2168 5.5 Building with profile feedback 2169 ================================== 2170 2171 It is possible to use profile feedback to optimize the compiler itself. 2172 This should result in a faster compiler binary. Experiments done on 2173 x86 using gcc 3.3 showed approximately 7 percent speedup on compiling C 2174 programs. To bootstrap the compiler with profile feedback, use `make 2175 profiledbootstrap'. 2176 2177 When `make profiledbootstrap' is run, it will first build a `stage1' 2178 compiler. This compiler is used to build a `stageprofile' compiler 2179 instrumented to collect execution counts of instruction and branch 2180 probabilities. Then runtime libraries are compiled with profile 2181 collected. Finally a `stagefeedback' compiler is built using the 2182 information collected. 2183 2184 Unlike standard bootstrap, several additional restrictions apply. 2185 The compiler used to build `stage1' needs to support a 64-bit integral 2186 type. It is recommended to only use GCC for this. Also parallel make 2187 is currently not supported since collisions in profile collecting may 2188 occur. 2189 2190 2191 File: gccinstall.info, Node: Testing, Next: Final install, Prev: Building, Up: Installing GCC 2192 2193 6 Installing GCC: Testing 2194 ************************* 2195 2196 Before you install GCC, we encourage you to run the testsuites and to 2197 compare your results with results from a similar configuration that have 2198 been submitted to the gcc-testresults mailing list. Some of these 2199 archived results are linked from the build status lists at 2200 `http://gcc.gnu.org/buildstat.html', although not everyone who reports 2201 a successful build runs the testsuites and submits the results. This 2202 step is optional and may require you to download additional software, 2203 but it can give you confidence in your new GCC installation or point out 2204 problems before you install and start using your new GCC. 2205 2206 First, you must have downloaded the testsuites. These are part of 2207 the full distribution, but if you downloaded the "core" compiler plus 2208 any front ends, you must download the testsuites separately. 2209 2210 Second, you must have the testing tools installed. This includes 2211 DejaGnu, Tcl, and Expect; the DejaGnu site has links to these. 2212 2213 If the directories where `runtest' and `expect' were installed are 2214 not in the `PATH', you may need to set the following environment 2215 variables appropriately, as in the following example (which assumes 2216 that DejaGnu has been installed under `/usr/local'): 2217 2218 TCL_LIBRARY = /usr/local/share/tcl8.0 2219 DEJAGNULIBS = /usr/local/share/dejagnu 2220 2221 (On systems such as Cygwin, these paths are required to be actual 2222 paths, not mounts or links; presumably this is due to some lack of 2223 portability in the DejaGnu code.) 2224 2225 Finally, you can run the testsuite (which may take a long time): 2226 cd OBJDIR; make -k check 2227 2228 This will test various components of GCC, such as compiler front 2229 ends and runtime libraries. While running the testsuite, DejaGnu might 2230 emit some harmless messages resembling `WARNING: Couldn't find the 2231 global config file.' or `WARNING: Couldn't find tool init file' that 2232 can be ignored. 2233 2234 If you are testing a cross-compiler, you may want to run the 2235 testsuite on a simulator as described at 2236 `http://gcc.gnu.org/simtest-howto.html'. 2237 2238 6.1 How can you run the testsuite on selected tests? 2239 ==================================================== 2240 2241 In order to run sets of tests selectively, there are targets `make 2242 check-gcc' and language specific `make check-c', `make check-c++', 2243 `make check-fortran', `make check-java', `make check-ada', `make 2244 check-objc', `make check-obj-c++', `make check-lto' in the `gcc' 2245 subdirectory of the object directory. You can also just run `make 2246 check' in a subdirectory of the object directory. 2247 2248 A more selective way to just run all `gcc' execute tests in the 2249 testsuite is to use 2250 2251 make check-gcc RUNTESTFLAGS="execute.exp OTHER-OPTIONS" 2252 2253 Likewise, in order to run only the `g++' "old-deja" tests in the 2254 testsuite with filenames matching `9805*', you would use 2255 2256 make check-g++ RUNTESTFLAGS="old-deja.exp=9805* OTHER-OPTIONS" 2257 2258 The `*.exp' files are located in the testsuite directories of the GCC 2259 source, the most important ones being `compile.exp', `execute.exp', 2260 `dg.exp' and `old-deja.exp'. To get a list of the possible `*.exp' 2261 files, pipe the output of `make check' into a file and look at the 2262 `Running ... .exp' lines. 2263 2264 6.2 Passing options and running multiple testsuites 2265 =================================================== 2266 2267 You can pass multiple options to the testsuite using the 2268 `--target_board' option of DejaGNU, either passed as part of 2269 `RUNTESTFLAGS', or directly to `runtest' if you prefer to work outside 2270 the makefiles. For example, 2271 2272 make check-g++ RUNTESTFLAGS="--target_board=unix/-O3/-fmerge-constants" 2273 2274 will run the standard `g++' testsuites ("unix" is the target name 2275 for a standard native testsuite situation), passing `-O3 2276 -fmerge-constants' to the compiler on every test, i.e., slashes 2277 separate options. 2278 2279 You can run the testsuites multiple times using combinations of 2280 options with a syntax similar to the brace expansion of popular shells: 2281 2282 ..."--target_board=arm-sim\{-mhard-float,-msoft-float\}\{-O1,-O2,-O3,\}" 2283 2284 (Note the empty option caused by the trailing comma in the final 2285 group.) The following will run each testsuite eight times using the 2286 `arm-sim' target, as if you had specified all possible combinations 2287 yourself: 2288 2289 --target_board='arm-sim/-mhard-float/-O1 \ 2290 arm-sim/-mhard-float/-O2 \ 2291 arm-sim/-mhard-float/-O3 \ 2292 arm-sim/-mhard-float \ 2293 arm-sim/-msoft-float/-O1 \ 2294 arm-sim/-msoft-float/-O2 \ 2295 arm-sim/-msoft-float/-O3 \ 2296 arm-sim/-msoft-float' 2297 2298 They can be combined as many times as you wish, in arbitrary ways. 2299 This list: 2300 2301 ..."--target_board=unix/-Wextra\{-O3,-fno-strength\}\{-fomit-frame,\}" 2302 2303 will generate four combinations, all involving `-Wextra'. 2304 2305 The disadvantage to this method is that the testsuites are run in 2306 serial, which is a waste on multiprocessor systems. For users with GNU 2307 Make and a shell which performs brace expansion, you can run the 2308 testsuites in parallel by having the shell perform the combinations and 2309 `make' do the parallel runs. Instead of using `--target_board', use a 2310 special makefile target: 2311 2312 make -jN check-TESTSUITE//TEST-TARGET/OPTION1/OPTION2/... 2313 2314 For example, 2315 2316 make -j3 check-gcc//sh-hms-sim/{-m1,-m2,-m3,-m3e,-m4}/{,-nofpu} 2317 2318 will run three concurrent "make-gcc" testsuites, eventually testing 2319 all ten combinations as described above. Note that this is currently 2320 only supported in the `gcc' subdirectory. (To see how this works, try 2321 typing `echo' before the example given here.) 2322 2323 6.3 Additional testing for Java Class Libraries 2324 =============================================== 2325 2326 The Java runtime tests can be executed via `make check' in the 2327 `TARGET/libjava/testsuite' directory in the build tree. 2328 2329 The Mauve Project provides a suite of tests for the Java Class 2330 Libraries. This suite can be run as part of libgcj testing by placing 2331 the Mauve tree within the libjava testsuite at 2332 `libjava/testsuite/libjava.mauve/mauve', or by specifying the location 2333 of that tree when invoking `make', as in `make MAUVEDIR=~/mauve check'. 2334 2335 6.4 How to interpret test results 2336 ================================= 2337 2338 The result of running the testsuite are various `*.sum' and `*.log' 2339 files in the testsuite subdirectories. The `*.log' files contain a 2340 detailed log of the compiler invocations and the corresponding results, 2341 the `*.sum' files summarize the results. These summaries contain 2342 status codes for all tests: 2343 2344 * PASS: the test passed as expected 2345 2346 * XPASS: the test unexpectedly passed 2347 2348 * FAIL: the test unexpectedly failed 2349 2350 * XFAIL: the test failed as expected 2351 2352 * UNSUPPORTED: the test is not supported on this platform 2353 2354 * ERROR: the testsuite detected an error 2355 2356 * WARNING: the testsuite detected a possible problem 2357 2358 It is normal for some tests to report unexpected failures. At the 2359 current time the testing harness does not allow fine grained control 2360 over whether or not a test is expected to fail. This problem should be 2361 fixed in future releases. 2362 2363 6.5 Submitting test results 2364 =========================== 2365 2366 If you want to report the results to the GCC project, use the 2367 `contrib/test_summary' shell script. Start it in the OBJDIR with 2368 2369 SRCDIR/contrib/test_summary -p your_commentary.txt \ 2370 -m gcc-testresults (a] gcc.gnu.org |sh 2371 2372 This script uses the `Mail' program to send the results, so make 2373 sure it is in your `PATH'. The file `your_commentary.txt' is prepended 2374 to the testsuite summary and should contain any special remarks you 2375 have on your results or your build environment. Please do not edit the 2376 testsuite result block or the subject line, as these messages may be 2377 automatically processed. 2378 2379 2380 File: gccinstall.info, Node: Final install, Prev: Testing, Up: Installing GCC 2381 2382 7 Installing GCC: Final installation 2383 ************************************ 2384 2385 Now that GCC has been built (and optionally tested), you can install 2386 it with 2387 cd OBJDIR && make install 2388 2389 We strongly recommend to install into a target directory where there 2390 is no previous version of GCC present. Also, the GNAT runtime should 2391 not be stripped, as this would break certain features of the debugger 2392 that depend on this debugging information (catching Ada exceptions for 2393 instance). 2394 2395 That step completes the installation of GCC; user level binaries can 2396 be found in `PREFIX/bin' where PREFIX is the value you specified with 2397 the `--prefix' to configure (or `/usr/local' by default). (If you 2398 specified `--bindir', that directory will be used instead; otherwise, 2399 if you specified `--exec-prefix', `EXEC-PREFIX/bin' will be used.) 2400 Headers for the C++ and Java libraries are installed in 2401 `PREFIX/include'; libraries in `LIBDIR' (normally `PREFIX/lib'); 2402 internal parts of the compiler in `LIBDIR/gcc' and `LIBEXECDIR/gcc'; 2403 documentation in info format in `INFODIR' (normally `PREFIX/info'). 2404 2405 When installing cross-compilers, GCC's executables are not only 2406 installed into `BINDIR', that is, `EXEC-PREFIX/bin', but additionally 2407 into `EXEC-PREFIX/TARGET-ALIAS/bin', if that directory exists. 2408 Typically, such "tooldirs" hold target-specific binutils, including 2409 assembler and linker. 2410 2411 Installation into a temporary staging area or into a `chroot' jail 2412 can be achieved with the command 2413 2414 make DESTDIR=PATH-TO-ROOTDIR install 2415 2416 where PATH-TO-ROOTDIR is the absolute path of a directory relative to 2417 which all installation paths will be interpreted. Note that the 2418 directory specified by `DESTDIR' need not exist yet; it will be created 2419 if necessary. 2420 2421 There is a subtle point with tooldirs and `DESTDIR': If you relocate 2422 a cross-compiler installation with e.g. `DESTDIR=ROOTDIR', then the 2423 directory `ROOTDIR/EXEC-PREFIX/TARGET-ALIAS/bin' will be filled with 2424 duplicated GCC executables only if it already exists, it will not be 2425 created otherwise. This is regarded as a feature, not as a bug, 2426 because it gives slightly more control to the packagers using the 2427 `DESTDIR' feature. 2428 2429 You can install stripped programs and libraries with 2430 2431 make install-strip 2432 2433 If you are bootstrapping a released version of GCC then please 2434 quickly review the build status page for your release, available from 2435 `http://gcc.gnu.org/buildstat.html'. If your system is not listed for 2436 the version of GCC that you built, send a note to <gcc (a] gcc.gnu.org> 2437 indicating that you successfully built and installed GCC. Include the 2438 following information: 2439 2440 * Output from running `SRCDIR/config.guess'. Do not send that file 2441 itself, just the one-line output from running it. 2442 2443 * The output of `gcc -v' for your newly installed `gcc'. This tells 2444 us which version of GCC you built and the options you passed to 2445 configure. 2446 2447 * Whether you enabled all languages or a subset of them. If you 2448 used a full distribution then this information is part of the 2449 configure options in the output of `gcc -v', but if you downloaded 2450 the "core" compiler plus additional front ends then it isn't 2451 apparent which ones you built unless you tell us about it. 2452 2453 * If the build was for GNU/Linux, also include: 2454 * The distribution name and version (e.g., Red Hat 7.1 or 2455 Debian 2.2.3); this information should be available from 2456 `/etc/issue'. 2457 2458 * The version of the Linux kernel, available from `uname 2459 --version' or `uname -a'. 2460 2461 * The version of glibc you used; for RPM-based systems like Red 2462 Hat, Mandrake, and SuSE type `rpm -q glibc' to get the glibc 2463 version, and on systems like Debian and Progeny use `dpkg -l 2464 libc6'. 2465 For other systems, you can include similar information if you 2466 think it is relevant. 2467 2468 * Any other information that you think would be useful to people 2469 building GCC on the same configuration. The new entry in the 2470 build status list will include a link to the archived copy of your 2471 message. 2472 2473 We'd also like to know if the *note host/target specific 2474 installation notes: Specific. didn't include your host/target 2475 information or if that information is incomplete or out of date. Send 2476 a note to <gcc (a] gcc.gnu.org> detailing how the information should be 2477 changed. 2478 2479 If you find a bug, please report it following the bug reporting 2480 guidelines. 2481 2482 If you want to print the GCC manuals, do `cd OBJDIR; make dvi'. You 2483 will need to have `texi2dvi' (version at least 4.7) and TeX installed. 2484 This creates a number of `.dvi' files in subdirectories of `OBJDIR'; 2485 these may be converted for printing with programs such as `dvips'. 2486 Alternately, by using `make pdf' in place of `make dvi', you can create 2487 documentation in the form of `.pdf' files; this requires `texi2pdf', 2488 which is included with Texinfo version 4.8 and later. You can also buy 2489 printed manuals from the Free Software Foundation, though such manuals 2490 may not be for the most recent version of GCC. 2491 2492 If you would like to generate online HTML documentation, do `cd 2493 OBJDIR; make html' and HTML will be generated for the gcc manuals in 2494 `OBJDIR/gcc/HTML'. 2495 2496 2497 File: gccinstall.info, Node: Binaries, Next: Specific, Prev: Installing GCC, Up: Top 2498 2499 8 Installing GCC: Binaries 2500 ************************** 2501 2502 We are often asked about pre-compiled versions of GCC. While we 2503 cannot provide these for all platforms, below you'll find links to 2504 binaries for various platforms where creating them by yourself is not 2505 easy due to various reasons. 2506 2507 Please note that we did not create these binaries, nor do we support 2508 them. If you have any problems installing them, please contact their 2509 makers. 2510 2511 * AIX: 2512 * Bull's Freeware and Shareware Archive for AIX; 2513 2514 * Hudson Valley Community College Open Source Software for IBM 2515 System p; 2516 2517 * AIX 5L and 6 Open Source Packages. 2518 2519 * DOS--DJGPP. 2520 2521 * Renesas H8/300[HS]--GNU Development Tools for the Renesas 2522 H8/300[HS] Series. 2523 2524 * HP-UX: 2525 * HP-UX Porting Center; 2526 2527 * Binaries for HP-UX 11.00 at Aachen University of Technology. 2528 2529 * SCO OpenServer/Unixware. 2530 2531 * Solaris 2 (SPARC, Intel): 2532 * Sunfreeware 2533 2534 * Blastwave 2535 2536 * OpenCSW 2537 2538 * TGCware 2539 2540 * Microsoft Windows: 2541 * The Cygwin project; 2542 2543 * The MinGW project. 2544 2545 * The Written Word offers binaries for AIX 4.3.3, 5.1 and 5.2, 2546 GNU/Linux (i386), HP-UX 10.20, 11.00, and 11.11, and Solaris/SPARC 2547 2.5.1, 2.6, 7, 8, 9 and 10. 2548 2549 * OpenPKG offers binaries for quite a number of platforms. 2550 2551 * The GFortran Wiki has links to GNU Fortran binaries for several 2552 platforms. 2553 2554 2555 File: gccinstall.info, Node: Specific, Next: Old, Prev: Binaries, Up: Top 2556 2557 9 Host/target specific installation notes for GCC 2558 ************************************************* 2559 2560 Please read this document carefully _before_ installing the GNU 2561 Compiler Collection on your machine. 2562 2563 Note that this list of install notes is _not_ a list of supported 2564 hosts or targets. Not all supported hosts and targets are listed here, 2565 only the ones that require host-specific or target-specific information 2566 have to. 2567 2568 alpha*-*-* 2569 ========== 2570 2571 This section contains general configuration information for all 2572 alpha-based platforms using ELF (in particular, ignore this section for 2573 DEC OSF/1, Digital UNIX and Tru64 UNIX). In addition to reading this 2574 section, please read all other sections that match your target. 2575 2576 We require binutils 2.11.2 or newer. Previous binutils releases had 2577 a number of problems with DWARF 2 debugging information, not the least 2578 of which is incorrect linking of shared libraries. 2579 2580 alpha*-dec-osf5.1 2581 ================= 2582 2583 Systems using processors that implement the DEC Alpha architecture and 2584 are running the DEC/Compaq/HP Unix (DEC OSF/1, Digital UNIX, or 2585 Compaq/HP Tru64 UNIX) operating system, for example the DEC Alpha AXP 2586 systems. 2587 2588 Support for Tru64 UNIX V5.1 has been removed in GCC 4.8. As of GCC 2589 4.6, support for Tru64 UNIX V4.0 and V5.0 has been removed. As of GCC 2590 3.2, versions before `alpha*-dec-osf4' are no longer supported. (These 2591 are the versions which identify themselves as DEC OSF/1.) 2592 2593 amd64-*-solaris2.1[0-9]* 2594 ======================== 2595 2596 This is a synonym for `x86_64-*-solaris2.1[0-9]*'. 2597 2598 arm-*-eabi 2599 ========== 2600 2601 ARM-family processors. Subtargets that use the ELF object format 2602 require GNU binutils 2.13 or newer. Such subtargets include: 2603 `arm-*-netbsdelf', `arm-*-*linux-*' and `arm-*-rtemseabi'. 2604 2605 avr 2606 === 2607 2608 ATMEL AVR-family micro controllers. These are used in embedded 2609 applications. There are no standard Unix configurations. *Note AVR 2610 Options: (gcc)AVR Options, for the list of supported MCU types. 2611 2612 Use `configure --target=avr --enable-languages="c"' to configure GCC. 2613 2614 Further installation notes and other useful information about AVR 2615 tools can also be obtained from: 2616 2617 * http://www.nongnu.org/avr/ 2618 2619 * http://www.amelek.gda.pl/avr/ 2620 2621 We _strongly_ recommend using binutils 2.13 or newer. 2622 2623 The following error: 2624 Error: register required 2625 2626 indicates that you should upgrade to a newer version of the binutils. 2627 2628 Blackfin 2629 ======== 2630 2631 The Blackfin processor, an Analog Devices DSP. *Note Blackfin Options: 2632 (gcc)Blackfin Options, 2633 2634 More information, and a version of binutils with support for this 2635 processor, is available at `http://blackfin.uclinux.org' 2636 2637 CR16 2638 ==== 2639 2640 The CR16 CompactRISC architecture is a 16-bit architecture. This 2641 architecture is used in embedded applications. 2642 2643 *Note CR16 Options: (gcc)CR16 Options, 2644 2645 Use `configure --target=cr16-elf --enable-languages=c,c++' to 2646 configure GCC for building a CR16 elf cross-compiler. 2647 2648 Use `configure --target=cr16-uclinux --enable-languages=c,c++' to 2649 configure GCC for building a CR16 uclinux cross-compiler. 2650 2651 CRIS 2652 ==== 2653 2654 CRIS is the CPU architecture in Axis Communications ETRAX 2655 system-on-a-chip series. These are used in embedded applications. 2656 2657 *Note CRIS Options: (gcc)CRIS Options, for a list of CRIS-specific 2658 options. 2659 2660 There are a few different CRIS targets: 2661 `cris-axis-elf' 2662 Mainly for monolithic embedded systems. Includes a multilib for 2663 the `v10' core used in `ETRAX 100 LX'. 2664 2665 `cris-axis-linux-gnu' 2666 A GNU/Linux port for the CRIS architecture, currently targeting 2667 `ETRAX 100 LX' by default. 2668 2669 For `cris-axis-elf' you need binutils 2.11 or newer. For 2670 `cris-axis-linux-gnu' you need binutils 2.12 or newer. 2671 2672 Pre-packaged tools can be obtained from 2673 `ftp://ftp.axis.com/pub/axis/tools/cris/compiler-kit/'. More 2674 information about this platform is available at 2675 `http://developer.axis.com/'. 2676 2677 DOS 2678 === 2679 2680 Please have a look at the binaries page. 2681 2682 You cannot install GCC by itself on MSDOS; it will not compile under 2683 any MSDOS compiler except itself. You need to get the complete 2684 compilation package DJGPP, which includes binaries as well as sources, 2685 and includes all the necessary compilation tools and libraries. 2686 2687 epiphany-*-elf 2688 ============== 2689 2690 Adapteva Epiphany. This configuration is intended for embedded systems. 2691 2692 *-*-freebsd* 2693 ============ 2694 2695 Support for FreeBSD 1 was discontinued in GCC 3.2. Support for FreeBSD 2696 2 (and any mutant a.out variants of FreeBSD 3) was discontinued in GCC 2697 4.0. 2698 2699 In order to better utilize FreeBSD base system functionality and 2700 match the configuration of the system compiler, GCC 4.5 and above as 2701 well as GCC 4.4 past 2010-06-20 leverage SSP support in libc (which is 2702 present on FreeBSD 7 or later) and the use of `__cxa_atexit' by default 2703 (on FreeBSD 6 or later). The use of `dl_iterate_phdr' inside 2704 `libgcc_s.so.1' and boehm-gc (on FreeBSD 7 or later) is enabled by GCC 2705 4.5 and above. 2706 2707 We support FreeBSD using the ELF file format with DWARF 2 debugging 2708 for all CPU architectures. You may use `-gstabs' instead of `-g', if 2709 you really want the old debugging format. There are no known issues 2710 with mixing object files and libraries with different debugging 2711 formats. Otherwise, this release of GCC should now match more of the 2712 configuration used in the stock FreeBSD configuration of GCC. In 2713 particular, `--enable-threads' is now configured by default. However, 2714 as a general user, do not attempt to replace the system compiler with 2715 this release. Known to bootstrap and check with good results on 2716 FreeBSD 7.2-STABLE. In the past, known to bootstrap and check with 2717 good results on FreeBSD 3.0, 3.4, 4.0, 4.2, 4.3, 4.4, 4.5, 4.8, 4.9 and 2718 5-CURRENT. 2719 2720 The version of binutils installed in `/usr/bin' probably works with 2721 this release of GCC. Bootstrapping against the latest GNU binutils 2722 and/or the version found in `/usr/ports/devel/binutils' has been known 2723 to enable additional features and improve overall testsuite results. 2724 However, it is currently known that boehm-gc (which itself is required 2725 for java) may not configure properly on FreeBSD prior to the FreeBSD 2726 7.0 release with GNU binutils after 2.16.1. 2727 2728 h8300-hms 2729 ========= 2730 2731 Renesas H8/300 series of processors. 2732 2733 Please have a look at the binaries page. 2734 2735 The calling convention and structure layout has changed in release 2736 2.6. All code must be recompiled. The calling convention now passes 2737 the first three arguments in function calls in registers. Structures 2738 are no longer a multiple of 2 bytes. 2739 2740 hppa*-hp-hpux* 2741 ============== 2742 2743 Support for HP-UX version 9 and older was discontinued in GCC 3.4. 2744 2745 We require using gas/binutils on all hppa platforms. Version 2.19 or 2746 later is recommended. 2747 2748 It may be helpful to configure GCC with the `--with-gnu-as' and 2749 `--with-as=...' options to ensure that GCC can find GAS. 2750 2751 The HP assembler should not be used with GCC. It is rarely tested 2752 and may not work. It shouldn't be used with any languages other than C 2753 due to its many limitations. 2754 2755 Specifically, `-g' does not work (HP-UX uses a peculiar debugging 2756 format which GCC does not know about). It also inserts timestamps into 2757 each object file it creates, causing the 3-stage comparison test to 2758 fail during a bootstrap. You should be able to continue by saying 2759 `make all-host all-target' after getting the failure from `make'. 2760 2761 Various GCC features are not supported. For example, it does not 2762 support weak symbols or alias definitions. As a result, explicit 2763 template instantiations are required when using C++. This makes it 2764 difficult if not impossible to build many C++ applications. 2765 2766 There are two default scheduling models for instructions. These are 2767 PROCESSOR_7100LC and PROCESSOR_8000. They are selected from the pa-risc 2768 architecture specified for the target machine when configuring. 2769 PROCESSOR_8000 is the default. PROCESSOR_7100LC is selected when the 2770 target is a `hppa1*' machine. 2771 2772 The PROCESSOR_8000 model is not well suited to older processors. 2773 Thus, it is important to completely specify the machine architecture 2774 when configuring if you want a model other than PROCESSOR_8000. The 2775 macro TARGET_SCHED_DEFAULT can be defined in BOOT_CFLAGS if a different 2776 default scheduling model is desired. 2777 2778 As of GCC 4.0, GCC uses the UNIX 95 namespace for HP-UX 10.10 2779 through 11.00, and the UNIX 98 namespace for HP-UX 11.11 and later. 2780 This namespace change might cause problems when bootstrapping with an 2781 earlier version of GCC or the HP compiler as essentially the same 2782 namespace is required for an entire build. This problem can be avoided 2783 in a number of ways. With HP cc, `UNIX_STD' can be set to `95' or 2784 `98'. Another way is to add an appropriate set of predefines to `CC'. 2785 The description for the `munix=' option contains a list of the 2786 predefines used with each standard. 2787 2788 More specific information to `hppa*-hp-hpux*' targets follows. 2789 2790 hppa*-hp-hpux10 2791 =============== 2792 2793 For hpux10.20, we _highly_ recommend you pick up the latest sed patch 2794 `PHCO_19798' from HP. 2795 2796 The C++ ABI has changed incompatibly in GCC 4.0. COMDAT subspaces 2797 are used for one-only code and data. This resolves many of the previous 2798 problems in using C++ on this target. However, the ABI is not 2799 compatible with the one implemented under HP-UX 11 using secondary 2800 definitions. 2801 2802 hppa*-hp-hpux11 2803 =============== 2804 2805 GCC 3.0 and up support HP-UX 11. GCC 2.95.x is not supported and cannot 2806 be used to compile GCC 3.0 and up. 2807 2808 The libffi and libjava libraries haven't been ported to 64-bit HP-UX 2809 and don't build. 2810 2811 Refer to binaries for information about obtaining precompiled GCC 2812 binaries for HP-UX. Precompiled binaries must be obtained to build the 2813 Ada language as it can't be bootstrapped using C. Ada is only 2814 available for the 32-bit PA-RISC runtime. 2815 2816 Starting with GCC 3.4 an ISO C compiler is required to bootstrap. 2817 The bundled compiler supports only traditional C; you will need either 2818 HP's unbundled compiler, or a binary distribution of GCC. 2819 2820 It is possible to build GCC 3.3 starting with the bundled HP 2821 compiler, but the process requires several steps. GCC 3.3 can then be 2822 used to build later versions. The fastjar program contains ISO C code 2823 and can't be built with the HP bundled compiler. This problem can be 2824 avoided by not building the Java language. For example, use the 2825 `--enable-languages="c,c++,f77,objc"' option in your configure command. 2826 2827 There are several possible approaches to building the distribution. 2828 Binutils can be built first using the HP tools. Then, the GCC 2829 distribution can be built. The second approach is to build GCC first 2830 using the HP tools, then build binutils, then rebuild GCC. There have 2831 been problems with various binary distributions, so it is best not to 2832 start from a binary distribution. 2833 2834 On 64-bit capable systems, there are two distinct targets. Different 2835 installation prefixes must be used if both are to be installed on the 2836 same system. The `hppa[1-2]*-hp-hpux11*' target generates code for the 2837 32-bit PA-RISC runtime architecture and uses the HP linker. The 2838 `hppa64-hp-hpux11*' target generates 64-bit code for the PA-RISC 2.0 2839 architecture. 2840 2841 The script config.guess now selects the target type based on the 2842 compiler detected during configuration. You must define `PATH' or `CC' 2843 so that configure finds an appropriate compiler for the initial 2844 bootstrap. When `CC' is used, the definition should contain the 2845 options that are needed whenever `CC' is used. 2846 2847 Specifically, options that determine the runtime architecture must be 2848 in `CC' to correctly select the target for the build. It is also 2849 convenient to place many other compiler options in `CC'. For example, 2850 `CC="cc -Ac +DA2.0W -Wp,-H16376 -D_CLASSIC_TYPES -D_HPUX_SOURCE"' can 2851 be used to bootstrap the GCC 3.3 branch with the HP compiler in 64-bit 2852 K&R/bundled mode. The `+DA2.0W' option will result in the automatic 2853 selection of the `hppa64-hp-hpux11*' target. The macro definition 2854 table of cpp needs to be increased for a successful build with the HP 2855 compiler. _CLASSIC_TYPES and _HPUX_SOURCE need to be defined when 2856 building with the bundled compiler, or when using the `-Ac' option. 2857 These defines aren't necessary with `-Ae'. 2858 2859 It is best to explicitly configure the `hppa64-hp-hpux11*' target 2860 with the `--with-ld=...' option. This overrides the standard search 2861 for ld. The two linkers supported on this target require different 2862 commands. The default linker is determined during configuration. As a 2863 result, it's not possible to switch linkers in the middle of a GCC 2864 build. This has been reported to sometimes occur in unified builds of 2865 binutils and GCC. 2866 2867 A recent linker patch must be installed for the correct operation of 2868 GCC 3.3 and later. `PHSS_26559' and `PHSS_24304' are the oldest linker 2869 patches that are known to work. They are for HP-UX 11.00 and 11.11, 2870 respectively. `PHSS_24303', the companion to `PHSS_24304', might be 2871 usable but it hasn't been tested. These patches have been superseded. 2872 Consult the HP patch database to obtain the currently recommended 2873 linker patch for your system. 2874 2875 The patches are necessary for the support of weak symbols on the 2876 32-bit port, and for the running of initializers and finalizers. Weak 2877 symbols are implemented using SOM secondary definition symbols. Prior 2878 to HP-UX 11, there are bugs in the linker support for secondary symbols. 2879 The patches correct a problem of linker core dumps creating shared 2880 libraries containing secondary symbols, as well as various other 2881 linking issues involving secondary symbols. 2882 2883 GCC 3.3 uses the ELF DT_INIT_ARRAY and DT_FINI_ARRAY capabilities to 2884 run initializers and finalizers on the 64-bit port. The 32-bit port 2885 uses the linker `+init' and `+fini' options for the same purpose. The 2886 patches correct various problems with the +init/+fini options, 2887 including program core dumps. Binutils 2.14 corrects a problem on the 2888 64-bit port resulting from HP's non-standard use of the .init and .fini 2889 sections for array initializers and finalizers. 2890 2891 Although the HP and GNU linkers are both supported for the 2892 `hppa64-hp-hpux11*' target, it is strongly recommended that the HP 2893 linker be used for link editing on this target. 2894 2895 At this time, the GNU linker does not support the creation of long 2896 branch stubs. As a result, it can't successfully link binaries 2897 containing branch offsets larger than 8 megabytes. In addition, there 2898 are problems linking shared libraries, linking executables with 2899 `-static', and with dwarf2 unwind and exception support. It also 2900 doesn't provide stubs for internal calls to global functions in shared 2901 libraries, so these calls can't be overloaded. 2902 2903 The HP dynamic loader does not support GNU symbol versioning, so 2904 symbol versioning is not supported. It may be necessary to disable 2905 symbol versioning with `--disable-symvers' when using GNU ld. 2906 2907 POSIX threads are the default. The optional DCE thread library is 2908 not supported, so `--enable-threads=dce' does not work. 2909 2910 *-*-linux-gnu 2911 ============= 2912 2913 Versions of libstdc++-v3 starting with 3.2.1 require bug fixes present 2914 in glibc 2.2.5 and later. More information is available in the 2915 libstdc++-v3 documentation. 2916 2917 i?86-*-linux* 2918 ============= 2919 2920 As of GCC 3.3, binutils 2.13.1 or later is required for this platform. 2921 See bug 10877 for more information. 2922 2923 If you receive Signal 11 errors when building on GNU/Linux, then it 2924 is possible you have a hardware problem. Further information on this 2925 can be found on www.bitwizard.nl. 2926 2927 i?86-*-solaris2.9 2928 ================= 2929 2930 The Sun assembler in Solaris 9 has several bugs and limitations. While 2931 GCC works around them, several features are missing, so it is 2932 recommended to use the GNU assembler instead. There is no bundled 2933 version, but the current version, from GNU binutils 2.22, is known to 2934 work. 2935 2936 Solaris 2/x86 doesn't support the execution of SSE/SSE2 instructions 2937 before Solaris 9 4/04, even if the CPU supports them. Programs will 2938 receive `SIGILL' if they try. The fix is available both in Solaris 9 2939 Update 6 and kernel patch 112234-12 or newer. To avoid this problem, 2940 `-march' defaults to `pentiumpro' on Solaris 9. If you have the patch 2941 installed, you can configure GCC with an appropriate `--with-arch' 2942 option, but need GNU `as' for SSE2 support. 2943 2944 i?86-*-solaris2.10 2945 ================== 2946 2947 Use this for Solaris 10 or later on x86 and x86-64 systems. Starting 2948 with GCC 4.7, there is also a 64-bit `amd64-*-solaris2.1[0-9]*' or 2949 `x86_64-*-solaris2.1[0-9]*' configuration that corresponds to 2950 `sparcv9-sun-solaris2*'. 2951 2952 It is recommended that you configure GCC to use the GNU assembler, in 2953 `/usr/sfw/bin/gas'. The versions included in Solaris 10, from GNU 2954 binutils 2.15, and Solaris 11, from GNU binutils 2.19, work fine, 2955 although the current version, from GNU binutils 2.22, is known to work, 2956 too. Recent versions of the Sun assembler in `/usr/ccs/bin/as' work 2957 almost as well, though. 2958 2959 For linking, the Sun linker, is preferred. If you want to use the 2960 GNU linker instead, which is available in `/usr/sfw/bin/gld', note that 2961 due to a packaging bug the version in Solaris 10, from GNU binutils 2962 2.15, cannot be used, while the version in Solaris 11, from GNU binutils 2963 2.19, works, as does the latest version, from GNU binutils 2.22. 2964 2965 To use GNU `as', configure with the options `--with-gnu-as 2966 --with-as=/usr/sfw/bin/gas'. It may be necessary to configure with 2967 `--without-gnu-ld --with-ld=/usr/ccs/bin/ld' to guarantee use of Sun 2968 `ld'. 2969 2970 ia64-*-linux 2971 ============ 2972 2973 IA-64 processor (also known as IPF, or Itanium Processor Family) 2974 running GNU/Linux. 2975 2976 If you are using the installed system libunwind library with 2977 `--with-system-libunwind', then you must use libunwind 0.98 or later. 2978 2979 None of the following versions of GCC has an ABI that is compatible 2980 with any of the other versions in this list, with the exception that 2981 Red Hat 2.96 and Trillian 000171 are compatible with each other: 3.1, 2982 3.0.2, 3.0.1, 3.0, Red Hat 2.96, and Trillian 000717. This primarily 2983 affects C++ programs and programs that create shared libraries. GCC 2984 3.1 or later is recommended for compiling linux, the kernel. As of 2985 version 3.1 GCC is believed to be fully ABI compliant, and hence no 2986 more major ABI changes are expected. 2987 2988 ia64-*-hpux* 2989 ============ 2990 2991 Building GCC on this target requires the GNU Assembler. The bundled HP 2992 assembler will not work. To prevent GCC from using the wrong assembler, 2993 the option `--with-gnu-as' may be necessary. 2994 2995 The GCC libunwind library has not been ported to HPUX. This means 2996 that for GCC versions 3.2.3 and earlier, `--enable-libunwind-exceptions' 2997 is required to build GCC. For GCC 3.3 and later, this is the default. 2998 For gcc 3.4.3 and later, `--enable-libunwind-exceptions' is removed and 2999 the system libunwind library will always be used. 3000 3001 *-ibm-aix* 3002 ========== 3003 3004 Support for AIX version 3 and older was discontinued in GCC 3.4. 3005 Support for AIX version 4.2 and older was discontinued in GCC 4.5. 3006 3007 "out of memory" bootstrap failures may indicate a problem with 3008 process resource limits (ulimit). Hard limits are configured in the 3009 `/etc/security/limits' system configuration file. 3010 3011 GCC can bootstrap with recent versions of IBM XLC, but bootstrapping 3012 with an earlier release of GCC is recommended. Bootstrapping with XLC 3013 requires a larger data segment, which can be enabled through the 3014 LDR_CNTRL environment variable, e.g., 3015 3016 % LDR_CNTRL=MAXDATA=0x50000000 3017 % export LDR_CNTRL 3018 3019 One can start with a pre-compiled version of GCC to build from 3020 sources. One may delete GCC's "fixed" header files when starting with 3021 a version of GCC built for an earlier release of AIX. 3022 3023 To speed up the configuration phases of bootstrapping and installing 3024 GCC, one may use GNU Bash instead of AIX `/bin/sh', e.g., 3025 3026 % CONFIG_SHELL=/opt/freeware/bin/bash 3027 % export CONFIG_SHELL 3028 3029 and then proceed as described in the build instructions, where we 3030 strongly recommend specifying an absolute path to invoke 3031 SRCDIR/configure. 3032 3033 Because GCC on AIX is built as a 32-bit executable by default, 3034 (although it can generate 64-bit programs) the GMP and MPFR libraries 3035 required by gfortran must be 32-bit libraries. Building GMP and MPFR 3036 as static archive libraries works better than shared libraries. 3037 3038 Errors involving `alloca' when building GCC generally are due to an 3039 incorrect definition of `CC' in the Makefile or mixing files compiled 3040 with the native C compiler and GCC. During the stage1 phase of the 3041 build, the native AIX compiler *must* be invoked as `cc' (not `xlc'). 3042 Once `configure' has been informed of `xlc', one needs to use `make 3043 distclean' to remove the configure cache files and ensure that `CC' 3044 environment variable does not provide a definition that will confuse 3045 `configure'. If this error occurs during stage2 or later, then the 3046 problem most likely is the version of Make (see above). 3047 3048 The native `as' and `ld' are recommended for bootstrapping on AIX. 3049 The GNU Assembler, GNU Linker, and GNU Binutils version 2.20 is the 3050 minimum level that supports bootstrap on AIX 5. The GNU Assembler has 3051 not been updated to support AIX 6 or AIX 7. The native AIX tools do 3052 interoperate with GCC. 3053 3054 AIX 5.3 TL10, AIX 6.1 TL05 and AIX 7.1 TL00 introduced an AIX 3055 assembler change that sometimes produces corrupt assembly files causing 3056 AIX linker errors. The bug breaks GCC bootstrap on AIX and can cause 3057 compilation failures with existing GCC installations. An AIX iFix for 3058 AIX 5.3 is available (APAR IZ98385 for AIX 5.3 TL10, APAR IZ98477 for 3059 AIX 5.3 TL11 and IZ98134 for AIX 5.3 TL12). AIX 5.3 TL11 SP8, AIX 5.3 3060 TL12 SP5, AIX 6.1 TL04 SP11, AIX 6.1 TL05 SP7, AIX 6.1 TL06 SP6, AIX 3061 6.1 TL07 and AIX 7.1 TL01 should include the fix. 3062 3063 Building `libstdc++.a' requires a fix for an AIX Assembler bug APAR 3064 IY26685 (AIX 4.3) or APAR IY25528 (AIX 5.1). It also requires a fix 3065 for another AIX Assembler bug and a co-dependent AIX Archiver fix 3066 referenced as APAR IY53606 (AIX 5.2) or as APAR IY54774 (AIX 5.1) 3067 3068 `libstdc++' in GCC 3.4 increments the major version number of the 3069 shared object and GCC installation places the `libstdc++.a' shared 3070 library in a common location which will overwrite the and GCC 3.3 3071 version of the shared library. Applications either need to be 3072 re-linked against the new shared library or the GCC 3.1 and GCC 3.3 3073 versions of the `libstdc++' shared object needs to be available to the 3074 AIX runtime loader. The GCC 3.1 `libstdc++.so.4', if present, and GCC 3075 3.3 `libstdc++.so.5' shared objects can be installed for runtime 3076 dynamic loading using the following steps to set the `F_LOADONLY' flag 3077 in the shared object for _each_ multilib `libstdc++.a' installed: 3078 3079 Extract the shared objects from the currently installed 3080 `libstdc++.a' archive: 3081 % ar -x libstdc++.a libstdc++.so.4 libstdc++.so.5 3082 3083 Enable the `F_LOADONLY' flag so that the shared object will be 3084 available for runtime dynamic loading, but not linking: 3085 % strip -e libstdc++.so.4 libstdc++.so.5 3086 3087 Archive the runtime-only shared object in the GCC 3.4 `libstdc++.a' 3088 archive: 3089 % ar -q libstdc++.a libstdc++.so.4 libstdc++.so.5 3090 3091 Linking executables and shared libraries may produce warnings of 3092 duplicate symbols. The assembly files generated by GCC for AIX always 3093 have included multiple symbol definitions for certain global variable 3094 and function declarations in the original program. The warnings should 3095 not prevent the linker from producing a correct library or runnable 3096 executable. 3097 3098 AIX 4.3 utilizes a "large format" archive to support both 32-bit and 3099 64-bit object modules. The routines provided in AIX 4.3.0 and AIX 4.3.1 3100 to parse archive libraries did not handle the new format correctly. 3101 These routines are used by GCC and result in error messages during 3102 linking such as "not a COFF file". The version of the routines shipped 3103 with AIX 4.3.1 should work for a 32-bit environment. The `-g' option 3104 of the archive command may be used to create archives of 32-bit objects 3105 using the original "small format". A correct version of the routines 3106 is shipped with AIX 4.3.2 and above. 3107 3108 Some versions of the AIX binder (linker) can fail with a relocation 3109 overflow severe error when the `-bbigtoc' option is used to link 3110 GCC-produced object files into an executable that overflows the TOC. A 3111 fix for APAR IX75823 (OVERFLOW DURING LINK WHEN USING GCC AND -BBIGTOC) 3112 is available from IBM Customer Support and from its 3113 techsupport.services.ibm.com website as PTF U455193. 3114 3115 The AIX 4.3.2.1 linker (bos.rte.bind_cmds Level 4.3.2.1) will dump 3116 core with a segmentation fault when invoked by any version of GCC. A 3117 fix for APAR IX87327 is available from IBM Customer Support and from its 3118 techsupport.services.ibm.com website as PTF U461879. This fix is 3119 incorporated in AIX 4.3.3 and above. 3120 3121 The initial assembler shipped with AIX 4.3.0 generates incorrect 3122 object files. A fix for APAR IX74254 (64BIT DISASSEMBLED OUTPUT FROM 3123 COMPILER FAILS TO ASSEMBLE/BIND) is available from IBM Customer Support 3124 and from its techsupport.services.ibm.com website as PTF U453956. This 3125 fix is incorporated in AIX 4.3.1 and above. 3126 3127 AIX provides National Language Support (NLS). Compilers and 3128 assemblers use NLS to support locale-specific representations of 3129 various data formats including floating-point numbers (e.g., `.' vs 3130 `,' for separating decimal fractions). There have been problems 3131 reported where GCC does not produce the same floating-point formats 3132 that the assembler expects. If one encounters this problem, set the 3133 `LANG' environment variable to `C' or `En_US'. 3134 3135 A default can be specified with the `-mcpu=CPU_TYPE' switch and 3136 using the configure option `--with-cpu-CPU_TYPE'. 3137 3138 iq2000-*-elf 3139 ============ 3140 3141 Vitesse IQ2000 processors. These are used in embedded applications. 3142 There are no standard Unix configurations. 3143 3144 lm32-*-elf 3145 ========== 3146 3147 Lattice Mico32 processor. This configuration is intended for embedded 3148 systems. 3149 3150 lm32-*-uclinux 3151 ============== 3152 3153 Lattice Mico32 processor. This configuration is intended for embedded 3154 systems running uClinux. 3155 3156 m32c-*-elf 3157 ========== 3158 3159 Renesas M32C processor. This configuration is intended for embedded 3160 systems. 3161 3162 m32r-*-elf 3163 ========== 3164 3165 Renesas M32R processor. This configuration is intended for embedded 3166 systems. 3167 3168 m68k-*-* 3169 ======== 3170 3171 By default, `m68k-*-elf*', `m68k-*-rtems', `m68k-*-uclinux' and 3172 `m68k-*-linux' build libraries for both M680x0 and ColdFire processors. 3173 If you only need the M680x0 libraries, you can omit the ColdFire ones 3174 by passing `--with-arch=m68k' to `configure'. Alternatively, you can 3175 omit the M680x0 libraries by passing `--with-arch=cf' to `configure'. 3176 These targets default to 5206 or 5475 code as appropriate for the 3177 target system when configured with `--with-arch=cf' and 68020 code 3178 otherwise. 3179 3180 The `m68k-*-netbsd' and `m68k-*-openbsd' targets also support the 3181 `--with-arch' option. They will generate ColdFire CFV4e code when 3182 configured with `--with-arch=cf' and 68020 code otherwise. 3183 3184 You can override the default processors listed above by configuring 3185 with `--with-cpu=TARGET'. This TARGET can either be a `-mcpu' argument 3186 or one of the following values: `m68000', `m68010', `m68020', `m68030', 3187 `m68040', `m68060', `m68020-40' and `m68020-60'. 3188 3189 GCC requires at least binutils version 2.17 on these targets. 3190 3191 m68k-*-uclinux 3192 ============== 3193 3194 GCC 4.3 changed the uClinux configuration so that it uses the 3195 `m68k-linux-gnu' ABI rather than the `m68k-elf' ABI. It also added 3196 improved support for C++ and flat shared libraries, both of which were 3197 ABI changes. 3198 3199 mep-*-elf 3200 ========= 3201 3202 Toshiba Media embedded Processor. This configuration is intended for 3203 embedded systems. 3204 3205 microblaze-*-elf 3206 ================ 3207 3208 Xilinx MicroBlaze processor. This configuration is intended for 3209 embedded systems. 3210 3211 mips-*-* 3212 ======== 3213 3214 If on a MIPS system you get an error message saying "does not have gp 3215 sections for all it's [sic] sectons [sic]", don't worry about it. This 3216 happens whenever you use GAS with the MIPS linker, but there is not 3217 really anything wrong, and it is okay to use the output file. You can 3218 stop such warnings by installing the GNU linker. 3219 3220 It would be nice to extend GAS to produce the gp tables, but they are 3221 optional, and there should not be a warning about their absence. 3222 3223 The libstdc++ atomic locking routines for MIPS targets requires MIPS 3224 II and later. A patch went in just after the GCC 3.3 release to make 3225 `mips*-*-*' use the generic implementation instead. You can also 3226 configure for `mipsel-elf' as a workaround. The `mips*-*-linux*' 3227 target continues to use the MIPS II routines. More work on this is 3228 expected in future releases. 3229 3230 The built-in `__sync_*' functions are available on MIPS II and later 3231 systems and others that support the `ll', `sc' and `sync' instructions. 3232 This can be overridden by passing `--with-llsc' or `--without-llsc' 3233 when configuring GCC. Since the Linux kernel emulates these 3234 instructions if they are missing, the default for `mips*-*-linux*' 3235 targets is `--with-llsc'. The `--with-llsc' and `--without-llsc' 3236 configure options may be overridden at compile time by passing the 3237 `-mllsc' or `-mno-llsc' options to the compiler. 3238 3239 MIPS systems check for division by zero (unless 3240 `-mno-check-zero-division' is passed to the compiler) by generating 3241 either a conditional trap or a break instruction. Using trap results 3242 in smaller code, but is only supported on MIPS II and later. Also, 3243 some versions of the Linux kernel have a bug that prevents trap from 3244 generating the proper signal (`SIGFPE'). To enable the use of break, 3245 use the `--with-divide=breaks' `configure' option when configuring GCC. 3246 The default is to use traps on systems that support them. 3247 3248 The assembler from GNU binutils 2.17 and earlier has a bug in the way 3249 it sorts relocations for REL targets (o32, o64, EABI). This can cause 3250 bad code to be generated for simple C++ programs. Also the linker from 3251 GNU binutils versions prior to 2.17 has a bug which causes the runtime 3252 linker stubs in very large programs, like `libgcj.so', to be 3253 incorrectly generated. GNU Binutils 2.18 and later (and snapshots made 3254 after Nov. 9, 2006) should be free from both of these problems. 3255 3256 mips-sgi-irix5 3257 ============== 3258 3259 Support for IRIX 5 has been removed in GCC 4.6. 3260 3261 mips-sgi-irix6 3262 ============== 3263 3264 Support for IRIX 6.5 has been removed in GCC 4.8. Support for IRIX 6 3265 releases before 6.5 has been removed in GCC 4.6, as well as support for 3266 the O32 ABI. 3267 3268 moxie-*-elf 3269 =========== 3270 3271 The moxie processor. 3272 3273 powerpc-*-* 3274 =========== 3275 3276 You can specify a default version for the `-mcpu=CPU_TYPE' switch by 3277 using the configure option `--with-cpu-CPU_TYPE'. 3278 3279 You will need binutils 2.15 or newer for a working GCC. 3280 3281 powerpc-*-darwin* 3282 ================= 3283 3284 PowerPC running Darwin (Mac OS X kernel). 3285 3286 Pre-installed versions of Mac OS X may not include any developer 3287 tools, meaning that you will not be able to build GCC from source. Tool 3288 binaries are available at `http://opensource.apple.com/'. 3289 3290 This version of GCC requires at least cctools-590.36. The 3291 cctools-590.36 package referenced from 3292 `http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/2006-03/msg00507.html' will not work on 3293 systems older than 10.3.9 (aka darwin7.9.0). 3294 3295 powerpc-*-elf 3296 ============= 3297 3298 PowerPC system in big endian mode, running System V.4. 3299 3300 powerpc*-*-linux-gnu* 3301 ===================== 3302 3303 PowerPC system in big endian mode running Linux. 3304 3305 powerpc-*-netbsd* 3306 ================= 3307 3308 PowerPC system in big endian mode running NetBSD. 3309 3310 powerpc-*-eabisim 3311 ================= 3312 3313 Embedded PowerPC system in big endian mode for use in running under the 3314 PSIM simulator. 3315 3316 powerpc-*-eabi 3317 ============== 3318 3319 Embedded PowerPC system in big endian mode. 3320 3321 powerpcle-*-elf 3322 =============== 3323 3324 PowerPC system in little endian mode, running System V.4. 3325 3326 powerpcle-*-eabisim 3327 =================== 3328 3329 Embedded PowerPC system in little endian mode for use in running under 3330 the PSIM simulator. 3331 3332 powerpcle-*-eabi 3333 ================ 3334 3335 Embedded PowerPC system in little endian mode. 3336 3337 rl78-*-elf 3338 ========== 3339 3340 The Renesas RL78 processor. This configuration is intended for 3341 embedded systems. 3342 3343 rx-*-elf 3344 ======== 3345 3346 The Renesas RX processor. See 3347 `http://eu.renesas.com/fmwk.jsp?cnt=rx600_series_landing.jsp&fp=/products/mpumcu/rx_family/rx600_series' 3348 for more information about this processor. 3349 3350 s390-*-linux* 3351 ============= 3352 3353 S/390 system running GNU/Linux for S/390. 3354 3355 s390x-*-linux* 3356 ============== 3357 3358 zSeries system (64-bit) running GNU/Linux for zSeries. 3359 3360 s390x-ibm-tpf* 3361 ============== 3362 3363 zSeries system (64-bit) running TPF. This platform is supported as 3364 cross-compilation target only. 3365 3366 *-*-solaris2* 3367 ============= 3368 3369 Support for Solaris 8 has removed in GCC 4.8. Support for Solaris 7 has 3370 been removed in GCC 4.6. 3371 3372 Sun does not ship a C compiler with Solaris 2 before Solaris 10, 3373 though you can download the Sun Studio compilers for free. In Solaris 3374 10 and 11, GCC 3.4.3 is available as `/usr/sfw/bin/gcc'. Solaris 11 3375 also provides GCC 4.5.2 as `/usr/gcc/4.5/bin/gcc'. Alternatively, you 3376 can install a pre-built GCC to bootstrap and install GCC. See the 3377 binaries page for details. 3378 3379 The Solaris 2 `/bin/sh' will often fail to configure `libstdc++-v3', 3380 `boehm-gc' or `libjava'. We therefore recommend using the following 3381 initial sequence of commands 3382 3383 % CONFIG_SHELL=/bin/ksh 3384 % export CONFIG_SHELL 3385 3386 and proceed as described in the configure instructions. In addition we 3387 strongly recommend specifying an absolute path to invoke 3388 `SRCDIR/configure'. 3389 3390 Solaris 2 comes with a number of optional OS packages. Some of these 3391 are needed to use GCC fully, namely `SUNWarc', `SUNWbtool', `SUNWesu', 3392 `SUNWhea', `SUNWlibm', `SUNWsprot', and `SUNWtoo'. If you did not 3393 install all optional packages when installing Solaris 2, you will need 3394 to verify that the packages that GCC needs are installed. 3395 3396 To check whether an optional package is installed, use the `pkginfo' 3397 command. To add an optional package, use the `pkgadd' command. For 3398 further details, see the Solaris 2 documentation. 3399 3400 Trying to use the linker and other tools in `/usr/ucb' to install 3401 GCC has been observed to cause trouble. For example, the linker may 3402 hang indefinitely. The fix is to remove `/usr/ucb' from your `PATH'. 3403 3404 The build process works more smoothly with the legacy Sun tools so, 3405 if you have `/usr/xpg4/bin' in your `PATH', we recommend that you place 3406 `/usr/bin' before `/usr/xpg4/bin' for the duration of the build. 3407 3408 We recommend the use of the Sun assembler or the GNU assembler, in 3409 conjunction with the Sun linker. The GNU `as' versions included in 3410 Solaris 10, from GNU binutils 2.15, and Solaris 11, from GNU binutils 3411 2.19, are known to work. They can be found in `/usr/sfw/bin/gas'. 3412 Current versions of GNU binutils (2.22) are known to work as well. 3413 Note that your mileage may vary if you use a combination of the GNU 3414 tools and the Sun tools: while the combination GNU `as' + Sun `ld' 3415 should reasonably work, the reverse combination Sun `as' + GNU `ld' may 3416 fail to build or cause memory corruption at runtime in some cases for 3417 C++ programs. GNU `ld' usually works as well, although the version 3418 included in Solaris 10 cannot be used due to several bugs. Again, the 3419 current version (2.22) is known to work, but generally lacks platform 3420 specific features, so better stay with Sun `ld'. To use the LTO linker 3421 plugin (`-fuse-linker-plugin') with GNU `ld', GNU binutils _must_ be 3422 configured with `--enable-largefile'. 3423 3424 To enable symbol versioning in `libstdc++' with Sun `ld', you need 3425 to have any version of GNU `c++filt', which is part of GNU binutils. 3426 `libstdc++' symbol versioning will be disabled if no appropriate 3427 version is found. Sun `c++filt' from the Sun Studio compilers does 3428 _not_ work. 3429 3430 Sun bug 4296832 turns up when compiling X11 headers with GCC 2.95 or 3431 newer: `g++' will complain that types are missing. These headers 3432 assume that omitting the type means `int'; this assumption worked for 3433 C90 but is wrong for C++, and is now wrong for C99 also. 3434 3435 Sun bug 4927647 sometimes causes random spurious testsuite failures 3436 related to missing diagnostic output. This bug doesn't affect GCC 3437 itself, rather it is a kernel bug triggered by the `expect' program 3438 which is used only by the GCC testsuite driver. When the bug causes 3439 the `expect' program to miss anticipated output, extra testsuite 3440 failures appear. 3441 3442 There are patches for Solaris 9 (117171-11 or newer for SPARC, 3443 117172-11 or newer for Intel) that address this problem. 3444 3445 Thread-local storage (TLS) is supported in Solaris 9, but requires 3446 some patches. The `libthread' patches provide the `__tls_get_addr' 3447 (SPARC, 64-bit x86) resp. `___tls_get_addr' (32-bit x86) functions. On 3448 Solaris 9, the necessary support on SPARC is present since FCS, while 3449 114432-05 or newer is required on Intel. Additionally, on 3450 Solaris 9/x86, patch 113986-02 or newer is required for the Sun `ld' 3451 and runtime linker (`ld.so.1') support, while Solaris 9/SPARC works 3452 since FCS. The linker patches must be installed even if GNU `ld' is 3453 used. Sun `as' in Solaris 9 doesn't support the necessary relocations, 3454 so GNU `as' must be used. The `configure' script checks for those 3455 prerequisites and automatically enables TLS support if they are met. 3456 Although those minimal patch versions should work, it is recommended to 3457 use the latest patch versions which include additional bug fixes. 3458 3459 sparc*-*-* 3460 ========== 3461 3462 This section contains general configuration information for all 3463 SPARC-based platforms. In addition to reading this section, please 3464 read all other sections that match your target. 3465 3466 Newer versions of the GNU Multiple Precision Library (GMP), the MPFR 3467 library and the MPC library are known to be miscompiled by earlier 3468 versions of GCC on these platforms. We therefore recommend the use of 3469 the exact versions of these libraries listed as minimal versions in the 3470 prerequisites. 3471 3472 sparc-sun-solaris2* 3473 =================== 3474 3475 When GCC is configured to use GNU binutils 2.14 or later, the binaries 3476 produced are smaller than the ones produced using Sun's native tools; 3477 this difference is quite significant for binaries containing debugging 3478 information. 3479 3480 Starting with Solaris 7, the operating system is capable of executing 3481 64-bit SPARC V9 binaries. GCC 3.1 and later properly supports this; 3482 the `-m64' option enables 64-bit code generation. However, if all you 3483 want is code tuned for the UltraSPARC CPU, you should try the 3484 `-mtune=ultrasparc' option instead, which produces code that, unlike 3485 full 64-bit code, can still run on non-UltraSPARC machines. 3486 3487 When configuring on a Solaris 7 or later system that is running a 3488 kernel that supports only 32-bit binaries, one must configure with 3489 `--disable-multilib', since we will not be able to build the 64-bit 3490 target libraries. 3491 3492 GCC 3.3 and GCC 3.4 trigger code generation bugs in earlier versions 3493 of the GNU compiler (especially GCC 3.0.x versions), which lead to the 3494 miscompilation of the stage1 compiler and the subsequent failure of the 3495 bootstrap process. A workaround is to use GCC 3.2.3 as an intermediary 3496 stage, i.e. to bootstrap that compiler with the base compiler and then 3497 use it to bootstrap the final compiler. 3498 3499 GCC 3.4 triggers a code generation bug in versions 5.4 (Sun ONE 3500 Studio 7) and 5.5 (Sun ONE Studio 8) of the Sun compiler, which causes 3501 a bootstrap failure in form of a miscompilation of the stage1 compiler 3502 by the Sun compiler. This is Sun bug 4974440. This is fixed with 3503 patch 112760-07. 3504 3505 GCC 3.4 changed the default debugging format from Stabs to DWARF-2 3506 for 32-bit code on Solaris 7 and later. If you use the Sun assembler, 3507 this change apparently runs afoul of Sun bug 4910101 (which is 3508 referenced as an x86-only problem by Sun, probably because they do not 3509 use DWARF-2). A symptom of the problem is that you cannot compile C++ 3510 programs like `groff' 1.19.1 without getting messages similar to the 3511 following: 3512 3513 ld: warning: relocation error: R_SPARC_UA32: ... 3514 external symbolic relocation against non-allocatable section 3515 .debug_info cannot be processed at runtime: relocation ignored. 3516 3517 To work around this problem, compile with `-gstabs+' instead of plain 3518 `-g'. 3519 3520 When configuring the GNU Multiple Precision Library (GMP), the MPFR 3521 library or the MPC library on a Solaris 7 or later system, the canonical 3522 target triplet must be specified as the `build' parameter on the 3523 configure line. This target triplet can be obtained by invoking 3524 `./config.guess' in the toplevel source directory of GCC (and not that 3525 of GMP or MPFR or MPC). For example on a Solaris 9 system: 3526 3527 % ./configure --build=sparc-sun-solaris2.9 --prefix=xxx 3528 3529 sparc-sun-solaris2.10 3530 ===================== 3531 3532 There is a bug in older versions of the Sun assembler which breaks 3533 thread-local storage (TLS). A typical error message is 3534 3535 ld: fatal: relocation error: R_SPARC_TLS_LE_HIX22: file /var/tmp//ccamPA1v.o: 3536 symbol <unknown>: bad symbol type SECT: symbol type must be TLS 3537 3538 This bug is fixed in Sun patch 118683-03 or later. 3539 3540 sparc-*-linux* 3541 ============== 3542 3543 GCC versions 3.0 and higher require binutils 2.11.2 and glibc 2.2.4 or 3544 newer on this platform. All earlier binutils and glibc releases 3545 mishandled unaligned relocations on `sparc-*-*' targets. 3546 3547 sparc64-*-solaris2* 3548 =================== 3549 3550 When configuring the GNU Multiple Precision Library (GMP), the MPFR 3551 library or the MPC library, the canonical target triplet must be 3552 specified as the `build' parameter on the configure line. For example 3553 on a Solaris 9 system: 3554 3555 % ./configure --build=sparc64-sun-solaris2.9 --prefix=xxx 3556 3557 The following compiler flags must be specified in the configure step 3558 in order to bootstrap this target with the Sun compiler: 3559 3560 % CC="cc -xarch=v9 -xildoff" SRCDIR/configure [OPTIONS] [TARGET] 3561 3562 `-xarch=v9' specifies the SPARC-V9 architecture to the Sun toolchain 3563 and `-xildoff' turns off the incremental linker. 3564 3565 sparcv9-*-solaris2* 3566 =================== 3567 3568 This is a synonym for `sparc64-*-solaris2*'. 3569 3570 c6x-*-* 3571 ======= 3572 3573 The C6X family of processors. This port requires binutils-2.22 or newer. 3574 3575 tilegx-*-linux* 3576 =============== 3577 3578 The TILE-Gx processor running GNU/Linux. This port requires 3579 binutils-2.22 or newer. 3580 3581 tilepro-*-linux* 3582 ================ 3583 3584 The TILEPro processor running GNU/Linux. This port requires 3585 binutils-2.22 or newer. 3586 3587 *-*-vxworks* 3588 ============ 3589 3590 Support for VxWorks is in flux. At present GCC supports _only_ the 3591 very recent VxWorks 5.5 (aka Tornado 2.2) release, and only on PowerPC. 3592 We welcome patches for other architectures supported by VxWorks 5.5. 3593 Support for VxWorks AE would also be welcome; we believe this is merely 3594 a matter of writing an appropriate "configlette" (see below). We are 3595 not interested in supporting older, a.out or COFF-based, versions of 3596 VxWorks in GCC 3. 3597 3598 VxWorks comes with an older version of GCC installed in 3599 `$WIND_BASE/host'; we recommend you do not overwrite it. Choose an 3600 installation PREFIX entirely outside $WIND_BASE. Before running 3601 `configure', create the directories `PREFIX' and `PREFIX/bin'. Link or 3602 copy the appropriate assembler, linker, etc. into `PREFIX/bin', and set 3603 your PATH to include that directory while running both `configure' and 3604 `make'. 3605 3606 You must give `configure' the `--with-headers=$WIND_BASE/target/h' 3607 switch so that it can find the VxWorks system headers. Since VxWorks 3608 is a cross compilation target only, you must also specify 3609 `--target=TARGET'. `configure' will attempt to create the directory 3610 `PREFIX/TARGET/sys-include' and copy files into it; make sure the user 3611 running `configure' has sufficient privilege to do so. 3612 3613 GCC's exception handling runtime requires a special "configlette" 3614 module, `contrib/gthr_supp_vxw_5x.c'. Follow the instructions in that 3615 file to add the module to your kernel build. (Future versions of 3616 VxWorks will incorporate this module.) 3617 3618 x86_64-*-*, amd64-*-* 3619 ===================== 3620 3621 GCC supports the x86-64 architecture implemented by the AMD64 processor 3622 (amd64-*-* is an alias for x86_64-*-*) on GNU/Linux, FreeBSD and NetBSD. 3623 On GNU/Linux the default is a bi-arch compiler which is able to generate 3624 both 64-bit x86-64 and 32-bit x86 code (via the `-m32' switch). 3625 3626 x86_64-*-solaris2.1[0-9]* 3627 ========================= 3628 3629 GCC also supports the x86-64 architecture implemented by the AMD64 3630 processor (`amd64-*-*' is an alias for `x86_64-*-*') on Solaris 10 or 3631 later. Unlike other systems, without special options a bi-arch 3632 compiler is built which generates 32-bit code by default, but can 3633 generate 64-bit x86-64 code with the `-m64' switch. Since GCC 4.7, 3634 there is also configuration that defaults to 64-bit code, but can 3635 generate 32-bit code with `-m32'. To configure and build this way, you 3636 have to provide all support libraries like `libgmp' as 64-bit code, 3637 configure with `--target=x86_64-pc-solaris2.1x' and `CC=gcc -m64'. 3638 3639 xtensa*-*-elf 3640 ============= 3641 3642 This target is intended for embedded Xtensa systems using the `newlib' 3643 C library. It uses ELF but does not support shared objects. 3644 Designed-defined instructions specified via the Tensilica Instruction 3645 Extension (TIE) language are only supported through inline assembly. 3646 3647 The Xtensa configuration information must be specified prior to 3648 building GCC. The `include/xtensa-config.h' header file contains the 3649 configuration information. If you created your own Xtensa 3650 configuration with the Xtensa Processor Generator, the downloaded files 3651 include a customized copy of this header file, which you can use to 3652 replace the default header file. 3653 3654 xtensa*-*-linux* 3655 ================ 3656 3657 This target is for Xtensa systems running GNU/Linux. It supports ELF 3658 shared objects and the GNU C library (glibc). It also generates 3659 position-independent code (PIC) regardless of whether the `-fpic' or 3660 `-fPIC' options are used. In other respects, this target is the same 3661 as the `xtensa*-*-elf' target. 3662 3663 Microsoft Windows 3664 ================= 3665 3666 Intel 16-bit versions 3667 --------------------- 3668 3669 The 16-bit versions of Microsoft Windows, such as Windows 3.1, are not 3670 supported. 3671 3672 However, the 32-bit port has limited support for Microsoft Windows 3673 3.11 in the Win32s environment, as a target only. See below. 3674 3675 Intel 32-bit versions 3676 --------------------- 3677 3678 The 32-bit versions of Windows, including Windows 95, Windows NT, 3679 Windows XP, and Windows Vista, are supported by several different target 3680 platforms. These targets differ in which Windows subsystem they target 3681 and which C libraries are used. 3682 3683 * Cygwin *-*-cygwin: Cygwin provides a user-space Linux API 3684 emulation layer in the Win32 subsystem. 3685 3686 * Interix *-*-interix: The Interix subsystem provides native support 3687 for POSIX. 3688 3689 * MinGW *-*-mingw32: MinGW is a native GCC port for the Win32 3690 subsystem that provides a subset of POSIX. 3691 3692 * MKS i386-pc-mks: NuTCracker from MKS. See 3693 `http://www.mkssoftware.com/' for more information. 3694 3695 Intel 64-bit versions 3696 --------------------- 3697 3698 GCC contains support for x86-64 using the mingw-w64 runtime library, 3699 available from `http://mingw-w64.sourceforge.net/'. This library 3700 should be used with the target triple x86_64-pc-mingw32. 3701 3702 Presently Windows for Itanium is not supported. 3703 3704 Windows CE 3705 ---------- 3706 3707 Windows CE is supported as a target only on Hitachi SuperH 3708 (sh-wince-pe), and MIPS (mips-wince-pe). 3709 3710 Other Windows Platforms 3711 ----------------------- 3712 3713 GCC no longer supports Windows NT on the Alpha or PowerPC. 3714 3715 GCC no longer supports the Windows POSIX subsystem. However, it does 3716 support the Interix subsystem. See above. 3717 3718 Old target names including *-*-winnt and *-*-windowsnt are no longer 3719 used. 3720 3721 PW32 (i386-pc-pw32) support was never completed, and the project 3722 seems to be inactive. See `http://pw32.sourceforge.net/' for more 3723 information. 3724 3725 UWIN support has been removed due to a lack of maintenance. 3726 3727 *-*-cygwin 3728 ========== 3729 3730 Ports of GCC are included with the Cygwin environment. 3731 3732 GCC will build under Cygwin without modification; it does not build 3733 with Microsoft's C++ compiler and there are no plans to make it do so. 3734 3735 The Cygwin native compiler can be configured to target any 32-bit x86 3736 cpu architecture desired; the default is i686-pc-cygwin. It should be 3737 used with as up-to-date a version of binutils as possible; use either 3738 the latest official GNU binutils release in the Cygwin distribution, or 3739 version 2.20 or above if building your own. 3740 3741 *-*-interix 3742 =========== 3743 3744 The Interix target is used by OpenNT, Interix, Services For UNIX (SFU), 3745 and Subsystem for UNIX-based Applications (SUA). Applications compiled 3746 with this target run in the Interix subsystem, which is separate from 3747 the Win32 subsystem. This target was last known to work in GCC 3.3. 3748 3749 *-*-mingw32 3750 =========== 3751 3752 GCC will build with and support only MinGW runtime 3.12 and later. 3753 Earlier versions of headers are incompatible with the new default 3754 semantics of `extern inline' in `-std=c99' and `-std=gnu99' modes. 3755 3756 Older systems 3757 ============= 3758 3759 GCC contains support files for many older (1980s and early 1990s) Unix 3760 variants. For the most part, support for these systems has not been 3761 deliberately removed, but it has not been maintained for several years 3762 and may suffer from bitrot. 3763 3764 Starting with GCC 3.1, each release has a list of "obsoleted" 3765 systems. Support for these systems is still present in that release, 3766 but `configure' will fail unless the `--enable-obsolete' option is 3767 given. Unless a maintainer steps forward, support for these systems 3768 will be removed from the next release of GCC. 3769 3770 Support for old systems as hosts for GCC can cause problems if the 3771 workarounds for compiler, library and operating system bugs affect the 3772 cleanliness or maintainability of the rest of GCC. In some cases, to 3773 bring GCC up on such a system, if still possible with current GCC, may 3774 require first installing an old version of GCC which did work on that 3775 system, and using it to compile a more recent GCC, to avoid bugs in the 3776 vendor compiler. Old releases of GCC 1 and GCC 2 are available in the 3777 `old-releases' directory on the GCC mirror sites. Header bugs may 3778 generally be avoided using `fixincludes', but bugs or deficiencies in 3779 libraries and the operating system may still cause problems. 3780 3781 Support for older systems as targets for cross-compilation is less 3782 problematic than support for them as hosts for GCC; if an enthusiast 3783 wishes to make such a target work again (including resurrecting any of 3784 the targets that never worked with GCC 2, starting from the last 3785 version before they were removed), patches following the usual 3786 requirements would be likely to be accepted, since they should not 3787 affect the support for more modern targets. 3788 3789 For some systems, old versions of GNU binutils may also be useful, 3790 and are available from `pub/binutils/old-releases' on sourceware.org 3791 mirror sites. 3792 3793 Some of the information on specific systems above relates to such 3794 older systems, but much of the information about GCC on such systems 3795 (which may no longer be applicable to current GCC) is to be found in 3796 the GCC texinfo manual. 3797 3798 all ELF targets (SVR4, Solaris 2, etc.) 3799 ======================================= 3800 3801 C++ support is significantly better on ELF targets if you use the GNU 3802 linker; duplicate copies of inlines, vtables and template 3803 instantiations will be discarded automatically. 3804 3805 3806 File: gccinstall.info, Node: Old, Next: GNU Free Documentation License, Prev: Specific, Up: Top 3807 3808 10 Old installation documentation 3809 ********************************* 3810 3811 Note most of this information is out of date and superseded by the 3812 previous chapters of this manual. It is provided for historical 3813 reference only, because of a lack of volunteers to merge it into the 3814 main manual. 3815 3816 * Menu: 3817 3818 * Configurations:: Configurations Supported by GCC. 3819 3820 Here is the procedure for installing GCC on a GNU or Unix system. 3821 3822 1. If you have chosen a configuration for GCC which requires other GNU 3823 tools (such as GAS or the GNU linker) instead of the standard 3824 system tools, install the required tools in the build directory 3825 under the names `as', `ld' or whatever is appropriate. 3826 3827 Alternatively, you can do subsequent compilation using a value of 3828 the `PATH' environment variable such that the necessary GNU tools 3829 come before the standard system tools. 3830 3831 2. Specify the host, build and target machine configurations. You do 3832 this when you run the `configure' script. 3833 3834 The "build" machine is the system which you are using, the "host" 3835 machine is the system where you want to run the resulting compiler 3836 (normally the build machine), and the "target" machine is the 3837 system for which you want the compiler to generate code. 3838 3839 If you are building a compiler to produce code for the machine it 3840 runs on (a native compiler), you normally do not need to specify 3841 any operands to `configure'; it will try to guess the type of 3842 machine you are on and use that as the build, host and target 3843 machines. So you don't need to specify a configuration when 3844 building a native compiler unless `configure' cannot figure out 3845 what your configuration is or guesses wrong. 3846 3847 In those cases, specify the build machine's "configuration name" 3848 with the `--host' option; the host and target will default to be 3849 the same as the host machine. 3850 3851 Here is an example: 3852 3853 ./configure --host=sparc-sun-sunos4.1 3854 3855 A configuration name may be canonical or it may be more or less 3856 abbreviated. 3857 3858 A canonical configuration name has three parts, separated by 3859 dashes. It looks like this: `CPU-COMPANY-SYSTEM'. (The three 3860 parts may themselves contain dashes; `configure' can figure out 3861 which dashes serve which purpose.) For example, 3862 `m68k-sun-sunos4.1' specifies a Sun 3. 3863 3864 You can also replace parts of the configuration by nicknames or 3865 aliases. For example, `sun3' stands for `m68k-sun', so 3866 `sun3-sunos4.1' is another way to specify a Sun 3. 3867 3868 You can specify a version number after any of the system types, 3869 and some of the CPU types. In most cases, the version is 3870 irrelevant, and will be ignored. So you might as well specify the 3871 version if you know it. 3872 3873 See *note Configurations::, for a list of supported configuration 3874 names and notes on many of the configurations. You should check 3875 the notes in that section before proceeding any further with the 3876 installation of GCC. 3877 3878 3879 3880 File: gccinstall.info, Node: Configurations, Up: Old 3881 3882 10.1 Configurations Supported by GCC 3883 ==================================== 3884 3885 Here are the possible CPU types: 3886 3887 1750a, a29k, alpha, arm, avr, cN, clipper, dsp16xx, elxsi, fr30, 3888 h8300, hppa1.0, hppa1.1, i370, i386, i486, i586, i686, i786, i860, 3889 i960, ip2k, m32r, m68000, m68k, m88k, mcore, mips, mipsel, mips64, 3890 mips64el, mn10200, mn10300, ns32k, pdp11, powerpc, powerpcle, 3891 romp, rs6000, sh, sparc, sparclite, sparc64, v850, vax, we32k. 3892 3893 Here are the recognized company names. As you can see, customary 3894 abbreviations are used rather than the longer official names. 3895 3896 acorn, alliant, altos, apollo, apple, att, bull, cbm, convergent, 3897 convex, crds, dec, dg, dolphin, elxsi, encore, harris, hitachi, 3898 hp, ibm, intergraph, isi, mips, motorola, ncr, next, ns, omron, 3899 plexus, sequent, sgi, sony, sun, tti, unicom, wrs. 3900 3901 The company name is meaningful only to disambiguate when the rest of 3902 the information supplied is insufficient. You can omit it, writing 3903 just `CPU-SYSTEM', if it is not needed. For example, `vax-ultrix4.2' 3904 is equivalent to `vax-dec-ultrix4.2'. 3905 3906 Here is a list of system types: 3907 3908 386bsd, aix, acis, amigaos, aos, aout, aux, bosx, bsd, clix, coff, 3909 ctix, cxux, dgux, dynix, ebmon, ecoff, elf, esix, freebsd, hms, 3910 genix, gnu, linux, linux-gnu, hiux, hpux, iris, irix, isc, luna, 3911 lynxos, mach, minix, msdos, mvs, netbsd, newsos, nindy, ns, osf, 3912 osfrose, ptx, riscix, riscos, rtu, sco, sim, solaris, sunos, sym, 3913 sysv, udi, ultrix, unicos, uniplus, unos, vms, vsta, vxworks, 3914 winnt, xenix. 3915 3916 You can omit the system type; then `configure' guesses the operating 3917 system from the CPU and company. 3918 3919 You can add a version number to the system type; this may or may not 3920 make a difference. For example, you can write `bsd4.3' or `bsd4.4' to 3921 distinguish versions of BSD. In practice, the version number is most 3922 needed for `sysv3' and `sysv4', which are often treated differently. 3923 3924 `linux-gnu' is the canonical name for the GNU/Linux target; however 3925 GCC will also accept `linux'. The version of the kernel in use is not 3926 relevant on these systems. A suffix such as `libc1' or `aout' 3927 distinguishes major versions of the C library; all of the suffixed 3928 versions are obsolete. 3929 3930 If you specify an impossible combination such as `i860-dg-vms', then 3931 you may get an error message from `configure', or it may ignore part of 3932 the information and do the best it can with the rest. `configure' 3933 always prints the canonical name for the alternative that it used. GCC 3934 does not support all possible alternatives. 3935 3936 Often a particular model of machine has a name. Many machine names 3937 are recognized as aliases for CPU/company combinations. Thus, the 3938 machine name `sun3', mentioned above, is an alias for `m68k-sun'. 3939 Sometimes we accept a company name as a machine name, when the name is 3940 popularly used for a particular machine. Here is a table of the known 3941 machine names: 3942 3943 3300, 3b1, 3bN, 7300, altos3068, altos, apollo68, att-7300, 3944 balance, convex-cN, crds, decstation-3100, decstation, delta, 3945 encore, fx2800, gmicro, hp7NN, hp8NN, hp9k2NN, hp9k3NN, hp9k7NN, 3946 hp9k8NN, iris4d, iris, isi68, m3230, magnum, merlin, miniframe, 3947 mmax, news-3600, news800, news, next, pbd, pc532, pmax, powerpc, 3948 powerpcle, ps2, risc-news, rtpc, sun2, sun386i, sun386, sun3, 3949 sun4, symmetry, tower-32, tower. 3950 3951 Remember that a machine name specifies both the cpu type and the company 3952 name. 3953 3954 3955 File: gccinstall.info, Node: GNU Free Documentation License, Next: Concept Index, Prev: Old, Up: Top 3956 3957 GNU Free Documentation License 3958 ****************************** 3959 3960 Version 1.3, 3 November 2008 3961 3962 Copyright (C) 2000, 2001, 2002, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 3963 `http://fsf.org/' 3964 3965 Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies 3966 of this license document, but changing it is not allowed. 3967 3968 0. PREAMBLE 3969 3970 The purpose of this License is to make a manual, textbook, or other 3971 functional and useful document "free" in the sense of freedom: to 3972 assure everyone the effective freedom to copy and redistribute it, 3973 with or without modifying it, either commercially or 3974 noncommercially. Secondarily, this License preserves for the 3975 author and publisher a way to get credit for their work, while not 3976 being considered responsible for modifications made by others. 3977 3978 This License is a kind of "copyleft", which means that derivative 3979 works of the document must themselves be free in the same sense. 3980 It complements the GNU General Public License, which is a copyleft 3981 license designed for free software. 3982 3983 We have designed this License in order to use it for manuals for 3984 free software, because free software needs free documentation: a 3985 free program should come with manuals providing the same freedoms 3986 that the software does. But this License is not limited to 3987 software manuals; it can be used for any textual work, regardless 3988 of subject matter or whether it is published as a printed book. 3989 We recommend this License principally for works whose purpose is 3990 instruction or reference. 3991 3992 1. APPLICABILITY AND DEFINITIONS 3993 3994 This License applies to any manual or other work, in any medium, 3995 that contains a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it 3996 can be distributed under the terms of this License. Such a notice 3997 grants a world-wide, royalty-free license, unlimited in duration, 3998 to use that work under the conditions stated herein. The 3999 "Document", below, refers to any such manual or work. Any member 4000 of the public is a licensee, and is addressed as "you". You 4001 accept the license if you copy, modify or distribute the work in a 4002 way requiring permission under copyright law. 4003 4004 A "Modified Version" of the Document means any work containing the 4005 Document or a portion of it, either copied verbatim, or with 4006 modifications and/or translated into another language. 4007 4008 A "Secondary Section" is a named appendix or a front-matter section 4009 of the Document that deals exclusively with the relationship of the 4010 publishers or authors of the Document to the Document's overall 4011 subject (or to related matters) and contains nothing that could 4012 fall directly within that overall subject. (Thus, if the Document 4013 is in part a textbook of mathematics, a Secondary Section may not 4014 explain any mathematics.) The relationship could be a matter of 4015 historical connection with the subject or with related matters, or 4016 of legal, commercial, philosophical, ethical or political position 4017 regarding them. 4018 4019 The "Invariant Sections" are certain Secondary Sections whose 4020 titles are designated, as being those of Invariant Sections, in 4021 the notice that says that the Document is released under this 4022 License. If a section does not fit the above definition of 4023 Secondary then it is not allowed to be designated as Invariant. 4024 The Document may contain zero Invariant Sections. If the Document 4025 does not identify any Invariant Sections then there are none. 4026 4027 The "Cover Texts" are certain short passages of text that are 4028 listed, as Front-Cover Texts or Back-Cover Texts, in the notice 4029 that says that the Document is released under this License. A 4030 Front-Cover Text may be at most 5 words, and a Back-Cover Text may 4031 be at most 25 words. 4032 4033 A "Transparent" copy of the Document means a machine-readable copy, 4034 represented in a format whose specification is available to the 4035 general public, that is suitable for revising the document 4036 straightforwardly with generic text editors or (for images 4037 composed of pixels) generic paint programs or (for drawings) some 4038 widely available drawing editor, and that is suitable for input to 4039 text formatters or for automatic translation to a variety of 4040 formats suitable for input to text formatters. A copy made in an 4041 otherwise Transparent file format whose markup, or absence of 4042 markup, has been arranged to thwart or discourage subsequent 4043 modification by readers is not Transparent. An image format is 4044 not Transparent if used for any substantial amount of text. A 4045 copy that is not "Transparent" is called "Opaque". 4046 4047 Examples of suitable formats for Transparent copies include plain 4048 ASCII without markup, Texinfo input format, LaTeX input format, 4049 SGML or XML using a publicly available DTD, and 4050 standard-conforming simple HTML, PostScript or PDF designed for 4051 human modification. Examples of transparent image formats include 4052 PNG, XCF and JPG. Opaque formats include proprietary formats that 4053 can be read and edited only by proprietary word processors, SGML or 4054 XML for which the DTD and/or processing tools are not generally 4055 available, and the machine-generated HTML, PostScript or PDF 4056 produced by some word processors for output purposes only. 4057 4058 The "Title Page" means, for a printed book, the title page itself, 4059 plus such following pages as are needed to hold, legibly, the 4060 material this License requires to appear in the title page. For 4061 works in formats which do not have any title page as such, "Title 4062 Page" means the text near the most prominent appearance of the 4063 work's title, preceding the beginning of the body of the text. 4064 4065 The "publisher" means any person or entity that distributes copies 4066 of the Document to the public. 4067 4068 A section "Entitled XYZ" means a named subunit of the Document 4069 whose title either is precisely XYZ or contains XYZ in parentheses 4070 following text that translates XYZ in another language. (Here XYZ 4071 stands for a specific section name mentioned below, such as 4072 "Acknowledgements", "Dedications", "Endorsements", or "History".) 4073 To "Preserve the Title" of such a section when you modify the 4074 Document means that it remains a section "Entitled XYZ" according 4075 to this definition. 4076 4077 The Document may include Warranty Disclaimers next to the notice 4078 which states that this License applies to the Document. These 4079 Warranty Disclaimers are considered to be included by reference in 4080 this License, but only as regards disclaiming warranties: any other 4081 implication that these Warranty Disclaimers may have is void and 4082 has no effect on the meaning of this License. 4083 4084 2. VERBATIM COPYING 4085 4086 You may copy and distribute the Document in any medium, either 4087 commercially or noncommercially, provided that this License, the 4088 copyright notices, and the license notice saying this License 4089 applies to the Document are reproduced in all copies, and that you 4090 add no other conditions whatsoever to those of this License. You 4091 may not use technical measures to obstruct or control the reading 4092 or further copying of the copies you make or distribute. However, 4093 you may accept compensation in exchange for copies. If you 4094 distribute a large enough number of copies you must also follow 4095 the conditions in section 3. 4096 4097 You may also lend copies, under the same conditions stated above, 4098 and you may publicly display copies. 4099 4100 3. COPYING IN QUANTITY 4101 4102 If you publish printed copies (or copies in media that commonly 4103 have printed covers) of the Document, numbering more than 100, and 4104 the Document's license notice requires Cover Texts, you must 4105 enclose the copies in covers that carry, clearly and legibly, all 4106 these Cover Texts: Front-Cover Texts on the front cover, and 4107 Back-Cover Texts on the back cover. Both covers must also clearly 4108 and legibly identify you as the publisher of these copies. The 4109 front cover must present the full title with all words of the 4110 title equally prominent and visible. You may add other material 4111 on the covers in addition. Copying with changes limited to the 4112 covers, as long as they preserve the title of the Document and 4113 satisfy these conditions, can be treated as verbatim copying in 4114 other respects. 4115 4116 If the required texts for either cover are too voluminous to fit 4117 legibly, you should put the first ones listed (as many as fit 4118 reasonably) on the actual cover, and continue the rest onto 4119 adjacent pages. 4120 4121 If you publish or distribute Opaque copies of the Document 4122 numbering more than 100, you must either include a 4123 machine-readable Transparent copy along with each Opaque copy, or 4124 state in or with each Opaque copy a computer-network location from 4125 which the general network-using public has access to download 4126 using public-standard network protocols a complete Transparent 4127 copy of the Document, free of added material. If you use the 4128 latter option, you must take reasonably prudent steps, when you 4129 begin distribution of Opaque copies in quantity, to ensure that 4130 this Transparent copy will remain thus accessible at the stated 4131 location until at least one year after the last time you 4132 distribute an Opaque copy (directly or through your agents or 4133 retailers) of that edition to the public. 4134 4135 It is requested, but not required, that you contact the authors of 4136 the Document well before redistributing any large number of 4137 copies, to give them a chance to provide you with an updated 4138 version of the Document. 4139 4140 4. MODIFICATIONS 4141 4142 You may copy and distribute a Modified Version of the Document 4143 under the conditions of sections 2 and 3 above, provided that you 4144 release the Modified Version under precisely this License, with 4145 the Modified Version filling the role of the Document, thus 4146 licensing distribution and modification of the Modified Version to 4147 whoever possesses a copy of it. In addition, you must do these 4148 things in the Modified Version: 4149 4150 A. Use in the Title Page (and on the covers, if any) a title 4151 distinct from that of the Document, and from those of 4152 previous versions (which should, if there were any, be listed 4153 in the History section of the Document). You may use the 4154 same title as a previous version if the original publisher of 4155 that version gives permission. 4156 4157 B. List on the Title Page, as authors, one or more persons or 4158 entities responsible for authorship of the modifications in 4159 the Modified Version, together with at least five of the 4160 principal authors of the Document (all of its principal 4161 authors, if it has fewer than five), unless they release you 4162 from this requirement. 4163 4164 C. State on the Title page the name of the publisher of the 4165 Modified Version, as the publisher. 4166 4167 D. Preserve all the copyright notices of the Document. 4168 4169 E. Add an appropriate copyright notice for your modifications 4170 adjacent to the other copyright notices. 4171 4172 F. Include, immediately after the copyright notices, a license 4173 notice giving the public permission to use the Modified 4174 Version under the terms of this License, in the form shown in 4175 the Addendum below. 4176 4177 G. Preserve in that license notice the full lists of Invariant 4178 Sections and required Cover Texts given in the Document's 4179 license notice. 4180 4181 H. Include an unaltered copy of this License. 4182 4183 I. Preserve the section Entitled "History", Preserve its Title, 4184 and add to it an item stating at least the title, year, new 4185 authors, and publisher of the Modified Version as given on 4186 the Title Page. If there is no section Entitled "History" in 4187 the Document, create one stating the title, year, authors, 4188 and publisher of the Document as given on its Title Page, 4189 then add an item describing the Modified Version as stated in 4190 the previous sentence. 4191 4192 J. Preserve the network location, if any, given in the Document 4193 for public access to a Transparent copy of the Document, and 4194 likewise the network locations given in the Document for 4195 previous versions it was based on. These may be placed in 4196 the "History" section. You may omit a network location for a 4197 work that was published at least four years before the 4198 Document itself, or if the original publisher of the version 4199 it refers to gives permission. 4200 4201 K. For any section Entitled "Acknowledgements" or "Dedications", 4202 Preserve the Title of the section, and preserve in the 4203 section all the substance and tone of each of the contributor 4204 acknowledgements and/or dedications given therein. 4205 4206 L. Preserve all the Invariant Sections of the Document, 4207 unaltered in their text and in their titles. Section numbers 4208 or the equivalent are not considered part of the section 4209 titles. 4210 4211 M. Delete any section Entitled "Endorsements". Such a section 4212 may not be included in the Modified Version. 4213 4214 N. Do not retitle any existing section to be Entitled 4215 "Endorsements" or to conflict in title with any Invariant 4216 Section. 4217 4218 O. Preserve any Warranty Disclaimers. 4219 4220 If the Modified Version includes new front-matter sections or 4221 appendices that qualify as Secondary Sections and contain no 4222 material copied from the Document, you may at your option 4223 designate some or all of these sections as invariant. To do this, 4224 add their titles to the list of Invariant Sections in the Modified 4225 Version's license notice. These titles must be distinct from any 4226 other section titles. 4227 4228 You may add a section Entitled "Endorsements", provided it contains 4229 nothing but endorsements of your Modified Version by various 4230 parties--for example, statements of peer review or that the text 4231 has been approved by an organization as the authoritative 4232 definition of a standard. 4233 4234 You may add a passage of up to five words as a Front-Cover Text, 4235 and a passage of up to 25 words as a Back-Cover Text, to the end 4236 of the list of Cover Texts in the Modified Version. Only one 4237 passage of Front-Cover Text and one of Back-Cover Text may be 4238 added by (or through arrangements made by) any one entity. If the 4239 Document already includes a cover text for the same cover, 4240 previously added by you or by arrangement made by the same entity 4241 you are acting on behalf of, you may not add another; but you may 4242 replace the old one, on explicit permission from the previous 4243 publisher that added the old one. 4244 4245 The author(s) and publisher(s) of the Document do not by this 4246 License give permission to use their names for publicity for or to 4247 assert or imply endorsement of any Modified Version. 4248 4249 5. COMBINING DOCUMENTS 4250 4251 You may combine the Document with other documents released under 4252 this License, under the terms defined in section 4 above for 4253 modified versions, provided that you include in the combination 4254 all of the Invariant Sections of all of the original documents, 4255 unmodified, and list them all as Invariant Sections of your 4256 combined work in its license notice, and that you preserve all 4257 their Warranty Disclaimers. 4258 4259 The combined work need only contain one copy of this License, and 4260 multiple identical Invariant Sections may be replaced with a single 4261 copy. If there are multiple Invariant Sections with the same name 4262 but different contents, make the title of each such section unique 4263 by adding at the end of it, in parentheses, the name of the 4264 original author or publisher of that section if known, or else a 4265 unique number. Make the same adjustment to the section titles in 4266 the list of Invariant Sections in the license notice of the 4267 combined work. 4268 4269 In the combination, you must combine any sections Entitled 4270 "History" in the various original documents, forming one section 4271 Entitled "History"; likewise combine any sections Entitled 4272 "Acknowledgements", and any sections Entitled "Dedications". You 4273 must delete all sections Entitled "Endorsements." 4274 4275 6. COLLECTIONS OF DOCUMENTS 4276 4277 You may make a collection consisting of the Document and other 4278 documents released under this License, and replace the individual 4279 copies of this License in the various documents with a single copy 4280 that is included in the collection, provided that you follow the 4281 rules of this License for verbatim copying of each of the 4282 documents in all other respects. 4283 4284 You may extract a single document from such a collection, and 4285 distribute it individually under this License, provided you insert 4286 a copy of this License into the extracted document, and follow 4287 this License in all other respects regarding verbatim copying of 4288 that document. 4289 4290 7. AGGREGATION WITH INDEPENDENT WORKS 4291 4292 A compilation of the Document or its derivatives with other 4293 separate and independent documents or works, in or on a volume of 4294 a storage or distribution medium, is called an "aggregate" if the 4295 copyright resulting from the compilation is not used to limit the 4296 legal rights of the compilation's users beyond what the individual 4297 works permit. When the Document is included in an aggregate, this 4298 License does not apply to the other works in the aggregate which 4299 are not themselves derivative works of the Document. 4300 4301 If the Cover Text requirement of section 3 is applicable to these 4302 copies of the Document, then if the Document is less than one half 4303 of the entire aggregate, the Document's Cover Texts may be placed 4304 on covers that bracket the Document within the aggregate, or the 4305 electronic equivalent of covers if the Document is in electronic 4306 form. Otherwise they must appear on printed covers that bracket 4307 the whole aggregate. 4308 4309 8. TRANSLATION 4310 4311 Translation is considered a kind of modification, so you may 4312 distribute translations of the Document under the terms of section 4313 4. Replacing Invariant Sections with translations requires special 4314 permission from their copyright holders, but you may include 4315 translations of some or all Invariant Sections in addition to the 4316 original versions of these Invariant Sections. You may include a 4317 translation of this License, and all the license notices in the 4318 Document, and any Warranty Disclaimers, provided that you also 4319 include the original English version of this License and the 4320 original versions of those notices and disclaimers. In case of a 4321 disagreement between the translation and the original version of 4322 this License or a notice or disclaimer, the original version will 4323 prevail. 4324 4325 If a section in the Document is Entitled "Acknowledgements", 4326 "Dedications", or "History", the requirement (section 4) to 4327 Preserve its Title (section 1) will typically require changing the 4328 actual title. 4329 4330 9. TERMINATION 4331 4332 You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Document 4333 except as expressly provided under this License. Any attempt 4334 otherwise to copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute it is void, 4335 and will automatically terminate your rights under this License. 4336 4337 However, if you cease all violation of this License, then your 4338 license from a particular copyright holder is reinstated (a) 4339 provisionally, unless and until the copyright holder explicitly 4340 and finally terminates your license, and (b) permanently, if the 4341 copyright holder fails to notify you of the violation by some 4342 reasonable means prior to 60 days after the cessation. 4343 4344 Moreover, your license from a particular copyright holder is 4345 reinstated permanently if the copyright holder notifies you of the 4346 violation by some reasonable means, this is the first time you have 4347 received notice of violation of this License (for any work) from 4348 that copyright holder, and you cure the violation prior to 30 days 4349 after your receipt of the notice. 4350 4351 Termination of your rights under this section does not terminate 4352 the licenses of parties who have received copies or rights from 4353 you under this License. If your rights have been terminated and 4354 not permanently reinstated, receipt of a copy of some or all of 4355 the same material does not give you any rights to use it. 4356 4357 10. FUTURE REVISIONS OF THIS LICENSE 4358 4359 The Free Software Foundation may publish new, revised versions of 4360 the GNU Free Documentation License from time to time. Such new 4361 versions will be similar in spirit to the present version, but may 4362 differ in detail to address new problems or concerns. See 4363 `http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/'. 4364 4365 Each version of the License is given a distinguishing version 4366 number. If the Document specifies that a particular numbered 4367 version of this License "or any later version" applies to it, you 4368 have the option of following the terms and conditions either of 4369 that specified version or of any later version that has been 4370 published (not as a draft) by the Free Software Foundation. If 4371 the Document does not specify a version number of this License, 4372 you may choose any version ever published (not as a draft) by the 4373 Free Software Foundation. If the Document specifies that a proxy 4374 can decide which future versions of this License can be used, that 4375 proxy's public statement of acceptance of a version permanently 4376 authorizes you to choose that version for the Document. 4377 4378 11. RELICENSING 4379 4380 "Massive Multiauthor Collaboration Site" (or "MMC Site") means any 4381 World Wide Web server that publishes copyrightable works and also 4382 provides prominent facilities for anybody to edit those works. A 4383 public wiki that anybody can edit is an example of such a server. 4384 A "Massive Multiauthor Collaboration" (or "MMC") contained in the 4385 site means any set of copyrightable works thus published on the MMC 4386 site. 4387 4388 "CC-BY-SA" means the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 4389 license published by Creative Commons Corporation, a not-for-profit 4390 corporation with a principal place of business in San Francisco, 4391 California, as well as future copyleft versions of that license 4392 published by that same organization. 4393 4394 "Incorporate" means to publish or republish a Document, in whole or 4395 in part, as part of another Document. 4396 4397 An MMC is "eligible for relicensing" if it is licensed under this 4398 License, and if all works that were first published under this 4399 License somewhere other than this MMC, and subsequently 4400 incorporated in whole or in part into the MMC, (1) had no cover 4401 texts or invariant sections, and (2) were thus incorporated prior 4402 to November 1, 2008. 4403 4404 The operator of an MMC Site may republish an MMC contained in the 4405 site under CC-BY-SA on the same site at any time before August 1, 4406 2009, provided the MMC is eligible for relicensing. 4407 4408 4409 ADDENDUM: How to use this License for your documents 4410 ==================================================== 4411 4412 To use this License in a document you have written, include a copy of 4413 the License in the document and put the following copyright and license 4414 notices just after the title page: 4415 4416 Copyright (C) YEAR YOUR NAME. 4417 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document 4418 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 4419 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; 4420 with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover 4421 Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU 4422 Free Documentation License''. 4423 4424 If you have Invariant Sections, Front-Cover Texts and Back-Cover 4425 Texts, replace the "with...Texts." line with this: 4426 4427 with the Invariant Sections being LIST THEIR TITLES, with 4428 the Front-Cover Texts being LIST, and with the Back-Cover Texts 4429 being LIST. 4430 4431 If you have Invariant Sections without Cover Texts, or some other 4432 combination of the three, merge those two alternatives to suit the 4433 situation. 4434 4435 If your document contains nontrivial examples of program code, we 4436 recommend releasing these examples in parallel under your choice of 4437 free software license, such as the GNU General Public License, to 4438 permit their use in free software. 4439 4440 4441 File: gccinstall.info, Node: Concept Index, Prev: GNU Free Documentation License, Up: Top 4442 4443 Concept Index 4444 ************* 4445 4446 [index] 4447 * Menu: 4448 4449 * Binaries: Binaries. (line 6) 4450 * build_configargs: Configuration. (line 1449) 4451 * Configuration: Configuration. (line 6) 4452 * configurations supported by GCC: Configurations. (line 6) 4453 * Downloading GCC: Downloading the source. 4454 (line 6) 4455 * Downloading the Source: Downloading the source. 4456 (line 6) 4457 * FDL, GNU Free Documentation License: GNU Free Documentation License. 4458 (line 6) 4459 * Host specific installation: Specific. (line 6) 4460 * host_configargs: Configuration. (line 1453) 4461 * Installing GCC: Binaries: Binaries. (line 6) 4462 * Installing GCC: Building: Building. (line 6) 4463 * Installing GCC: Configuration: Configuration. (line 6) 4464 * Installing GCC: Testing: Testing. (line 6) 4465 * Prerequisites: Prerequisites. (line 6) 4466 * Specific: Specific. (line 6) 4467 * Specific installation notes: Specific. (line 6) 4468 * Target specific installation: Specific. (line 6) 4469 * Target specific installation notes: Specific. (line 6) 4470 * target_configargs: Configuration. (line 1457) 4471 * Testing: Testing. (line 6) 4472 * Testsuite: Testing. (line 6) 4473 4474 4475 4476 Tag Table: 4477 Node: Top1759 4478 Node: Installing GCC2317 4479 Node: Prerequisites3954 4480 Node: Downloading the source14281 4481 Node: Configuration15835 4482 Ref: with-gnu-as30841 4483 Ref: with-as31739 4484 Ref: with-gnu-ld33152 4485 Node: Building80070 4486 Node: Testing95555 4487 Node: Final install103427 4488 Node: Binaries108741 4489 Node: Specific110253 4490 Ref: alpha-x-x110763 4491 Ref: alpha-dec-osf51111252 4492 Ref: amd64-x-solaris210111777 4493 Ref: arm-x-eabi111880 4494 Ref: avr112091 4495 Ref: bfin112731 4496 Ref: cr16112973 4497 Ref: cris113388 4498 Ref: dos114204 4499 Ref: epiphany-x-elf114527 4500 Ref: x-x-freebsd114632 4501 Ref: h8300-hms116469 4502 Ref: hppa-hp-hpux116821 4503 Ref: hppa-hp-hpux10119192 4504 Ref: hppa-hp-hpux11119605 4505 Ref: x-x-linux-gnu125264 4506 Ref: ix86-x-linux125457 4507 Ref: ix86-x-solaris29125770 4508 Ref: ix86-x-solaris210126549 4509 Ref: ia64-x-linux127740 4510 Ref: ia64-x-hpux128510 4511 Ref: x-ibm-aix129065 4512 Ref: iq2000-x-elf135928 4513 Ref: lm32-x-elf136068 4514 Ref: lm32-x-uclinux136172 4515 Ref: m32c-x-elf136300 4516 Ref: m32r-x-elf136402 4517 Ref: m68k-x-x136504 4518 Ref: m68k-x-uclinux137542 4519 Ref: mep-x-elf137788 4520 Ref: microblaze-x-elf137898 4521 Ref: mips-x-x138017 4522 Ref: mips-sgi-irix5140413 4523 Ref: mips-sgi-irix6140493 4524 Ref: moxie-x-elf140680 4525 Ref: powerpc-x-x140727 4526 Ref: powerpc-x-darwin140932 4527 Ref: powerpc-x-elf141426 4528 Ref: powerpc-x-linux-gnu141511 4529 Ref: powerpc-x-netbsd141606 4530 Ref: powerpc-x-eabisim141694 4531 Ref: powerpc-x-eabi141820 4532 Ref: powerpcle-x-elf141896 4533 Ref: powerpcle-x-eabisim141988 4534 Ref: powerpcle-x-eabi142121 4535 Ref: rl78-x-elf142204 4536 Ref: rx-x-elf142310 4537 Ref: s390-x-linux142509 4538 Ref: s390x-x-linux142581 4539 Ref: s390x-ibm-tpf142668 4540 Ref: x-x-solaris2142799 4541 Ref: sparc-x-x147562 4542 Ref: sparc-sun-solaris2148064 4543 Ref: sparc-sun-solaris210150818 4544 Ref: sparc-x-linux151194 4545 Ref: sparc64-x-solaris2151419 4546 Ref: sparcv9-x-solaris2152072 4547 Ref: c6x-x-x152159 4548 Ref: tilegx-*-linux152250 4549 Ref: tilepro-*-linux152369 4550 Ref: x-x-vxworks152490 4551 Ref: x86-64-x-x154012 4552 Ref: x86-64-x-solaris210154340 4553 Ref: xtensa-x-elf155002 4554 Ref: xtensa-x-linux155673 4555 Ref: windows156014 4556 Ref: x-x-cygwin157951 4557 Ref: x-x-interix158504 4558 Ref: x-x-mingw32158813 4559 Ref: older159039 4560 Ref: elf161156 4561 Node: Old161414 4562 Node: Configurations164551 4563 Node: GNU Free Documentation License168092 4564 Node: Concept Index193239 4565 4566 End Tag Table 4567