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1\input texinfo.tex @c -*-texinfo-*-
2@c @ifnothtml
3@c %**start of header
d7f8491b 4@setfilename gccinstall.info
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5@settitle Installing GCC
6@setchapternewpage odd
7@c %**end of header
8@c @end ifnothtml
9
10@c Specify title for specific html page
11@ifset indexhtml
12@settitle Installing GCC
13@end ifset
14@ifset specifichtml
15@settitle Host/Target specific installation notes for GCC
16@end ifset
17@ifset downloadhtml
18@settitle Downloading GCC
19@end ifset
20@ifset configurehtml
21@settitle Installing GCC: Configuration
22@end ifset
23@ifset buildhtml
24@settitle Installing GCC: Building
25@end ifset
26@ifset testhtml
27@settitle Installing GCC: Testing
28@end ifset
29@ifset finalinstallhtml
30@settitle Installing GCC: Final installation
31@end ifset
32@ifset binarieshtml
33@settitle Installing GCC: Binaries
34@end ifset
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35@ifset oldhtml
36@settitle Installing GCC: Old documentation
37@end ifset
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38@ifset gfdlhtml
39@settitle Installing GCC: GNU Free Documentation License
40@end ifset
f42974dc 41
aed5964b 42@c Copyright (C) 1988, 1989, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998,
4dd57c18 43@c 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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44@c *** Converted to texinfo by Dean Wakerley, dean@wakerley.com
45
46@c Include everything if we're not making html
47@ifnothtml
48@set indexhtml
49@set specifichtml
50@set downloadhtml
51@set configurehtml
52@set buildhtml
53@set testhtml
54@set finalinstallhtml
55@set binarieshtml
73e2155a 56@set oldhtml
aed5964b 57@set gfdlhtml
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58@end ifnothtml
59
60@c Part 2 Summary Description and Copyright
bdefb2ab 61@copying
aed5964b 62Copyright @copyright{} 1988, 1989, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998,
b3a8389d 631999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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64@sp 1
65Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
b3a8389d 66under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or
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67any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
68Invariant Sections, the Front-Cover texts being (a) (see below), and
69with the Back-Cover Texts being (b) (see below). A copy of the
70license is included in the section entitled ``@uref{./gfdl.html,,GNU
71Free Documentation License}''.
72
73(a) The FSF's Front-Cover Text is:
74
75 A GNU Manual
76
77(b) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is:
78
79 You have freedom to copy and modify this GNU Manual, like GNU
80 software. Copies published by the Free Software Foundation raise
81 funds for GNU development.
bdefb2ab 82@end copying
f42974dc 83@ifinfo
bdefb2ab 84@insertcopying
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85@end ifinfo
86
87@c Part 3 Titlepage and Copyright
88@titlepage
89@sp 10
90@comment The title is printed in a large font.
ef88b07d 91@center @titlefont{Installing GCC}
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92
93@c The following two commands start the copyright page.
94@page
ef88b07d 95@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
bdefb2ab 96@insertcopying
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97@end titlepage
98
99@c Part 4 Top node and Master Menu
100@ifinfo
101@node Top, , , (dir)
102@comment node-name, next, Previous, up
103
104@menu
105* Installing GCC:: This document describes the generic installation
106 procedure for GCC as well as detailing some target
f9047ed3 107 specific installation instructions.
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108
109* Specific:: Host/target specific installation notes for GCC.
110* Binaries:: Where to get pre-compiled binaries.
111
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112* Old:: Old installation documentation.
113
aed5964b 114* GNU Free Documentation License:: How you can copy and share this manual.
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115* Concept Index:: This index has two entries.
116@end menu
117@end ifinfo
118
119@c Part 5 The Body of the Document
120@c ***Installing GCC**********************************************************
6cfb3f16 121@ifnothtml
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122@comment node-name, next, previous, up
123@node Installing GCC, Binaries, , Top
6cfb3f16 124@end ifnothtml
f42974dc 125@ifset indexhtml
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126@ifnothtml
127@chapter Installing GCC
128@end ifnothtml
129
130The latest version of this document is always available at
f9047ed3 131@uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/install/,,http://gcc.gnu.org/install/}.
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132
133This document describes the generic installation procedure for GCC as well
f9047ed3 134as detailing some target specific installation instructions.
f42974dc 135
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136GCC includes several components that previously were separate distributions
137with their own installation instructions. This document supersedes all
eea81d3e 138package specific installation instructions.
f42974dc 139
f9047ed3 140@emph{Before} starting the build/install procedure please check the
f42974dc 141@ifnothtml
eea81d3e 142@ref{Specific, host/target specific installation notes}.
f42974dc 143@end ifnothtml
c009f01f 144@ifhtml
f9047ed3 145@uref{specific.html,,host/target specific installation notes}.
c009f01f 146@end ifhtml
f9047ed3 147We recommend you browse the entire generic installation instructions before
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148you proceed.
149
c009f01f 150Lists of successful builds for released versions of GCC are
b58bbfbb 151available at @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/buildstat.html}.
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152These lists are updated as new information becomes available.
153
f9047ed3 154The installation procedure itself is broken into five steps.
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155
156@ifinfo
157@menu
158* Downloading the source::
159* Configuration::
160* Building::
161* Testing:: (optional)
162* Final install::
163@end menu
164@end ifinfo
c009f01f 165@ifhtml
f42974dc 166@enumerate
f9047ed3 167@item
f42974dc 168@uref{download.html,,Downloading the source}
f42974dc 169@item
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170@uref{configure.html,,Configuration}
171@item
172@uref{build.html,,Building}
173@item
174@uref{test.html,,Testing} (optional)
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175@item
176@uref{finalinstall.html,,Final install}
177@end enumerate
c009f01f 178@end ifhtml
f42974dc 179
38209993 180Please note that GCC does not support @samp{make uninstall} and probably
f9047ed3 181won't do so in the near future as this would open a can of worms. Instead,
f42974dc 182we suggest that you install GCC into a directory of its own and simply
38209993 183remove that directory when you do not need that specific version of GCC
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184any longer, and, if shared libraries are installed there as well, no
185more binaries exist that use them.
f42974dc 186
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187@ifhtml
188There are also some @uref{old.html,,old installation instructions},
189which are mostly obsolete but still contain some information which has
190not yet been merged into the main part of this manual.
191@end ifhtml
192
f42974dc 193@html
b8db17af 194<hr />
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195<p>
196@end html
197@ifhtml
198@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
aed5964b 199
bdefb2ab 200@insertcopying
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201@end ifhtml
202@end ifset
203
204@c ***Downloading the source**************************************************
6cfb3f16 205@ifnothtml
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206@comment node-name, next, previous, up
207@node Downloading the source, Configuration, , Installing GCC
6cfb3f16 208@end ifnothtml
f42974dc 209@ifset downloadhtml
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210@ifnothtml
211@chapter Downloading GCC
212@end ifnothtml
213@cindex Downloading GCC
214@cindex Downloading the Source
215
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216GCC is distributed via @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/cvs.html,,CVS} and FTP
217tarballs compressed with @command{gzip} or
6cfb3f16 218@command{bzip2}. It is possible to download a full distribution or specific
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219components.
220
221Please refer to our @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/releases.html,,releases web page}
161d7b59 222for information on how to obtain GCC@.
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223
224The full distribution includes the C, C++, Objective-C, Fortran, Java,
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225and Ada (in case of GCC 3.1 and later) compilers. The full distribution
226also includes runtime libraries for C++, Objective-C, Fortran, and Java.
227In GCC 3.0 and later versions, GNU compiler testsuites are also included
228in the full distribution.
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229
230If you choose to download specific components, you must download the core
eea81d3e 231GCC distribution plus any language specific distributions you wish to
6c0a4eab 232use. The core distribution includes the C language front end as well as the
767094dd 233shared components. Each language has a tarball which includes the language
6c0a4eab 234front end as well as the language runtime (when appropriate).
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235
236Unpack the core distribution as well as any language specific
237distributions in the same directory.
238
239If you also intend to build binutils (either to upgrade an existing
240installation or for use in place of the corresponding tools of your
241OS), unpack the binutils distribution either in the same directory or
242a separate one. In the latter case, add symbolic links to any
243components of the binutils you intend to build alongside the compiler
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244(@file{bfd}, @file{binutils}, @file{gas}, @file{gprof}, @file{ld},
245@file{opcodes}, @dots{}) to the directory containing the GCC sources.
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246
247@html
b8db17af 248<hr />
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249<p>
250@end html
251@ifhtml
252@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
253@end ifhtml
254@end ifset
255
256@c ***Configuration***********************************************************
6cfb3f16 257@ifnothtml
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258@comment node-name, next, previous, up
259@node Configuration, Building, Downloading the source, Installing GCC
6cfb3f16 260@end ifnothtml
f42974dc 261@ifset configurehtml
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262@ifnothtml
263@chapter Installing GCC: Configuration
264@end ifnothtml
265@cindex Configuration
266@cindex Installing GCC: Configuration
267
268Like most GNU software, GCC must be configured before it can be built.
269This document describes the recommended configuration procedure
270for both native and cross targets.
271
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272We use @var{srcdir} to refer to the toplevel source directory for
273GCC; we use @var{objdir} to refer to the toplevel build/object directory.
274
275If you obtained the sources via CVS, @var{srcdir} must refer to the top
276@file{gcc} directory, the one where the @file{MAINTAINERS} can be found,
277and not its @file{gcc} subdirectory, otherwise the build will fail.
f42974dc 278
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279If either @var{srcdir} or @var{objdir} is located on an automounted NFS
280file system, the shell's built-in @command{pwd} command will return
281temporary pathnames. Using these can lead to various sorts of build
282problems. To avoid this issue, set the @env{PWDCMD} environment
283variable to an automounter-aware @command{pwd} command, e.g.,
7ba4ca63 284@command{pawd} or @samp{amq -w}, during the configuration and build
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285phases.
286
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287First, we @strong{highly} recommend that GCC be built into a
288separate directory than the sources which does @strong{not} reside
289within the source tree. This is how we generally build GCC; building
290where @var{srcdir} == @var{objdir} should still work, but doesn't
291get extensive testing; building where @var{objdir} is a subdirectory
292of @var{srcdir} is unsupported.
f42974dc 293
eea81d3e 294If you have previously built GCC in the same directory for a
f85b8d1a 295different target machine, do @samp{make distclean} to delete all files
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296that might be invalid. One of the files this deletes is @file{Makefile};
297if @samp{make distclean} complains that @file{Makefile} does not exist
298or issues a message like ``don't know how to make distclean'' it probably
299means that the directory is already suitably clean. However, with the
300recommended method of building in a separate @var{objdir}, you should
301simply use a different @var{objdir} for each target.
f85b8d1a 302
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303Second, when configuring a native system, either @command{cc} or
304@command{gcc} must be in your path or you must set @env{CC} in
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305your environment before running configure. Otherwise the configuration
306scripts may fail.
f42974dc 307
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308Note that the bootstrap compiler and the resulting GCC must be link
309compatible, else the bootstrap will fail with linker errors about
310incompatible object file formats. Several multilibed targets are
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311affected by this requirement, see
312@ifnothtml
313@ref{Specific, host/target specific installation notes}.
314@end ifnothtml
c009f01f 315@ifhtml
e69aa433 316@uref{specific.html,,host/target specific installation notes}.
c009f01f 317@end ifhtml
eea81d3e 318
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319To configure GCC:
320
321@example
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322 % mkdir @var{objdir}
323 % cd @var{objdir}
eea81d3e 324 % @var{srcdir}/configure [@var{options}] [@var{target}]
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325@end example
326
327
ef88b07d 328@heading Target specification
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329@itemize @bullet
330@item
38209993 331GCC has code to correctly determine the correct value for @var{target}
f9047ed3 332for nearly all native systems. Therefore, we highly recommend you not
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333provide a configure target when configuring a native compiler.
334
335@item
6cfb3f16 336@var{target} must be specified as @option{--target=@var{target}}
f9047ed3 337when configuring a cross compiler; examples of valid targets would be
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338i960-rtems, m68k-coff, sh-elf, etc.
339
340@item
6cfb3f16 341Specifying just @var{target} instead of @option{--target=@var{target}}
38209993 342implies that the host defaults to @var{target}.
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343@end itemize
344
345
ef88b07d 346@heading Options specification
f42974dc 347
ef88b07d 348Use @var{options} to override several configure time options for
7ba4ca63 349GCC@. A list of supported @var{options} follows; @samp{configure
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350--help} may list other options, but those not listed below may not
351work and should not normally be used.
f42974dc 352
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353@table @code
354@item --prefix=@var{dirname}
355Specify the toplevel installation
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356directory. This is the recommended way to install the tools into a directory
357other than the default. The toplevel installation directory defaults to
6cfb3f16 358@file{/usr/local}.
f42974dc 359
38209993 360We @strong{highly} recommend against @var{dirname} being the same or a
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361subdirectory of @var{objdir} or vice versa. If specifying a directory
362beneath a user's home directory tree, some shells will not expand
363@var{dirname} correctly if it contains the @samp{~} metacharacter; use
364@env{$HOME} instead.
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365
366These additional options control where certain parts of the distribution
367are installed. Normally you should not need to use these options.
ef88b07d 368@table @code
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369@item --exec-prefix=@var{dirname}
370Specify the toplevel installation directory for architecture-dependent
371files. The default is @file{@var{prefix}}.
372
373@item --bindir=@var{dirname}
374Specify the installation directory for the executables called by users
375(such as @command{gcc} and @command{g++}). The default is
376@file{@var{exec-prefix}/bin}.
377
378@item --libdir=@var{dirname}
379Specify the installation directory for object code libraries and
161d7b59 380internal parts of GCC@. The default is @file{@var{exec-prefix}/lib}.
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381
382@item --with-slibdir=@var{dirname}
383Specify the installation directory for the shared libgcc library. The
384default is @file{@var{libdir}}.
385
386@item --infodir=@var{dirname}
387Specify the installation directory for documentation in info format.
388The default is @file{@var{prefix}/info}.
389
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390@item --datadir=@var{dirname}
391Specify the installation directory for some architecture-independent
392data files referenced by GCC@. The default is @file{@var{prefix}/share}.
393
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394@item --mandir=@var{dirname}
395Specify the installation directory for manual pages. The default is
396@file{@var{prefix}/man}. (Note that the manual pages are only extracts from
397the full GCC manuals, which are provided in Texinfo format. The
398@command{g77} manpage is unmaintained and may be out of date; the others
399are derived by an automatic conversion process from parts of the full
400manual.)
401
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402@item --with-gxx-include-dir=@var{dirname}
403Specify
eea81d3e 404the installation directory for G++ header files. The default is
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405@file{@var{prefix}/include/g++-v3}.
406
ef88b07d 407@end table
f42974dc 408
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409@item --program-prefix=@var{prefix}
410GCC supports some transformations of the names of its programs when
411installing them. This option prepends @var{prefix} to the names of
412programs to install in @var{bindir} (see above). For example, specifying
413@option{--program-prefix=foo-} would result in @samp{gcc}
414being installed as @file{/usr/local/bin/foo-gcc}.
415
416@item --program-suffix=@var{suffix}
417Appends @var{suffix} to the names of programs to install in @var{bindir}
418(see above). For example, specifying @option{--program-suffix=-3.1}
419would result in @samp{gcc} being installed as
420@file{/usr/local/bin/gcc-3.1}.
421
422@item --program-transform-name=@var{pattern}
423Applies the @samp{sed} script @var{pattern} to be applied to the names
424of programs to install in @var{bindir} (see above). @var{pattern} has to
425consist of one or more basic @samp{sed} editing commands, separated by
426semicolons. For example, if you want the @samp{gcc} program name to be
427transformed to the installed program @file{/usr/local/bin/myowngcc} and
428the @samp{g++} program name to be transformed to
429@file{/usr/local/bin/gspecial++} without changing other program names,
430you could use the pattern
431@option{--program-transform-name='s/^gcc$/myowngcc/; s/^g++$/gspecial++/'}
432to achieve this effect.
433
434All three options can be combined and used together, resulting in more
435complex conversion patterns. As a basic rule, @var{prefix} (and
436@var{suffix}) are prepended (appended) before further transformations
437can happen with a special transformation script @var{pattern}.
438
8c085f6f 439As currently implemented, this option only takes effect for native
b21d216c 440builds; cross compiler binaries' names are not transformed even when a
8c085f6f 441transformation is explicitly asked for by one of these options.
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442
443For native builds, some of the installed programs are also installed
444with the target alias in front of their name, as in
445@samp{i686-pc-linux-gnu-gcc}. All of the above transformations happen
446before the target alias is prepended to the name - so, specifying
447@option{--program-prefix=foo-} and @option{program-suffix=-3.1}, the
448resulting binary would be installed as
449@file{/usr/local/bin/i686-pc-linux-gnu-foo-gcc-3.1}.
450
8ecab453 451As a last shortcoming, none of the installed Ada programs are
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452transformed yet, which will be fixed in some time.
453
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454@item --with-local-prefix=@var{dirname}
455Specify the
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456installation directory for local include files. The default is
457@file{/usr/local}. Specify this option if you want the compiler to
458search directory @file{@var{dirname}/include} for locally installed
459header files @emph{instead} of @file{/usr/local/include}.
460
461You should specify @option{--with-local-prefix} @strong{only} if your
462site has a different convention (not @file{/usr/local}) for where to put
463site-specific files.
464
465The default value for @option{--with-local-prefix} is @file{/usr/local}
466regardless of the value of @option{--prefix}. Specifying
467@option{--prefix} has no effect on which directory GCC searches for
468local header files. This may seem counterintuitive, but actually it is
469logical.
470
471The purpose of @option{--prefix} is to specify where to @emph{install
472GCC}. The local header files in @file{/usr/local/include}---if you put
161d7b59 473any in that directory---are not part of GCC@. They are part of other
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474programs---perhaps many others. (GCC installs its own header files in
475another directory which is based on the @option{--prefix} value.)
476
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477Both the local-prefix include directory and the GCC-prefix include
478directory are part of GCC's "system include" directories. Although these
479two directories are not fixed, they need to be searched in the proper
480order for the correct processing of the include_next directive. The
481local-prefix include directory is searched before the GCC-prefix
482include directory. Another characteristic of system include directories
483is that pedantic warnings are turned off for headers in these directories.
484
485Some autoconf macros add @option{-I @var{directory}} options to the
486compiler command line, to ensure that directories containing installed
487packages' headers are searched. When @var{directory} is one of GCC's
488system include directories, GCC will ignore the option so that system
489directories continue to be processed in the correct order. This
490may result in a search order different from what was specified but the
491directory will still be searched.
492
493GCC automatically searches for ordinary libraries using
494@env{GCC_EXEC_PREFIX}. Thus, when the same installation prefix is
495used for both GCC and packages, GCC will automatically search for
496both headers and libraries. This provides a configuration that is
497easy to use. GCC behaves in a manner similar to that when it is
498installed as a system compiler in @file{/usr}.
499
500Sites that need to install multiple versions of GCC may not want to
501use the above simple configuration. It is possible to use the
502@option{--program-prefix}, @option{--program-suffix} and
503@option{--program-transform-name} options to install multiple versions
504into a single directory, but it may be simpler to use different prefixes
505and the @option{--with-local-prefix} option to specify the location of the
506site-specific files for each version. It will then be necessary for
507users to specify explicitly the location of local site libraries
508(e.g., with @env{LIBRARY_PATH}).
509
510The same value can be used for both @option{--with-local-prefix} and
511@option{--prefix} provided it is not @file{/usr}. This can be used
512to avoid the default search of @file{/usr/local/include}.
513
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514@strong{Do not} specify @file{/usr} as the @option{--with-local-prefix}!
515The directory you use for @option{--with-local-prefix} @strong{must not}
516contain any of the system's standard header files. If it did contain
517them, certain programs would be miscompiled (including GNU Emacs, on
518certain targets), because this would override and nullify the header
4c64396e 519file corrections made by the @command{fixincludes} script.
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520
521Indications are that people who use this option use it based on mistaken
522ideas of what it is for. People use it as if it specified where to
161d7b59 523install part of GCC@. Perhaps they make this assumption because
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524installing GCC creates the directory.
525
6cfb3f16 526@item --enable-shared[=@var{package}[,@dots{}]]
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527Build shared versions of libraries, if shared libraries are supported on
528the target platform. Unlike GCC 2.95.x and earlier, shared libraries
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529are enabled by default on all platforms that support shared libraries,
530except for @samp{libobjc} which is built as a static library only by
531default.
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532
533If a list of packages is given as an argument, build shared libraries
534only for the listed packages. For other packages, only static libraries
535will be built. Package names currently recognized in the GCC tree are
536@samp{libgcc} (also known as @samp{gcc}), @samp{libstdc++} (not
537@samp{libstdc++-v3}), @samp{libffi}, @samp{zlib}, @samp{boehm-gc} and
538@samp{libjava}. Note that @samp{libobjc} does not recognize itself by
539any name, so, if you list package names in @option{--enable-shared},
eea81d3e 540you will only get static Objective-C libraries. @samp{libf2c} and
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541@samp{libiberty} do not support shared libraries at all.
542
543Use @option{--disable-shared} to build only static libraries. Note that
544@option{--disable-shared} does not accept a list of package names as
545argument, only @option{--enable-shared} does.
f42974dc 546
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547@item @anchor{with-gnu-as}--with-gnu-as
548Specify that the compiler should assume that the
767094dd 549assembler it finds is the GNU assembler. However, this does not modify
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550the rules to find an assembler and will result in confusion if the
551assembler found is not actually the GNU assembler. (Confusion may also
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552result if the compiler finds the GNU assembler but has not been
553configured with @option{--with-gnu-as}.) If you have more than one
38209993 554assembler installed on your system, you may want to use this option in
eea81d3e 555connection with @option{--with-as=@var{pathname}}.
38209993 556
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557The following systems are the only ones where it makes a difference
558whether you use the GNU assembler. On any other system,
559@option{--with-gnu-as} has no effect.
560
561@itemize bullet
562@item @samp{hppa1.0-@var{any}-@var{any}}
563@item @samp{hppa1.1-@var{any}-@var{any}}
564@item @samp{i386-@var{any}-sysv}
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565@item @samp{m68k-bull-sysv}
566@item @samp{m68k-hp-hpux}
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567@item @samp{m68000-hp-hpux}
568@item @samp{m68000-att-sysv}
569@item @samp{@var{any}-lynx-lynxos}
570@item @samp{mips-@var{any}}
571@end itemize
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572
573On the systems listed above (except for the HP-PA, for ISC on the
574386, and for @samp{mips-sgi-irix5.*}), if you use the GNU assembler,
575you should also use the GNU linker (and specify @option{--with-gnu-ld}).
576
eea81d3e 577@item --with-as=@var{pathname}
ef88b07d 578Specify that the
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579compiler should use the assembler pointed to by @var{pathname}, rather
580than the one found by the standard rules to find an assembler, which
581are:
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582@itemize @bullet
583@item
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584Check the
585@file{@var{exec_prefix}/lib/gcc-lib/@var{target}/@var{version}}
586directory, where @var{exec_prefix} defaults to @var{prefix} which
587defaults to @file{/usr/local} unless overridden by the
eea81d3e 588@option{--prefix=@var{pathname}} switch described above. @var{target} is the
b953cc4b 589target system triple, such as @samp{sparc-sun-solaris2.7}, and
eea81d3e 590@var{version} denotes the GCC version, such as 3.0.
f42974dc 591@item
e979f9e8 592Check operating system specific directories (e.g.@: @file{/usr/ccs/bin} on
250d5688 593Sun Solaris 2).
f42974dc 594@end itemize
767094dd 595Note that these rules do not check for the value of @env{PATH}. You may
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596want to use @option{--with-as} if no assembler is installed in the
597directories listed above, or if you have multiple assemblers installed
598and want to choose one that is not found by the above rules.
f42974dc 599
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600@item @anchor{with-gnu-ld}--with-gnu-ld
601Same as @uref{#with-gnu-as,,@option{--with-gnu-as}}
38209993 602but for linker.
20293b4c 603
f42974dc 604
eea81d3e 605@item --with-ld=@var{pathname}
ef88b07d 606Same as
38209993 607@option{--with-as}, but for the linker.
f42974dc 608
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609@item --with-stabs
610Specify that stabs debugging
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611information should be used instead of whatever format the host normally
612uses. Normally GCC uses the same debug format as the host system.
f42974dc 613
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614On MIPS based systems and on Alphas, you must specify whether you want
615GCC to create the normal ECOFF debugging format, or to use BSD-style
616stabs passed through the ECOFF symbol table. The normal ECOFF debug
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617format cannot fully handle languages other than C@. BSD stabs format can
618handle other languages, but it only works with the GNU debugger GDB@.
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619
620Normally, GCC uses the ECOFF debugging format by default; if you
161d7b59 621prefer BSD stabs, specify @option{--with-stabs} when you configure GCC@.
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622
623No matter which default you choose when you configure GCC, the user
624can use the @option{-gcoff} and @option{-gstabs+} options to specify explicitly
625the debug format for a particular compilation.
626
627@option{--with-stabs} is meaningful on the ISC system on the 386, also, if
628@option{--with-gas} is used. It selects use of stabs debugging
629information embedded in COFF output. This kind of debugging information
630supports C++ well; ordinary COFF debugging information does not.
631
632@option{--with-stabs} is also meaningful on 386 systems running SVR4. It
633selects use of stabs debugging information embedded in ELF output. The
634C++ compiler currently (2.6.0) does not support the DWARF debugging
635information normally used on 386 SVR4 platforms; stabs provide a
636workable alternative. This requires gas and gdb, as the normal SVR4
637tools can not generate or interpret stabs.
638
eea81d3e 639@item --disable-multilib
ef88b07d 640Specify that multiple target
eea81d3e
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641libraries to support different target variants, calling
642conventions, etc should not be built. The default is to build a
643predefined set of them.
f42974dc 644
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645Some targets provide finer-grained control over which multilibs are built
646(e.g., @option{--disable-softfloat}):
647@table @code
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648@item arc-*-elf*
649biendian.
650
651@item arm-*-*
652fpu, 26bit, underscore, interwork, biendian, nofmult.
653
654@item m68*-*-*
655softfloat, m68881, m68000, m68020.
656
657@item mips*-*-*
658single-float, biendian, softfloat.
659
660@item powerpc*-*-*, rs6000*-*-*
661aix64, pthread, softfloat, powercpu, powerpccpu, powerpcos, biendian,
f282ffb3 662sysv, aix.
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663
664@end table
665
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666@item --enable-threads
667Specify that the target
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668supports threads. This affects the Objective-C compiler and runtime
669library, and exception handling for other languages like C++ and Java.
6ac48571 670On some systems, this is the default.
f42974dc 671
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672In general, the best (and, in many cases, the only known) threading
673model available will be configured for use. Beware that on some
674systems, gcc has not been taught what threading models are generally
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675available for the system. In this case, @option{--enable-threads} is an
676alias for @option{--enable-threads=single}.
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677
678@item --disable-threads
679Specify that threading support should be disabled for the system.
3c6bb1db 680This is an alias for @option{--enable-threads=single}.
f6160ed5 681
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682@item --enable-threads=@var{lib}
683Specify that
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684@var{lib} is the thread support library. This affects the Objective-C
685compiler and runtime library, and exception handling for other languages
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686like C++ and Java. The possibilities for @var{lib} are:
687
688@table @code
689@item aix
690AIX thread support.
691@item dce
692DCE thread support.
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693@item gnat
694Ada tasking support. For non-Ada programs, this setting is equivalent
695to @samp{single}. When used in conjunction with the Ada run time, it
696causes GCC to use the same thread primitives as Ada uses. This option
697is necessary when using both Ada and the back end exception handling,
698which is the default for most Ada targets.
f85b8d1a 699@item mach
eea81d3e 700Generic MACH thread support, known to work on NeXTSTEP@. (Please note
3c6bb1db 701that the file needed to support this configuration, @file{gthr-mach.h}, is
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702missing and thus this setting will cause a known bootstrap failure.)
703@item no
704This is an alias for @samp{single}.
f85b8d1a 705@item posix
c771326b 706Generic POSIX thread support.
f85b8d1a 707@item pthreads
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708Same as @samp{posix} on arm*-*-linux*, *-*-chorusos* and *-*-freebsd*
709only. A future release of gcc might remove this alias or extend it
710to all platforms.
711@item rtems
712RTEMS thread support.
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713@item single
714Disable thread support, should work for all platforms.
715@item solaris
eea81d3e 716Sun Solaris 2 thread support.
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717@item vxworks
718VxWorks thread support.
719@item win32
720Microsoft Win32 API thread support.
721@end table
f42974dc 722
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723@item --with-cpu=@var{cpu}
724Specify which cpu variant the
f42974dc 725compiler should generate code for by default. This is currently
377dfc82 726only supported on some ports, specifically arm, powerpc, and
161d7b59 727SPARC@. If configure does not recognize the model name (e.g.@: arm700,
ec5b5ef1 728603e, or ultrasparc) you provide, please check the
b15da5b7 729@file{gcc/config.gcc} script for a complete list of supported models.
f42974dc 730
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731@item --enable-altivec
732Specify that the target supports AltiVec vector enhancements. This
733option will adjust the ABI for AltiVec enhancements, as well as generate
734AltiVec code when appropriate. This option is only available for
735PowerPC systems.
736
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737@item --enable-target-optspace
738Specify that target
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739libraries should be optimized for code space instead of code speed.
740This is the default for the m32r platform.
f42974dc 741
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742@item --disable-cpp
743Specify that a user visible @command{cpp} program should not be installed.
744
745@item --with-cpp-install-dir=@var{dirname}
746Specify that the user visible @command{cpp} program should be installed
747in @file{@var{prefix}/@var{dirname}/cpp}, in addition to @var{bindir}.
f42974dc 748
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749@item --enable-initfini-array
750Force the use of sections @code{.init_array} and @code{.fini_array}
751(instead of @code{.init} and @code{.fini}) for constructors and
752destructors. Option @option{--disable-initfini-array} has the
753opposite effect. If neither option is specified, the configure script
754will try to guess whether the @code{.init_array} and
755@code{.fini_array} sections are supported and, if they are, use them.
756
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757@item --enable-maintainer-mode
758The build rules that
6cfb3f16 759regenerate the GCC master message catalog @file{gcc.pot} are normally
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760disabled. This is because it can only be rebuilt if the complete source
761tree is present. If you have changed the sources and want to rebuild the
6ac48571 762catalog, configuring with @option{--enable-maintainer-mode} will enable
767094dd 763this. Note that you need a recent version of the @code{gettext} tools
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764to do so.
765
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766@item --enable-version-specific-runtime-libs
767Specify
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768that runtime libraries should be installed in the compiler specific
769subdirectory (@file{@var{libsubdir}}) rather than the usual places. In
eea81d3e 770addition, @samp{libstdc++}'s include files will be installed in
38209993 771@file{@var{libsubdir}/include/g++} unless you overruled it by using
6cfb3f16 772@option{--with-gxx-include-dir=@var{dirname}}. Using this option is
38209993 773particularly useful if you intend to use several versions of GCC in
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RO
774parallel. This is currently supported by @samp{libf2c} and
775@samp{libstdc++}, and is the default for @samp{libobjc} which cannot be
776changed in this case.
38209993 777
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778@item --enable-languages=@var{lang1},@var{lang2},@dots{}
779Specify that only a particular subset of compilers and
767094dd 780their runtime libraries should be built. For a list of valid values for
6cfb3f16 781@var{langN} you can issue the following command in the
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RO
782@file{gcc} directory of your GCC source tree:@*
783@example
784grep language= */config-lang.in
785@end example
786Currently, you can use any of the following:
e23381df 787@code{ada}, @code{c}, @code{c++}, @code{f77}, @code{java}, @code{objc}.
8ecab453 788Building the Ada compiler has special requirements, see below.@*
38209993 789If you do not pass this flag, all languages available in the @file{gcc}
6cfb3f16 790sub-tree will be configured. Re-defining @code{LANGUAGES} when calling
ef88b07d 791@samp{make bootstrap} @strong{does not} work anymore, as those
38209993 792language sub-directories might not have been configured!
f42974dc 793
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794@item --disable-libgcj
795Specify that the run-time libraries
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796used by GCJ should not be built. This is useful in case you intend
797to use GCJ with some other run-time, or you're going to install it
798separately, or it just happens not to build on your particular
6c0a4eab 799machine. In general, if the Java front end is enabled, the GCJ
f42974dc 800libraries will be enabled too, unless they're known to not work on
eea81d3e 801the target platform. If GCJ is enabled but @samp{libgcj} isn't built, you
f42974dc 802may need to port it; in this case, before modifying the top-level
eea81d3e 803@file{configure.in} so that @samp{libgcj} is enabled by default on this platform,
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804you may use @option{--enable-libgcj} to override the default.
805
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806@item --with-dwarf2
807Specify that the compiler should
eea81d3e 808use DWARF 2 debugging information as the default.
f85b8d1a
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809
810@item --enable-win32-registry
eea81d3e 811@itemx --enable-win32-registry=@var{key}
f85b8d1a 812@itemx --disable-win32-registry
6cfb3f16 813The @option{--enable-win32-registry} option enables Windows-hosted GCC
f85b8d1a
JM
814to look up installations paths in the registry using the following key:
815
816@smallexample
eea81d3e 817@code{HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Free Software Foundation\@var{key}}
f85b8d1a
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818@end smallexample
819
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RO
820@var{key} defaults to GCC version number, and can be overridden by the
821@option{--enable-win32-registry=@var{key}} option. Vendors and distributors
f85b8d1a
JM
822who use custom installers are encouraged to provide a different key,
823perhaps one comprised of vendor name and GCC version number, to
767094dd 824avoid conflict with existing installations. This feature is enabled
6cfb3f16 825by default, and can be disabled by @option{--disable-win32-registry}
f85b8d1a
JM
826option. This option has no effect on the other hosts.
827
828@item --nfp
829Specify that the machine does not have a floating point unit. This
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LH
830option only applies to @samp{m68k-sun-sunos@var{n}}. On any other
831system, @option{--nfp} has no effect.
f85b8d1a 832
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833@item --enable-werror
834@itemx --disable-werror
835@itemx --enable-werror=yes
836@itemx --enable-werror=no
837When you specify this option, it controls whether certain files in the
838compiler are built with @option{-Werror} in bootstrap stage2 and later.
839If you don't specify it, @option{-Werror} is turned on for the main
840development trunk. However it defaults to off for release branches and
841final releases. The specific files which get @option{-Werror} are
842controlled by the Makefiles.
843
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844@item --enable-checking
845@itemx --enable-checking=@var{list}
846When you specify this option, the compiler is built to perform checking
847of tree node types when referencing fields of that node, and some other
848internal consistency checks. This does not change the generated code,
849but adds error checking within the compiler. This will slow down the
850compiler and may only work properly if you are building the compiler
161d7b59 851with GCC@. This is on by default when building from CVS or snapshots,
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852but off for releases. More control over the checks may be had by
853specifying @var{list}; the categories of checks available are
4c76f856
JJ
854@samp{misc}, @samp{tree}, @samp{gc}, @samp{rtl}, @samp{rtlflag} and
855@samp{gcac}. The
856default when @var{list} is not specified is @samp{misc,tree,gc,rtlflag}; the
f85b8d1a
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857checks @samp{rtl} and @samp{gcac} are very expensive.
858
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859@item --enable-coverage
860@item --enable-coverage=@var{level}
861With this option, the compiler is built to collect self coverage
862information, every time it is run. This is for internal development
863purposes, and only works when the compiler is being built with gcc. The
864@var{level} argument controls whether the compiler is built optimized or
865not, values are @samp{opt} and @samp{noopt}. For coverage analysis you
866want to disable optimization, for performance analysis you want to
867enable optimization. When coverage is enabled, the default level is
868without optimization.
869
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870@item --enable-nls
871@itemx --disable-nls
6cfb3f16 872The @option{--enable-nls} option enables Native Language Support (NLS),
f85b8d1a 873which lets GCC output diagnostics in languages other than American
767094dd 874English. Native Language Support is enabled by default if not doing a
161d7b59 875canadian cross build. The @option{--disable-nls} option disables NLS@.
f85b8d1a
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876
877@item --with-included-gettext
c771326b 878If NLS is enabled, the @option{--with-included-gettext} option causes the build
021c4bfd 879procedure to prefer its copy of GNU @command{gettext}.
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880
881@item --with-catgets
882If NLS is enabled, and if the host lacks @code{gettext} but has the
883inferior @code{catgets} interface, the GCC build procedure normally
884ignores @code{catgets} and instead uses GCC's copy of the GNU
6cfb3f16 885@code{gettext} library. The @option{--with-catgets} option causes the
f85b8d1a 886build procedure to use the host's @code{catgets} in this situation.
80f9249a 887
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888@item --with-libiconv-prefix=@var{dir}
889Search for libiconv header files in @file{@var{dir}/include} and
890libiconv library files in @file{@var{dir}/lib}.
891
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892@item --with-system-zlib
893Use installed zlib rather than that included with GCC@. This option
894only applies if the Java front end is being built.
9340544b
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895
896@item --enable-obsolete
897Enable configuration for an obsoleted system. If you attempt to
898configure GCC for a system (build, host, or target) which has been
899obsoleted, and you do not specify this flag, configure will halt with an
900error message.
901
902All support for systems which have been obsoleted in one release of GCC
903is removed entirely in the next major release, unless someone steps
904forward to maintain the port.
ef88b07d 905@end table
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906
907Some options which only apply to building cross compilers:
ef88b07d 908@table @code
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909@item --with-sysroot
910@itemx --with-sysroot=@var{dir}
911Tells GCC to consider @var{dir} as the root of a tree that contains a
912(subset of) the root filesystem of the target operating system.
913Target system headers, libraries and run-time object files will be
914searched in there. The specified directory is not copied into the
915install tree, unlike the options @option{--with-headers} and
916@option{--with-libs} that this option obsoletes. The default value,
917in case @option{--with-sysroot} is not given an argument, is
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918@option{$@{gcc_tooldir@}/sys-root}. If the specified directory is a
919subdirectory of @option{$@{exec_prefix@}}, then it will be found relative to
920the GCC binaries if the installation tree is moved.
4977bab6 921
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922@item --with-headers
923@itemx --with-headers=@var{dir}
4977bab6 924Deprecated in favor of @option{--with-sysroot}.
65a824f6
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925Specifies that target headers are available when building a cross compiler.
926The @var{dir} argument specifies a directory which has the target include
927files. These include files will be copied into the @file{gcc} install
928directory. @emph{This option with the @var{dir} argument is required} when
929building a cross compiler, if @file{@var{prefix}/@var{target}/sys-include}
930doesn't pre-exist. If @file{@var{prefix}/@var{target}/sys-include} does
931pre-exist, the @var{dir} argument may be omitted. @command{fixincludes}
932will be run on these files to make them compatible with GCC.
933@item --with-libs
934@itemx --with-libs=``@var{dir1} @var{dir2} @dots{} @var{dirN}''
4977bab6 935Deprecated in favor of @option{--with-sysroot}.
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936Specifies a list of directories which contain the target runtime
937libraries. These libraries will be copied into the @file{gcc} install
65a824f6
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938directory. If the directory list is omitted, this option has no
939effect.
ef88b07d 940@item --with-newlib
eea81d3e 941Specifies that @samp{newlib} is
38209993 942being used as the target C library. This causes @code{__eprintf} to be
eea81d3e
RO
943omitted from @file{libgcc.a} on the assumption that it will be provided by
944@samp{newlib}.
ef88b07d 945@end table
f9047ed3 946
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LG
947Note that each @option{--enable} option has a corresponding
948@option{--disable} option and that each @option{--with} option has a
949corresponding @option{--without} option.
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950
951@html
b8db17af 952<hr />
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953<p>
954@end html
955@ifhtml
956@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
957@end ifhtml
958@end ifset
959
960@c ***Building****************************************************************
6cfb3f16 961@ifnothtml
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962@comment node-name, next, previous, up
963@node Building, Testing, Configuration, Installing GCC
6cfb3f16 964@end ifnothtml
f42974dc 965@ifset buildhtml
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966@ifnothtml
967@chapter Building
968@end ifnothtml
969@cindex Installing GCC: Building
970
971Now that GCC is configured, you are ready to build the compiler and
972runtime libraries.
973
58db9d1a 974We @strong{highly} recommend that GCC be built using GNU make;
f282ffb3 975other versions may work, then again they might not.
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AH
976GNU make is required for compiling GNAT (the Ada compiler) and the Java
977runtime library.
f42974dc
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978
979(For example, many broken versions of make will fail if you use the
b8df899a
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980recommended setup where @var{objdir} is different from @var{srcdir}.
981Other broken versions may recompile parts of the compiler when
982installing the compiler.)
f42974dc 983
b8df899a 984Some commands executed when making the compiler may fail (return a
7ba4ca63 985nonzero status) and be ignored by @command{make}. These failures, which
b8df899a
JM
986are often due to files that were not found, are expected, and can safely
987be ignored.
988
989It is normal to have compiler warnings when compiling certain files.
990Unless you are a GCC developer, you can generally ignore these warnings
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991unless they cause compilation to fail. Developers should attempt to fix
992any warnings encountered, however they can temporarily continue past
993warnings-as-errors by specifying the configure flag
994@option{--disable-werror}.
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995
996On certain old systems, defining certain environment variables such as
6cfb3f16 997@env{CC} can interfere with the functioning of @command{make}.
b8df899a
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998
999If you encounter seemingly strange errors when trying to build the
1000compiler in a directory other than the source directory, it could be
1001because you have previously configured the compiler in the source
1002directory. Make sure you have done all the necessary preparations.
1003
1004If you build GCC on a BSD system using a directory stored in an old System
4c64396e 1005V file system, problems may occur in running @command{fixincludes} if the
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1006System V file system doesn't support symbolic links. These problems
1007result in a failure to fix the declaration of @code{size_t} in
1008@file{sys/types.h}. If you find that @code{size_t} is a signed type and
1009that type mismatches occur, this could be the cause.
1010
161d7b59 1011The solution is not to use such a directory for building GCC@.
f42974dc 1012
f85b8d1a
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1013When building from CVS or snapshots, or if you modify parser sources,
1014you need the Bison parser generator installed. Any version 1.25 or
1015later should work; older versions may also work. If you do not modify
1016parser sources, releases contain the Bison-generated files and you do
1017not need Bison installed to build them.
1018
1019When building from CVS or snapshots, or if you modify Texinfo
a38f87a9 1020documentation, you need version 4.2 or later of Texinfo installed if you
f85b8d1a
JM
1021want Info documentation to be regenerated. Releases contain Info
1022documentation pre-built for the unmodified documentation in the release.
1023
f42974dc
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1024@section Building a native compiler
1025
f9047ed3 1026For a native build issue the command @samp{make bootstrap}. This
f42974dc
DW
1027will build the entire GCC system, which includes the following steps:
1028
1029@itemize @bullet
1030@item
1031Build host tools necessary to build the compiler such as texinfo, bison,
1032gperf.
1033
1034@item
1035Build target tools for use by the compiler such as binutils (bfd,
eea81d3e 1036binutils, gas, gprof, ld, and opcodes)
f282ffb3 1037if they have been individually linked
f42974dc
DW
1038or moved into the top level GCC source tree before configuring.
1039
1040@item
1041Perform a 3-stage bootstrap of the compiler.
1042
1043@item
1044Perform a comparison test of the stage2 and stage3 compilers.
1045
1046@item
1047Build runtime libraries using the stage3 compiler from the previous step.
f9047ed3 1048
f42974dc
DW
1049@end itemize
1050
38209993
LG
1051If you are short on disk space you might consider @samp{make
1052bootstrap-lean} instead. This is identical to @samp{make
1053bootstrap} except that object files from the stage1 and
f42974dc
DW
1054stage2 of the 3-stage bootstrap of the compiler are deleted as
1055soon as they are no longer needed.
1056
f42974dc
DW
1057If you want to save additional space during the bootstrap and in
1058the final installation as well, you can build the compiler binaries
8c085f6f 1059without debugging information as in the following example. This will save
f42974dc
DW
1060roughly 40% of disk space both for the bootstrap and the final installation.
1061(Libraries will still contain debugging information.)
1062
8c085f6f
JJ
1063@example
1064 make CFLAGS='-O' LIBCFLAGS='-g -O2' \
1065 LIBCXXFLAGS='-g -O2 -fno-implicit-templates' bootstrap
1066@end example
1067
eea81d3e
RO
1068If you wish to use non-default GCC flags when compiling the stage2 and
1069stage3 compilers, set @code{BOOT_CFLAGS} on the command line when doing
f85b8d1a
JM
1070@samp{make bootstrap}. Non-default optimization flags are less well
1071tested here than the default of @samp{-g -O2}, but should still work.
1072In a few cases, you may find that you need to specify special flags such
1073as @option{-msoft-float} here to complete the bootstrap; or, if the
1074native compiler miscompiles the stage1 compiler, you may need to work
1075around this, by choosing @code{BOOT_CFLAGS} to avoid the parts of the
1076stage1 compiler that were miscompiled, or by using @samp{make
1077bootstrap4} to increase the number of stages of bootstrap.
1078
6cfb3f16 1079If you used the flag @option{--enable-languages=@dots{}} to restrict
f42974dc 1080the compilers to be built, only those you've actually enabled will be
767094dd 1081built. This will of course only build those runtime libraries, for
f42974dc 1082which the particular compiler has been built. Please note,
eea81d3e 1083that re-defining @env{LANGUAGES} when calling @samp{make bootstrap}
ef88b07d 1084@strong{does not} work anymore!
f42974dc 1085
f85b8d1a 1086If the comparison of stage2 and stage3 fails, this normally indicates
eea81d3e 1087that the stage2 compiler has compiled GCC incorrectly, and is therefore
f85b8d1a
JM
1088a potentially serious bug which you should investigate and report. (On
1089a few systems, meaningful comparison of object files is impossible; they
1090always appear ``different''. If you encounter this problem, you will
1091need to disable comparison in the @file{Makefile}.)
f42974dc
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1092
1093@section Building a cross compiler
1094
1095We recommend reading the
1096@uref{http://www.objsw.com/CrossGCC/,,crossgcc FAQ}
1097for information about building cross compilers.
1098
1099When building a cross compiler, it is not generally possible to do a
11003-stage bootstrap of the compiler. This makes for an interesting problem
161d7b59 1101as parts of GCC can only be built with GCC@.
f42974dc
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1102
1103To build a cross compiler, we first recommend building and installing a
1104native compiler. You can then use the native GCC compiler to build the
635771af
JM
1105cross compiler. The installed native compiler needs to be GCC version
11062.95 or later.
f42974dc
DW
1107
1108Assuming you have already installed a native copy of GCC and configured
6cfb3f16 1109your cross compiler, issue the command @command{make}, which performs the
f42974dc
DW
1110following steps:
1111
1112@itemize @bullet
1113@item
1114Build host tools necessary to build the compiler such as texinfo, bison,
1115gperf.
1116
1117@item
1118Build target tools for use by the compiler such as binutils (bfd,
1119binutils, gas, gprof, ld, and opcodes)
1120if they have been individually linked or moved into the top level GCC source
1121tree before configuring.
1122
1123@item
1124Build the compiler (single stage only).
1125
1126@item
1127Build runtime libraries using the compiler from the previous step.
1128@end itemize
1129
1130Note that if an error occurs in any step the make process will exit.
1131
1132@section Building in parallel
1133
38209993
LG
1134If you have a multiprocessor system you can use @samp{make bootstrap
1135MAKE="make -j 2" -j 2} or just @samp{make -j 2 bootstrap}
1136for GNU Make 3.79 and above instead of just @samp{make bootstrap}
161d7b59 1137when building GCC@. You can use a bigger number instead of two if
f42974dc
DW
1138you like. In most cases, it won't help to use a number bigger than
1139the number of processors in your machine.
1140
e23381df
GB
1141@section Building the Ada compiler
1142
1143In order to build GNAT, the Ada compiler, you need a working GNAT
3e98a119 1144compiler (GNAT version 3.14 or later, or GCC version 3.1 or later),
38e23049 1145since the Ada front end is written in Ada (with some
e23381df
GB
1146GNAT-specific extensions), and GNU make.
1147
1148However, you do not need a full installation of GNAT, just the GNAT
1149binary @file{gnat1}, a copy of @file{gnatbind}, and a compiler driver
1150which can deal with Ada input (by invoking the @file{gnat1} binary).
1151You can specify this compiler driver by setting the @env{ADAC}
1152environment variable at the configure step. @command{configure} can
1153detect the driver automatically if it has got a common name such as
1154@command{gcc} or @command{gnatgcc}. Of course, you still need a working
1155C compiler (the compiler driver can be different or not).
38e23049
JM
1156@command{configure} does not test whether the GNAT installation works
1157and has a sufficiently recent version; if too old a GNAT version is
1158installed, the build will fail unless @option{--enable-languages} is
1159used to disable building the Ada front end.
e23381df
GB
1160
1161Additional build tools (such as @command{gnatmake}) or a working GNAT
1162run-time library installation are usually @emph{not} required. However,
9026a957 1163if you want to bootstrap the compiler using a minimal version of GNAT,
e23381df 1164you have to issue the following commands before invoking @samp{make
9026a957 1165bootstrap} (this assumes that you start with an unmodified and consistent
e23381df
GB
1166source distribution):
1167
1168@example
1169 cd @var{srcdir}/gcc/ada
1170 touch treeprs.ads [es]info.h nmake.ad[bs]
1171@end example
1172
1173At the moment, the GNAT library and several tools for GNAT are not built
f282ffb3 1174by @samp{make bootstrap}. You have to invoke
e23381df
GB
1175@samp{make gnatlib_and_tools} in the @file{@var{objdir}/gcc}
1176subdirectory before proceeding with the next steps.
1177
1178For example, you can build a native Ada compiler by issuing the
1179following commands (assuming @command{make} is GNU make):
1180
1181@example
1182 cd @var{objdir}
f282ffb3 1183 @var{srcdir}/configure --enable-languages=c,ada
e23381df
GB
1184 cd @var{srcdir}/gcc/ada
1185 touch treeprs.ads [es]info.h nmake.ad[bs]
f282ffb3 1186 cd @var{objdir}
e23381df
GB
1187 make bootstrap
1188 cd gcc
1189 make gnatlib_and_tools
1190 cd ..
1191@end example
1192
1193Currently, when compiling the Ada front end, you cannot use the parallel
1194build feature described in the previous section.
1195
f42974dc 1196@html
b8db17af 1197<hr />
f42974dc
DW
1198<p>
1199@end html
1200@ifhtml
1201@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
1202@end ifhtml
1203@end ifset
1204
1205@c ***Testing*****************************************************************
6cfb3f16 1206@ifnothtml
f42974dc
DW
1207@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1208@node Testing, Final install, Building, Installing GCC
6cfb3f16 1209@end ifnothtml
f42974dc 1210@ifset testhtml
f42974dc
DW
1211@ifnothtml
1212@chapter Installing GCC: Testing
1213@end ifnothtml
1214@cindex Testing
1215@cindex Installing GCC: Testing
1216@cindex Testsuite
1217
f97903cc
JJ
1218Before you install GCC, we encourage you to run the testsuites and to
1219compare your results with results from a similar configuration that have
1220been submitted to the
1221@uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-testresults/,,gcc-testresults mailing list}.
05253aed
JJ
1222Some of these archived results are linked from the build status lists
1223at @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/buildstat.html}, although not everyone who
1224reports a successful build runs the testsuites and submits the results.
f97903cc
JJ
1225This step is optional and may require you to download additional software,
1226but it can give you confidence in your new GCC installation or point out
1227problems before you install and start using your new GCC.
f42974dc 1228
f9047ed3 1229First, you must have @uref{download.html,,downloaded the testsuites}.
f97903cc
JJ
1230These are part of the full distribution, but if you downloaded the
1231``core'' compiler plus any front ends, you must download the testsuites
1232separately.
f42974dc 1233
f97903cc 1234Second, you must have the testing tools installed. This includes
8cacda7c
GP
1235@uref{http://www.gnu.org/software/dejagnu/,,DejaGnu} 1.4.2 (or later),
1236Tcl, and Expect; the DejaGnu site has links to these.
f42974dc 1237
8cacda7c
GP
1238If the directories where @command{runtest} and @command{expect} were
1239installed are not in the @env{PATH}, you may need to set the following
1240environment variables appropriately, as in the following example (which
1241assumes that DejaGnu has been installed under @file{/usr/local}):
f42974dc
DW
1242
1243@example
1244 TCL_LIBRARY = /usr/local/share/tcl8.0
1245 DEJAGNULIBS = /usr/local/share/dejagnu
1246@end example
1247
8cacda7c 1248(On systems such as Cygwin, these paths are required to be actual
f42974dc 1249paths, not mounts or links; presumably this is due to some lack of
8cacda7c 1250portability in the DejaGnu code.)
ecb7d6b3 1251
f42974dc
DW
1252
1253Finally, you can run the testsuite (which may take a long time):
1254@example
ef88b07d 1255 cd @var{objdir}; make -k check
f42974dc
DW
1256@end example
1257
794aca5d
WB
1258This will test various components of GCC, such as compiler
1259front ends and runtime libraries. While running the testsuite, DejaGnu
1260might emit some harmless messages resembling
06809951 1261@samp{WARNING: Couldn't find the global config file.} or
794aca5d 1262@samp{WARNING: Couldn't find tool init file} that can be ignored.
06809951 1263
f42974dc
DW
1264@section How can I run the test suite on selected tests?
1265
794aca5d
WB
1266In order to run sets of tests selectively, there are targets
1267@samp{make check-gcc} and @samp{make check-g++}
1268in the @file{gcc} subdirectory of the object directory. You can also
1269just run @samp{make check} in a subdirectory of the object directory.
1270
1271
1272A more selective way to just run all @command{gcc} execute tests in the
1273testsuite is to use
f42974dc
DW
1274
1275@example
6cfb3f16 1276 make check-gcc RUNTESTFLAGS="execute.exp @var{other-options}"
f42974dc
DW
1277@end example
1278
794aca5d
WB
1279Likewise, in order to run only the @command{g++} ``old-deja'' tests in
1280the testsuite with filenames matching @samp{9805*}, you would use
f42974dc
DW
1281
1282@example
6cfb3f16 1283 make check-g++ RUNTESTFLAGS="old-deja.exp=9805* @var{other-options}"
f42974dc
DW
1284@end example
1285
6cfb3f16
JM
1286The @file{*.exp} files are located in the testsuite directories of the GCC
1287source, the most important ones being @file{compile.exp},
1288@file{execute.exp}, @file{dg.exp} and @file{old-deja.exp}.
1289To get a list of the possible @file{*.exp} files, pipe the
38209993 1290output of @samp{make check} into a file and look at the
6cfb3f16 1291@samp{Running @dots{} .exp} lines.
f42974dc 1292
f702e700
JJ
1293
1294@section Additional testing for Java Class Libraries
1295
1296The @uref{http://sources.redhat.com/mauve/,,Mauve Project} provides
1297a suite of tests for the Java Class Libraries. This suite can be run
1298as part of libgcj testing by placing the Mauve tree within the libjava
1299testsuite at @file{libjava/testsuite/libjava.mauve/mauve}, or by
1300specifying the location of that tree when invoking @samp{make}, as in
1301@samp{make MAUVEDIR=~/mauve check}.
1302
582f6e6d
TT
1303@uref{http://www-124.ibm.com/developerworks/oss/cvs/jikes/~checkout~/jacks/jacks.html,,Jacks}
1304is a free test suite that tests Java compiler front ends. This suite
3b41afd9 1305can be run as part of libgcj testing by placing the Jacks tree within
582f6e6d
TT
1306the libjava testsuite at @file{libjava/testsuite/libjava.jacks/jacks}.
1307
f42974dc
DW
1308@section How to interpret test results
1309
794aca5d 1310The result of running the testsuite are various @file{*.sum} and @file{*.log}
767094dd 1311files in the testsuite subdirectories. The @file{*.log} files contain a
f42974dc 1312detailed log of the compiler invocations and the corresponding
794aca5d
WB
1313results, the @file{*.sum} files summarize the results. These summaries
1314contain status codes for all tests:
f42974dc
DW
1315
1316@itemize @bullet
1317@item
1318PASS: the test passed as expected
1319@item
1320XPASS: the test unexpectedly passed
1321@item
1322FAIL: the test unexpectedly failed
1323@item
1324XFAIL: the test failed as expected
1325@item
1326UNSUPPORTED: the test is not supported on this platform
1327@item
1328ERROR: the testsuite detected an error
1329@item
1330WARNING: the testsuite detected a possible problem
1331@end itemize
1332
38209993
LG
1333It is normal for some tests to report unexpected failures. At the
1334current time our testing harness does not allow fine grained control
1335over whether or not a test is expected to fail. We expect to fix this
1336problem in future releases.
f42974dc
DW
1337
1338
1339@section Submitting test results
1340
1341If you want to report the results to the GCC project, use the
767094dd 1342@file{contrib/test_summary} shell script. Start it in the @var{objdir} with
f42974dc
DW
1343
1344@example
6cfb3f16
JM
1345 @var{srcdir}/contrib/test_summary -p your_commentary.txt \
1346 -m gcc-testresults@@gcc.gnu.org |sh
f42974dc
DW
1347@end example
1348
6cfb3f16 1349This script uses the @command{Mail} program to send the results, so
767094dd 1350make sure it is in your @env{PATH}. The file @file{your_commentary.txt} is
f42974dc 1351prepended to the testsuite summary and should contain any special
767094dd 1352remarks you have on your results or your build environment. Please
f42974dc 1353do not edit the testsuite result block or the subject line, as these
05c425a9 1354messages may be automatically processed.
f42974dc 1355
aed5964b 1356@html
b8db17af 1357<hr />
aed5964b
JM
1358<p>
1359@end html
1360@ifhtml
1361@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
1362@end ifhtml
f42974dc
DW
1363@end ifset
1364
1365@c ***Final install***********************************************************
6cfb3f16 1366@ifnothtml
f42974dc
DW
1367@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1368@node Final install, , Testing, Installing GCC
6cfb3f16 1369@end ifnothtml
f42974dc 1370@ifset finalinstallhtml
f42974dc
DW
1371@ifnothtml
1372@chapter Installing GCC: Final installation
1373@end ifnothtml
1374
eea81d3e
RO
1375Now that GCC has been built (and optionally tested), you can install it with
1376@example
1377cd @var{objdir}; make install
1378@end example
f42974dc 1379
06809951
GP
1380We strongly recommend to install into a target directory where there is
1381no previous version of GCC present.
1382
f42974dc 1383That step completes the installation of GCC; user level binaries can
38209993
LG
1384be found in @file{@var{prefix}/bin} where @var{prefix} is the value you
1385specified with the @option{--prefix} to configure (or @file{/usr/local}
ab130aa5
JM
1386by default). (If you specified @option{--bindir}, that directory will
1387be used instead; otherwise, if you specified @option{--exec-prefix},
1388@file{@var{exec-prefix}/bin} will be used.) Headers for the C++ and
1389Java libraries are installed in @file{@var{prefix}/include}; libraries
1390in @file{@var{libdir}} (normally @file{@var{prefix}/lib}); internal
1391parts of the compiler in @file{@var{libdir}/gcc-lib}; documentation in
1392info format in @file{@var{infodir}} (normally @file{@var{prefix}/info}).
f42974dc 1393
53b50ac1
CC
1394When installing cross-compilers, GCC's executables
1395are not only installed into @file{@var{bindir}}, that
1396is, @file{@var{exec-prefix}/bin}, but additionally into
1397@file{@var{exec-prefix}/@var{target-alias}/bin}, if that directory
1398exists. Typically, such @dfn{tooldirs} hold target-specific
1399binutils, including assembler and linker.
1400
1401Installation into a temporary staging area or into a @command{chroot}
1402jail can be achieved with the command
1403
1404@example
1405make DESTDIR=@var{path-to-rootdir} install
1406@end example
1407
1408@noindent where @var{path-to-rootdir} is the absolute path of
1409a directory relative to which all installation paths will be
1410interpreted. Note that the directory specified by @code{DESTDIR}
1411need not exist yet; it will be created if necessary.
1412
1413There is a subtle point with tooldirs and @code{DESTDIR}:
1414If you relocate a cross-compiler installation with
1415e.g.@: @samp{DESTDIR=@var{rootdir}}, then the directory
1416@file{@var{rootdir}/@var{exec-prefix}/@var{target-alias}/bin} will
1417be filled with duplicated GCC executables only if it already exists,
1418it will not be created otherwise. This is regarded as a feature,
1419not as a bug, because it gives slightly more control to the packagers
1420using the @code{DESTDIR} feature.
1421
2b46bc67 1422If you built a released version of GCC using @samp{make bootstrap} then please
f97a5bda
JJ
1423quickly review the build status page for your release, available from
1424@uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/buildstat.html}.
c5997381
JJ
1425If your system is not listed for the version of GCC that you built,
1426send a note to
eea81d3e
RO
1427@email{gcc@@gcc.gnu.org} indicating
1428that you successfully built and installed GCC.
c5997381 1429Include the following information:
f42974dc 1430
c5997381
JJ
1431@itemize @bullet
1432@item
1433Output from running @file{@var{srcdir}/config.guess}. Do not send us
1434that file itself, just the one-line output from running it.
1435
1436@item
1437The output of @samp{gcc -v} for your newly installed gcc.
1438This tells us which version of GCC you built and the options you passed to
1439configure.
1440
2b46bc67
JJ
1441@item
1442Whether you enabled all languages or a subset of them. If you used a
1443full distribution then this information is part of the configure
1444options in the output of @samp{gcc -v}, but if you downloaded the
1445``core'' compiler plus additional front ends then it isn't apparent
1446which ones you built unless you tell us about it.
1447
c5997381
JJ
1448@item
1449If the build was for GNU/Linux, also include:
1450@itemize @bullet
1451@item
1452The distribution name and version (e.g., Red Hat 7.1 or Debian 2.2.3);
1453this information should be available from @file{/etc/issue}.
1454
1455@item
1456The version of the Linux kernel, available from @samp{uname --version}
1457or @samp{uname -a}.
1458
1459@item
1460The version of glibc you used; for RPM-based systems like Red Hat,
b9da07da
JJ
1461Mandrake, and SuSE type @samp{rpm -q glibc} to get the glibc version,
1462and on systems like Debian and Progeny use @samp{dpkg -l libc6}.
c5997381
JJ
1463@end itemize
1464For other systems, you can include similar information if you think it is
1465relevant.
1466
1467@item
1468Any other information that you think would be useful to people building
1469GCC on the same configuration. The new entry in the build status list
1470will include a link to the archived copy of your message.
1471@end itemize
c009f01f
JJ
1472
1473We'd also like to know if the
1474@ifnothtml
1475@ref{Specific, host/target specific installation notes}
1476@end ifnothtml
1477@ifhtml
1478@uref{specific.html,,host/target specific installation notes}
1479@end ifhtml
1480didn't include your host/target information or if that information is
1481incomplete or out of date. Send a note to
1482@email{gcc@@gcc.gnu.org} telling us how the information should be changed.
f42974dc
DW
1483
1484If you find a bug, please report it following our
1485@uref{../bugs.html,,bug reporting guidelines}.
1486
ab130aa5 1487If you want to print the GCC manuals, do @samp{cd @var{objdir}; make
a38f87a9 1488dvi}. You will need to have @command{texi2dvi} (version at least 4.2)
ab130aa5
JM
1489and @TeX{} installed. This creates a number of @file{.dvi} files in
1490subdirectories of @file{@var{objdir}}; these may be converted for
1491printing with programs such as @command{dvips}. You can also
1492@uref{http://www.gnu.org/order/order.html,,buy printed manuals from the
1493Free Software Foundation}, though such manuals may not be for the most
161d7b59 1494recent version of GCC@.
ab130aa5 1495
f42974dc 1496@html
b8db17af 1497<hr />
f42974dc
DW
1498<p>
1499@end html
1500@ifhtml
1501@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
1502@end ifhtml
1503@end ifset
1504
1505@c ***Binaries****************************************************************
6cfb3f16 1506@ifnothtml
f42974dc
DW
1507@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1508@node Binaries, Specific, Installing GCC, Top
6cfb3f16 1509@end ifnothtml
f42974dc 1510@ifset binarieshtml
f42974dc
DW
1511@ifnothtml
1512@chapter Installing GCC: Binaries
1513@end ifnothtml
1514@cindex Binaries
1515@cindex Installing GCC: Binaries
1516
161d7b59 1517We are often asked about pre-compiled versions of GCC@. While we cannot
f42974dc
DW
1518provide these for all platforms, below you'll find links to binaries for
1519various platforms where creating them by yourself is not easy due to various
1520reasons.
1521
1522Please note that we did not create these binaries, nor do we
1523support them. If you have any problems installing them, please
1524contact their makers.
1525
1526@itemize
1527@item
df002c7d
DE
1528AIX:
1529@itemize
1530@item
ff4c5e7b 1531@uref{http://www.bullfreeware.com,,Bull's Freeware and Shareware Archive for AIX};
df002c7d
DE
1532
1533@item
8d5362b7 1534@uref{http://aixpdslib.seas.ucla.edu,,UCLA Software Library for AIX}.
df002c7d 1535@end itemize
f42974dc
DW
1536
1537@item
8d5362b7
GP
1538DOS---@uref{http://www.delorie.com/djgpp/,,DJGPP}.
1539
1540@item
1541Hitachi H8/300[HS]---@uref{http://h8300-hms.sourceforge.net/,,GNU
1542Development Tools for the Hitachi H8/300[HS] Series}.
f42974dc 1543
f404402c
MW
1544@item
1545HP-UX:
1546@itemize
f42974dc
DW
1547@item
1548@uref{http://hpux.cae.wisc.edu/,,HP-UX Porting Center};
1549
f404402c
MW
1550@item
1551@uref{ftp://sunsite.informatik.rwth-aachen.de/pub/packages/gcc_hpux/,,Binaries for HP-UX 11.00 at Aachen University of Technology}.
1552@end itemize
1553
3e35d143
SC
1554@item
1555Motorola 68HC11/68HC12---@uref{http://www.gnu-m68hc11.org,,GNU
1556Development Tools for the Motorola 68HC11/68HC12}.
1557
f42974dc 1558@item
38209993 1559@uref{http://www.sco.com/skunkware/devtools/index.html#gcc,,SCO
8d5362b7 1560OpenServer/Unixware}.
f42974dc
DW
1561
1562@item
35113fde 1563Sinix/Reliant Unix---@uref{ftp://ftp.fujitsu-siemens.com/pub/pd/gnu/gcc/,,Siemens}.
8d5362b7
GP
1564
1565@item
1566Solaris 2 (SPARC, Intel)---@uref{http://www.sunfreeware.com/,,Sunfreeware}.
f42974dc
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1567
1568@item
8d5362b7 1569SGI---@uref{http://freeware.sgi.com/,,SGI Freeware}.
f42974dc
DW
1570
1571@item
05c425a9 1572Microsoft Windows:
f42974dc
DW
1573@itemize
1574@item
1575The @uref{http://sources.redhat.com/cygwin/,,Cygwin} project;
1576@item
cc92b8ab 1577The @uref{http://www.mingw.org/,,MinGW} project.
f42974dc
DW
1578@end itemize
1579
1580@item
616de62f
GP
1581@uref{ftp://ftp.thewrittenword.com/packages/by-name/,,The
1582Written Word} offers binaries for
1583AIX 4.3.2.
1584IRIX 6.5,
1585Digital UNIX 4.0D and 5.1,
1586GNU/Linux (i386),
1587HP-UX 10.20, 11.00, and 11.11, and
1588Solaris/SPARC 2.5.1, 2.6, 2.7, 8, and 9,
f42974dc
DW
1589@end itemize
1590
1591In addition to those specific offerings, you can get a binary
1592distribution CD-ROM from the
f9047ed3 1593@uref{http://www.fsf.org/order/order.html,,Free Software Foundation}.
f42974dc 1594It contains binaries for a number of platforms, and
767094dd 1595includes not only GCC, but other stuff as well. The current CD does
f42974dc 1596not contain the latest version of GCC, but it should allow
767094dd 1597bootstrapping the compiler. An updated version of that disk is in the
f42974dc
DW
1598works.
1599
1600@html
b8db17af 1601<hr />
f42974dc
DW
1602<p>
1603@end html
1604@ifhtml
1605@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
1606@end ifhtml
1607@end ifset
1608
1609@c ***Specific****************************************************************
6cfb3f16 1610@ifnothtml
f42974dc 1611@comment node-name, next, previous, up
73e2155a 1612@node Specific, Old, Binaries, Top
6cfb3f16 1613@end ifnothtml
f42974dc 1614@ifset specifichtml
f42974dc
DW
1615@ifnothtml
1616@chapter Host/target specific installation notes for GCC
1617@end ifnothtml
1618@cindex Specific
1619@cindex Specific installation notes
1620@cindex Target specific installation
1621@cindex Host specific installation
1622@cindex Target specific installation notes
1623
1624Please read this document carefully @emph{before} installing the
1625GNU Compiler Collection on your machine.
1626
ef88b07d 1627@ifhtml
f42974dc
DW
1628@itemize
1629@item
333e14b0 1630@uref{#alpha*-*-*,,alpha*-*-*}
f42974dc
DW
1631@item
1632@uref{#alpha*-dec-osf*,,alpha*-dec-osf*}
1633@item
71b96724
RL
1634@uref{#alphaev5-cray-unicosmk*,,alphaev5-cray-unicosmk*}
1635@item
b8df899a
JM
1636@uref{#arc-*-elf,,arc-*-elf}
1637@item
2aea0b53 1638@uref{#arm-*-*,,arm-*-*}
b8df899a 1639@item
2aea0b53 1640@uref{#xscale-*-*,,xscale-*-*}
476c334e 1641@item
f42974dc
DW
1642@uref{#avr,,avr}
1643@item
0132e321
MH
1644@uref{#c4x,,c4x}
1645@item
f42974dc
DW
1646@uref{#dos,,DOS}
1647@item
b8df899a
JM
1648@uref{#dsp16xx,,dsp16xx}
1649@item
021c4bfd
RO
1650@uref{#*-*-freebsd*,,*-*-freebsd*}
1651@item
f42974dc
DW
1652@uref{#h8300-hms,,h8300-hms}
1653@item
1654@uref{#hppa*-hp-hpux*,,hppa*-hp-hpux*}
1655@item
f42974dc
DW
1656@uref{#hppa*-hp-hpux10,,hppa*-hp-hpux10}
1657@item
1658@uref{#hppa*-hp-hpux11,,hppa*-hp-hpux11}
1659@item
b8df899a
JM
1660@uref{#i370-*-*,,i370-*-*}
1661@item
f42974dc
DW
1662@uref{#*-*-linux-gnu,,*-*-linux-gnu}
1663@item
b8df899a
JM
1664@uref{#ix86-*-linux*aout,,i?86-*-linux*aout}
1665@item
f42974dc
DW
1666@uref{#ix86-*-linux*,,i?86-*-linux*}
1667@item
b8df899a
JM
1668@uref{#ix86-*-sco,,i?86-*-sco}
1669@item
1670@uref{#ix86-*-sco3.2v4,,i?86-*-sco3.2v4}
1671@item
f42974dc
DW
1672@uref{#ix86-*-sco3.2v5*,,i?86-*-sco3.2v5*}
1673@item
f42974dc
DW
1674@uref{#ix86-*-udk,,i?86-*-udk}
1675@item
b8df899a
JM
1676@uref{#ix86-*-esix,,i?86-*-esix}
1677@item
b499d9ab
JJ
1678@uref{#ia64-*-linux,,ia64-*-linux}
1679@item
f42974dc
DW
1680@uref{#*-ibm-aix*,,*-ibm-aix*}
1681@item
e3223ea2
DC
1682@uref{#ip2k-*-elf,,ip2k-*-elf}
1683@item
b8df899a
JM
1684@uref{#m32r-*-elf,,m32r-*-elf}
1685@item
b8df899a
JM
1686@uref{#m6811-elf,,m6811-elf}
1687@item
1688@uref{#m6812-elf,,m6812-elf}
1689@item
b8df899a
JM
1690@uref{#m68k-hp-hpux,,m68k-hp-hpux}
1691@item
b8df899a
JM
1692@uref{#mips-*-*,,mips-*-*}
1693@item
b953cc4b 1694@uref{#mips-sgi-irix5,,mips-sgi-irix5}
f42974dc 1695@item
b953cc4b 1696@uref{#mips-sgi-irix6,,mips-sgi-irix6}
f42974dc 1697@item
021c4bfd
RO
1698@uref{#powerpc*-*-*,,powerpc*-*-*, powerpc-*-sysv4}
1699@item
4f2b1139
SS
1700@uref{#powerpc-*-darwin*,,powerpc-*-darwin*}
1701@item
b8df899a
JM
1702@uref{#powerpc-*-elf,,powerpc-*-elf, powerpc-*-sysv4}
1703@item
f42974dc
DW
1704@uref{#powerpc-*-linux-gnu*,,powerpc-*-linux-gnu*}
1705@item
edf1b3f3
AC
1706@uref{#powerpc-*-netbsd*,,powerpc-*-netbsd*}
1707@item
b8df899a
JM
1708@uref{#powerpc-*-eabiaix,,powerpc-*-eabiaix}
1709@item
1710@uref{#powerpc-*-eabisim,,powerpc-*-eabisim}
1711@item
1712@uref{#powerpc-*-eabi,,powerpc-*-eabi}
1713@item
1714@uref{#powerpcle-*-elf,,powerpcle-*-elf, powerpcle-*-sysv4}
1715@item
1716@uref{#powerpcle-*-eabisim,,powerpcle-*-eabisim}
1717@item
1718@uref{#powerpcle-*-eabi,,powerpcle-*-eabi}
1719@item
1720@uref{#powerpcle-*-winnt,,powerpcle-*-winnt, powerpcle-*-pe}
1721@item
225cee28 1722@uref{#s390-*-linux*,,s390-*-linux*}
91abf72d 1723@item
225cee28 1724@uref{#s390x-*-linux*,,s390x-*-linux*}
91abf72d 1725@item
250d5688 1726@uref{#*-*-solaris2*,,*-*-solaris2*}
f42974dc 1727@item
250d5688 1728@uref{#sparc-sun-solaris2*,,sparc-sun-solaris2*}
f42974dc
DW
1729@item
1730@uref{#sparc-sun-solaris2.7,,sparc-sun-solaris2.7}
1731@item
c6fa9728
JS
1732@uref{#sparc-*-linux*,,sparc-*-linux*}
1733@item
0dc7ee3c 1734@uref{#sparc64-*-solaris2*,,sparc64-*-solaris2*}
f42974dc 1735@item
e403b4bc
CR
1736@uref{#sparcv9-*-solaris2*,,sparcv9-*-solaris2*}
1737@item
b8df899a
JM
1738@uref{#*-*-sysv*,,*-*-sysv*}
1739@item
1740@uref{#vax-dec-ultrix,,vax-dec-ultrix}
1741@item
4977bab6
ZW
1742@uref{#*-*-vxworks*,,*-*-vxworks*}
1743@item
fd29f6ea
BW
1744@uref{#xtensa-*-elf,,xtensa-*-elf}
1745@item
1746@uref{#xtensa-*-linux*,,xtensa-*-linux*}
1747@item
f42974dc
DW
1748@uref{#windows,,Microsoft Windows}
1749@item
1750@uref{#os2,,OS/2}
1751@item
1752@uref{#older,,Older systems}
1753@end itemize
1754
1755@itemize
1756@item
250d5688 1757@uref{#elf_targets,,all ELF targets} (SVR4, Solaris 2, etc.)
f42974dc 1758@end itemize
ef88b07d 1759@end ifhtml
f42974dc
DW
1760
1761
1762@html
1763<!-- -------- host/target specific issues start here ---------------- -->
b8db17af 1764<hr />
f42974dc 1765@end html
333e14b0
LR
1766@heading @anchor{alpha*-*-*}alpha*-*-*
1767
1768This section contains general configuration information for all
1769alpha-based platforms using ELF (in particular, ignore this section for
161d7b59 1770DEC OSF/1, Digital UNIX and Tru64 UNIX)@. In addition to reading this
f2541106 1771section, please read all other sections that match your target.
333e14b0 1772
021c4bfd
RO
1773We require binutils 2.11.2 or newer.
1774Previous binutils releases had a number of problems with DWARF 2
333e14b0
LR
1775debugging information, not the least of which is incorrect linking of
1776shared libraries.
1777
b8df899a 1778@html
b8db17af 1779<hr />
b8df899a 1780@end html
f2541106 1781@heading @anchor{alpha*-dec-osf*}alpha*-dec-osf*
b8df899a 1782Systems using processors that implement the DEC Alpha architecture and
f2541106
RO
1783are running the DEC/Compaq Unix (DEC OSF/1, Digital UNIX, or Compaq
1784Tru64 UNIX) operating system, for example the DEC Alpha AXP systems.
1785
c7bdf0a6
ZW
1786As of GCC 3.2, versions before @code{alpha*-dec-osf4} are no longer
1787supported. (These are the versions which identify themselves as DEC
1788OSF/1.)
9340544b 1789
6e92b3a1
RB
1790In Digital Unix V4.0, virtual memory exhausted bootstrap failures
1791may be fixed by configuring with @option{--with-gc=simple},
1792reconfiguring Kernel Virtual Memory and Swap parameters
1793per the @command{/usr/sbin/sys_check} Tuning Suggestions,
1794or applying the patch in
1795@uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/2002-08/msg00822.html}.
1796
f2541106
RO
1797In Tru64 UNIX V5.1, Compaq introduced a new assembler that does not
1798currently (2001-06-13) work with @command{mips-tfile}. As a workaround,
1799we need to use the old assembler, invoked via the barely documented
1800@option{-oldas} option. To bootstrap GCC, you either need to use the
1801Compaq C Compiler:
1802
1803@example
eea81d3e 1804 % CC=cc @var{srcdir}/configure [@var{options}] [@var{target}]
f2541106
RO
1805@end example
1806
1807or you can use a copy of GCC 2.95.3 or higher built on Tru64 UNIX V4.0:
1808
1809@example
eea81d3e 1810 % CC=gcc -Wa,-oldas @var{srcdir}/configure [@var{options}] [@var{target}]
f2541106 1811@end example
b8df899a 1812
b953cc4b
RO
1813As of GNU binutils 2.11.2, neither GNU @command{as} nor GNU @command{ld}
1814are supported on Tru64 UNIX, so you must not configure GCC with
1815@option{--with-gnu-as} or @option{--with-gnu-ld}.
1816
1817The @option{--enable-threads} options isn't supported yet. A patch is
18b467f1 1818in preparation for a future release.
b953cc4b 1819
f0523f02 1820GCC writes a @samp{.verstamp} directive to the assembler output file
b8df899a
JM
1821unless it is built as a cross-compiler. It gets the version to use from
1822the system header file @file{/usr/include/stamp.h}. If you install a
1823new version of DEC Unix, you should rebuild GCC to pick up the new version
1824stamp.
1825
1826Note that since the Alpha is a 64-bit architecture, cross-compilers from
182732-bit machines will not generate code as efficient as that generated
1828when the compiler is running on a 64-bit machine because many
1829optimizations that depend on being able to represent a word on the
1830target in an integral value on the host cannot be performed. Building
1831cross-compilers on the Alpha for 32-bit machines has only been tested in
1832a few cases and may not work properly.
1833
7ba4ca63 1834@samp{make compare} may fail on old versions of DEC Unix unless you add
6cfb3f16 1835@option{-save-temps} to @code{CFLAGS}. On these systems, the name of the
b8df899a
JM
1836assembler input file is stored in the object file, and that makes
1837comparison fail if it differs between the @code{stage1} and
6cfb3f16 1838@code{stage2} compilations. The option @option{-save-temps} forces a
b8df899a 1839fixed name to be used for the assembler input file, instead of a
6cfb3f16 1840randomly chosen name in @file{/tmp}. Do not add @option{-save-temps}
b8df899a 1841unless the comparisons fail without that option. If you add
6cfb3f16 1842@option{-save-temps}, you will have to manually delete the @samp{.i} and
b8df899a
JM
1843@samp{.s} files after each series of compilations.
1844
f0523f02 1845GCC now supports both the native (ECOFF) debugging format used by DBX
161d7b59 1846and GDB and an encapsulated STABS format for use only with GDB@. See the
6cfb3f16 1847discussion of the @option{--with-stabs} option of @file{configure} above
b8df899a
JM
1848for more information on these formats and how to select them.
1849
1850There is a bug in DEC's assembler that produces incorrect line numbers
1851for ECOFF format when the @samp{.align} directive is used. To work
f0523f02 1852around this problem, GCC will not emit such alignment directives
b8df899a
JM
1853while writing ECOFF format debugging information even if optimization is
1854being performed. Unfortunately, this has the very undesirable
6cfb3f16
JM
1855side-effect that code addresses when @option{-O} is specified are
1856different depending on whether or not @option{-g} is also specified.
b8df899a 1857
6cfb3f16 1858To avoid this behavior, specify @option{-gstabs+} and use GDB instead of
161d7b59 1859DBX@. DEC is now aware of this problem with the assembler and hopes to
b8df899a
JM
1860provide a fix shortly.
1861
71b96724 1862@html
b8db17af 1863<hr />
71b96724
RL
1864@end html
1865@heading @anchor{alphaev5-cray-unicosmk*}alphaev5-cray-unicosmk*
1866Cray T3E systems running Unicos/Mk.
1867
1868This port is incomplete and has many known bugs. We hope to improve the
1869support for this target soon. Currently, only the C front end is supported,
1870and it is not possible to build parallel applications. Cray modules are not
1871supported; in particular, Craylibs are assumed to be in
1872@file{/opt/ctl/craylibs/craylibs}.
1873
1874You absolutely @strong{must} use GNU make on this platform. Also, you
1875need to tell GCC where to find the assembler and the linker. The
1876simplest way to do so is by providing @option{--with-as} and
1877@option{--with-ld} to @file{configure}, e.g.@:
1878
8c085f6f
JJ
1879@example
1880 configure --with-as=/opt/ctl/bin/cam --with-ld=/opt/ctl/bin/cld \
1881 --enable-languages=c
1882@end example
71b96724
RL
1883
1884The comparison test during @samp{make bootstrap} fails on Unicos/Mk
1885because the assembler inserts timestamps into object files. You should
1886be able to work around this by doing @samp{make all} after getting this
1887failure.
1888
b8df899a 1889@html
b8db17af 1890<hr />
b8df899a
JM
1891@end html
1892@heading @anchor{arc-*-elf}arc-*-elf
1893Argonaut ARC processor.
1894This configuration is intended for embedded systems.
1895
1896@html
b8db17af 1897<hr />
b8df899a 1898@end html
2aea0b53
ZW
1899@heading @anchor{arm-*-*}arm-*-*
1900@heading @anchor{xscale-*-*}xscale-*-*
1901Advanced RISC Machines ARM-family processors. Subtargets that use the
1902ELF object format require GNU binutils 2.13 or newer.
476c334e 1903
f42974dc 1904@html
b8db17af 1905<hr />
f42974dc 1906@end html
ef88b07d 1907@heading @anchor{avr}avr
f42974dc 1908
b8df899a 1909ATMEL AVR-family micro controllers. These are used in embedded
ca52d046
GP
1910applications. There are no standard Unix configurations.
1911@ifnothtml
1912@xref{AVR Options,, AVR Options, gcc, Using and Porting the GNU Compiler
1913Collection (GCC)},
1914@end ifnothtml
98999d8b 1915@ifhtml
ca52d046 1916See ``AVR Options'' in the main manual
98999d8b 1917@end ifhtml
ca52d046 1918for the list of supported MCU types.
b8df899a 1919
161d7b59 1920Use @samp{configure --target=avr --enable-languages="c"} to configure GCC@.
f42974dc
DW
1921
1922Further installation notes and other useful information about AVR tools
1923can also be obtained from:
1924
1925@itemize @bullet
1926@item
de7999ba
MM
1927@uref{http://www.openavr.org,,http://www.openavr.org}
1928@item
d1a86812 1929@uref{http://home.overta.ru/users/denisc/,,http://home.overta.ru/users/denisc/}
f42974dc 1930@item
d1a86812 1931@uref{http://www.amelek.gda.pl/avr/,,http://www.amelek.gda.pl/avr/}
f42974dc
DW
1932@end itemize
1933
de7999ba 1934We @emph{strongly} recommend using binutils 2.13 or newer.
f42974dc
DW
1935
1936The following error:
1937@example
1938 Error: register required
1939@end example
1940
1941indicates that you should upgrade to a newer version of the binutils.
1942
0132e321 1943@html
b8db17af 1944<hr />
0132e321
MH
1945@end html
1946@heading @anchor{c4x}c4x
1947
1948Texas Instruments TMS320C3x and TMS320C4x Floating Point Digital Signal
1949Processors. These are used in embedded applications. There are no
d8393f64
GP
1950standard Unix configurations.
1951@ifnothtml
1952@xref{TMS320C3x/C4x Options,, TMS320C3x/C4x Options, gcc, Using and
1953Porting the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC)},
1954@end ifnothtml
98999d8b 1955@ifhtml
d8393f64 1956See ``TMS320C3x/C4x Options'' in the main manual
98999d8b 1957@end ifhtml
d8393f64 1958for the list of supported MCU types.
0132e321
MH
1959
1960GCC can be configured as a cross compiler for both the C3x and C4x
1961architectures on the same system. Use @samp{configure --target=c4x
1962--enable-languages="c,c++"} to configure.
1963
1964
1965Further installation notes and other useful information about C4x tools
1966can also be obtained from:
1967
1968@itemize @bullet
1969@item
d8393f64 1970@uref{http://www.elec.canterbury.ac.nz/c4x/,,http://www.elec.canterbury.ac.nz/c4x/}
0132e321
MH
1971@end itemize
1972
0b85d816 1973@html
b8db17af 1974<hr />
0b85d816
HPN
1975@end html
1976@heading @anchor{cris}CRIS
1977
1978CRIS is the CPU architecture in Axis Communications ETRAX system-on-a-chip
1979series. These are used in embedded applications.
1980
1981@ifnothtml
1982@xref{CRIS Options,, CRIS Options, gcc, Using and Porting the GNU Compiler
1983Collection (GCC)},
1984@end ifnothtml
1985@ifhtml
1986See ``CRIS Options'' in the main manual
1987@end ifhtml
1988for a list of CRIS-specific options.
1989
1990There are a few different CRIS targets:
1991@table @code
1992@item cris-axis-aout
1993Old target. Includes a multilib for the @samp{elinux} a.out-based
1994target. No multilibs for newer architecture variants.
1995@item cris-axis-elf
1996Mainly for monolithic embedded systems. Includes a multilib for the
1997@samp{v10} core used in @samp{ETRAX 100 LX}.
1998@item cris-axis-linux-gnu
1999A GNU/Linux port for the CRIS architecture, currently targeting
2000@samp{ETRAX 100 LX} by default.
2001@end table
2002
2003For @code{cris-axis-aout} and @code{cris-axis-elf} you need binutils 2.11
2004or newer. For @code{cris-axis-linux-gnu} you need binutils 2.12 or newer.
2005
2006Pre-packaged tools can be obtained from
2007@uref{ftp://ftp.axis.com/pub/axis/tools/cris/compiler-kit/}. More
2008information about this platform is available at
2009@uref{http://developer.axis.com/}.
2010
f42974dc 2011@html
b8db17af 2012<hr />
f42974dc 2013@end html
ef88b07d 2014@heading @anchor{dos}DOS
f42974dc
DW
2015
2016Please have a look at our @uref{binaries.html,,binaries page}.
2017
f0523f02 2018You cannot install GCC by itself on MSDOS; it will not compile under
f85b8d1a
JM
2019any MSDOS compiler except itself. You need to get the complete
2020compilation package DJGPP, which includes binaries as well as sources,
2021and includes all the necessary compilation tools and libraries.
2022
b8df899a 2023@html
b8db17af 2024<hr />
b8df899a
JM
2025@end html
2026@heading @anchor{dsp16xx}dsp16xx
2027A port to the AT&T DSP1610 family of processors.
2028
021c4bfd 2029@html
b8db17af 2030<hr />
021c4bfd
RO
2031@end html
2032@heading @anchor{*-*-freebsd*}*-*-freebsd*
2033
2034The version of binutils installed in @file{/usr/bin} is known to work unless
2035otherwise specified in any per-architecture notes. However, binutils
6b976d99 20362.12.1 or greater is known to improve overall testsuite results.
021c4bfd 2037
2aea0b53 2038FreeBSD 1 is no longer supported.
c7bdf0a6
ZW
2039
2040For FreeBSD 2 or any mutant a.out versions of FreeBSD 3: All
021c4bfd
RO
2041configuration support and files as shipped with GCC 2.95 are still in
2042place. FreeBSD 2.2.7 has been known to bootstrap completely; however,
2043it is unknown which version of binutils was used (it is assumed that it
2044was the system copy in @file{/usr/bin}) and C++ EH failures were noted.
2045
2046For FreeBSD using the ELF file format: DWARF 2 debugging is now the
2047default for all CPU architectures. It had been the default on
2048FreeBSD/alpha since its inception. You may use @option{-gstabs} instead
2049of @option{-g}, if you really want the old debugging format. There are
2050no known issues with mixing object files and libraries with different
2051debugging formats. Otherwise, this release of GCC should now match more
2052of the configuration used in the stock FreeBSD configuration of GCC. In
2053particular, @option{--enable-threads} is now configured by default.
2054However, as a general user, do not attempt to replace the system
2055compiler with this release. Known to bootstrap and check with good
e4e7d312
LR
2056results on FreeBSD 4.8-STABLE and 5-CURRENT@. In the past, known to
2057bootstrap and check with good results on FreeBSD 3.0, 3.4, 4.0, 4.2,
20584.3, 4.4, 4.5-STABLE@.
46fc709d
LR
2059
2060In principle, @option{--enable-threads} is now compatible with
2061@option{--enable-libgcj} on FreeBSD@. However, it has only been built
e4e7d312 2062and tested on @samp{i386-*-freebsd[45]} and @samp{alpha-*-freebsd[45]}.
8c085f6f 2063The static
6b976d99
LR
2064library may be incorrectly built (symbols are missing at link time).
2065There is a rare timing-based startup hang (probably involves an
c0478a66 2066assumption about the thread library). Multi-threaded boehm-gc (required for
46fc709d 2067libjava) exposes severe threaded signal-handling bugs on FreeBSD before
e4e7d312 20684.5-RELEASE@. Other CPU architectures
46fc709d
LR
2069supported by FreeBSD will require additional configuration tuning in, at
2070the very least, both boehm-gc and libffi.
021c4bfd 2071
bc3a44db
LR
2072Shared @file{libgcc_s.so} is now built and installed by default.
2073
f42974dc 2074@html
b8db17af 2075<hr />
f42974dc 2076@end html
ef88b07d 2077@heading @anchor{h8300-hms}h8300-hms
b8df899a 2078Hitachi H8/300 series of processors.
f42974dc
DW
2079
2080Please have a look at our @uref{binaries.html,,binaries page}.
2081
b8df899a
JM
2082The calling convention and structure layout has changed in release 2.6.
2083All code must be recompiled. The calling convention now passes the
2084first three arguments in function calls in registers. Structures are no
2085longer a multiple of 2 bytes.
2086
f42974dc 2087@html
b8db17af 2088<hr />
f42974dc 2089@end html
ef88b07d 2090@heading @anchor{hppa*-hp-hpux*}hppa*-hp-hpux*
2aea0b53 2091HP-UX version 9 or older is no longer supported.
f42974dc 2092
021c4bfd 2093We @emph{highly} recommend using gas/binutils 2.8 or newer on all hppa
f9047ed3 2094platforms; you may encounter a variety of problems when using the HP
581d9404 2095assembler.
f42974dc
DW
2096
2097Specifically, @option{-g} does not work on HP-UX (since that system
2098uses a peculiar debugging format which GCC does not know about), unless you
38209993
LG
2099use GAS and GDB and configure GCC with the
2100@uref{./configure.html#with-gnu-as,,@option{--with-gnu-as}} and
6cfb3f16 2101@option{--with-as=@dots{}} options.
f42974dc 2102
08b3d104
JDA
2103If you wish to use the pa-risc 2.0 architecture support with a 32-bit
2104runtime, you must use either the HP assembler, gas/binutils 2.11 or newer,
2105or a recent
f42974dc
DW
2106@uref{ftp://sources.redhat.com/pub/binutils/snapshots,,snapshot of gas}.
2107
d5355cb2
JDA
2108There are two default scheduling models for instructions. These are
2109PROCESSOR_7100LC and PROCESSOR_8000. They are selected from the pa-risc
2110architecture specified for the target machine when configuring.
2111PROCESSOR_8000 is the default. PROCESSOR_7100LC is selected when
2112the target is a @samp{hppa1*} machine.
806bf413
JDA
2113
2114The PROCESSOR_8000 model is not well suited to older processors. Thus,
2115it is important to completely specify the machine architecture when
2116configuring if you want a model other than PROCESSOR_8000. The macro
2117TARGET_SCHED_DEFAULT can be defined in BOOT_CFLAGS if a different
2118default scheduling model is desired.
2119
021c4bfd 2120More specific information to @samp{hppa*-hp-hpux*} targets follows.
f42974dc 2121
f42974dc 2122@html
b8db17af 2123<hr />
f42974dc 2124@end html
ef88b07d 2125@heading @anchor{hppa*-hp-hpux10}hppa*-hp-hpux10
f42974dc 2126
f9047ed3 2127For hpux10.20, we @emph{highly} recommend you pick up the latest sed patch
161d7b59 2128@code{PHCO_19798} from HP@. HP has two sites which provide patches free of
f42974dc
DW
2129charge:
2130
2131@itemize @bullet
2132@item
2133@html
f401d0f5 2134<a href="http://us.itrc.hp.com/service/home/home.do">US, Canada, Asia-Pacific, and
f42974dc
DW
2135Latin-America</a>
2136@end html
2137@ifnothtml
f401d0f5
JDA
2138@uref{http://us.itrc.hp.com/service/home/home.do,,} US, Canada, Asia-Pacific,
2139and Latin-America.
f42974dc
DW
2140@end ifnothtml
2141@item
f401d0f5 2142@uref{http://europe.itrc.hp.com/service/home/home.do,,} Europe.
f42974dc
DW
2143@end itemize
2144
2aea0b53
ZW
2145The HP assembler on these systems has some problems. Most notably the
2146assembler inserts timestamps into each object file it creates, causing
2147the 3-stage comparison test to fail during a @samp{make bootstrap}.
2148You should be able to continue by saying @samp{make all} after getting
2149the failure from @samp{make bootstrap}.
f42974dc
DW
2150
2151
2152@html
b8db17af 2153<hr />
f42974dc 2154@end html
ef88b07d 2155@heading @anchor{hppa*-hp-hpux11}hppa*-hp-hpux11
f42974dc 2156
08b3d104
JDA
2157GCC 3.0 and up support HP-UX 11. On 64-bit capable systems, there
2158are two distinct ports. The @samp{hppa2.0w-hp-hpux11*} port generates
2159code for the 32-bit pa-risc runtime architecture. It uses the HP
f269f54f
JDA
2160linker. The @samp{hppa64-hp-hpux11*} port generates 64-bit code for the
2161pa-risc 2.0 architecture. The script config.guess now selects the port
2162type based on the type compiler detected during configuration. You must
2163set your @env{PATH} or define @env{CC} so that configure finds an appropriate
2164compiler for the initial bootstrap. Different prefixes must be used if
2165both ports are to be installed on the same system.
2166
f401d0f5
JDA
2167It is best to explicitly configure the @samp{hppa64-hp-hpux11*} target
2168with the @option{--with-ld=@dots{}} option. We support both the HP
2169and GNU linkers for this target. The two linkers require different
2170link commands. Thus, it's not possible to switch linkers during a
2171GCC build. This has been been reported to occur in a unified build
2172of binutils and GCC.
2173
f269f54f
JDA
2174GCC 2.95.x is not supported under HP-UX 11 and cannot be used to
2175compile GCC 3.0 and up. Refer to @uref{binaries.html,,binaries} for
2176information about obtaining precompiled GCC binaries for HP-UX.
08b3d104
JDA
2177
2178You must use GNU binutils 2.11 or above with the 32-bit port. Thread
2179support is not currently implemented, so @option{--enable-threads} does
8c085f6f
JJ
2180not work. See:
2181
2182@itemize
2183@item @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-prs/2002-01/msg00551.html}
2184@item @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-bugs/2002-01/msg00663.html}
2185@end itemize
2186
f269f54f
JDA
2187GCC 3.3 and later support weak symbols on the 32-bit port using SOM
2188secondary definition symbols. This feature is not enabled for earlier
2189versions of HP-UX since there have been bugs in the linker support for
2190secondary symbols. The HP linker patches @code{PHSS_26559} and
2191@code{PHSS_24304} for HP-UX 11.00 and 11.11, respectively, correct the
2192problem of linker core dumps creating C++ libraries. Earlier patches
2193may work but they have not been tested.
2194
2195GCC 3.3 nows uses the ELF DT_INIT_ARRAY and DT_FINI_ARRAY capability
2196to run initializers and finalizers on the 64-bit port. The feature
2197requires CVS binutils as of January 2, 2003, or a subsequent release
2198to correct a problem arising from HP's non-standard use of the .init
2199and .fini sections. The 32-bit port uses the linker @option{+init}
2200and @option{+fini} options. As with the support for secondary symbols,
2201there have been bugs in the order in which these options are executed
2202by the HP linker. So, again a recent linker patch is recommended.
2203
2204The HP assembler has many limitations and is not recommended for either
2205the 32 or 64-bit ports. For example, it does not support weak symbols
2206or alias definitions. As a result, explicit template instantiations
f401d0f5
JDA
2207are required when using C++. This will make it difficult if not
2208impossible to build many C++ applications. You also can't generate
2209debugging information when using the HP assembler with GCC.
2210
2211There are a number of issues to consider in selecting which linker to
2212use with the 64-bit port. The GNU 64-bit linker can only create dynamic
2213binaries. The @option{-static} option causes linking with archive
2214libraries but doesn't produce a truly static binary. Dynamic binaries
2215still require final binding by the dynamic loader to resolve a set of
2216dynamic-loader-defined symbols. The default behavior of the HP linker
2217is the same as the GNU linker. However, it can generate true 64-bit
2218static binaries using the @option{+compat} option.
2219
2220The HP 64-bit linker doesn't support linkonce semantics. As a
2221result, C++ programs have many more sections than they should.
2222
2223The GNU 64-bit linker has some issues with shared library support
2224and exceptions. As a result, we only support libgcc in archive
2225format. For similar reasons, dwarf2 unwind and exception support
2226are disabled. The GNU linker also has problems creating binaries
2227with @option{-static}. It doesn't provide stubs for internal
2228calls to global functions in shared libraries, so these calls
2229can't be overloaded.
581d9404
JDA
2230
2231There are several possible approaches to building the distribution.
2232Binutils can be built first using the HP tools. Then, the GCC
2233distribution can be built. The second approach is to build GCC
2234first using the HP tools, then build binutils, then rebuild GCC.
2235There have been problems with various binary distributions, so
2236it is best not to start from a binary distribution.
2237
2aea0b53
ZW
2238Starting with GCC 3.4 an ISO C compiler is required to bootstrap.
2239The bundled compiler supports only traditional C; you will need
2240either HP's unbundled compiler, or a binary distribution of GCC@.
581d9404
JDA
2241
2242This port still is undergoing significant development.
08b3d104 2243
b8df899a 2244@html
b8db17af 2245<hr />
b8df899a
JM
2246@end html
2247@heading @anchor{i370-*-*}i370-*-*
2248This port is very preliminary and has many known bugs. We hope to
2249have a higher-quality port for this machine soon.
2250
f42974dc 2251@html
b8db17af 2252<hr />
f42974dc 2253@end html
ef88b07d 2254@heading @anchor{*-*-linux-gnu}*-*-linux-gnu
f42974dc 2255
9e80ada7
PE
2256Versions of libstdc++-v3 starting with 3.2.1 require bugfixes present
2257in glibc 2.2.5 and later. More information is available in the
2258libstdc++-v3 documentation.
2259
f42974dc 2260If you use glibc 2.2 (or 2.1.9x), GCC 2.95.2 won't install
021c4bfd 2261out-of-the-box. You'll get compile errors while building @samp{libstdc++}.
f42974dc
DW
2262The patch @uref{glibc-2.2.patch,,glibc-2.2.patch}, that is to be
2263applied in the GCC source tree, fixes the compatibility problems.
2264
e15ed790 2265Currently Glibc 2.2.3 (and older releases) and GCC 3.0 are out of sync
161d7b59 2266since the latest exception handling changes for GCC@. Compiling glibc
e15ed790 2267with GCC 3.0 will give a binary incompatible glibc and therefore cause
3bcf1b13
KH
2268lots of problems and might make your system completely unusable. This
2269will definitely need fixes in glibc but might also need fixes in GCC@. We
e15ed790
AJ
2270strongly advise to wait for glibc 2.2.4 and to read the release notes of
2271glibc 2.2.4 whether patches for GCC 3.0 are needed. You can use glibc
22722.2.3 with GCC 3.0, just do not try to recompile it.
2273
b8df899a 2274@html
b8db17af 2275<hr />
b8df899a
JM
2276@end html
2277@heading @anchor{ix86-*-linux*aout}i?86-*-linux*aout
2278Use this configuration to generate @file{a.out} binaries on Linux-based
767094dd 2279GNU systems. This configuration is being superseded. You must use
b8df899a
JM
2280gas/binutils version 2.5.2 or later.
2281
f42974dc 2282@html
b8db17af 2283<hr />
f42974dc 2284@end html
ef88b07d 2285@heading @anchor{ix86-*-linux*}i?86-*-linux*
f42974dc 2286
021c4bfd 2287You will need binutils 2.9.1.0.15 or newer for exception handling to work.
f42974dc
DW
2288
2289If you receive Signal 11 errors when building on GNU/Linux, then it is
2290possible you have a hardware problem. Further information on this can be
2291found on @uref{http://www.bitwizard.nl/sig11/,,www.bitwizard.nl}.
2292
b8df899a 2293@html
b8db17af 2294<hr />
b8df899a
JM
2295@end html
2296@heading @anchor{ix86-*-sco}i?86-*-sco
2297Compilation with RCC is recommended. Also, it may be a good idea to
2298link with GNU malloc instead of the malloc that comes with the system.
2299
2300@html
b8db17af 2301<hr />
b8df899a
JM
2302@end html
2303@heading @anchor{ix86-*-sco3.2v4}i?86-*-sco3.2v4
2304Use this configuration for SCO release 3.2 version 4.
2305
f42974dc 2306@html
b8db17af 2307<hr />
f42974dc 2308@end html
ef88b07d 2309@heading @anchor{ix86-*-sco3.2v5*}i?86-*-sco3.2v5*
b8df899a 2310Use this for the SCO OpenServer Release 5 family of operating systems.
f42974dc
DW
2311
2312Unlike earlier versions of GCC, the ability to generate COFF with this
2313target is no longer provided.
2314
021c4bfd 2315Earlier versions of GCC emitted DWARF 1 when generating ELF to allow
f42974dc 2316the system debugger to be used. That support was too burdensome to
021c4bfd 2317maintain. GCC now emits only DWARF 2 for this target. This means you
f42974dc 2318may use either the UDK debugger or GDB to debug programs built by this
161d7b59 2319version of GCC@.
f42974dc 2320
ac24fc99
KJ
2321GCC is now only supported on releases 5.0.4 and later, and requires that
2322you install Support Level Supplement OSS646B or later, and Support Level
2323Supplement OSS631C or later. If you are using release 5.0.7 of
2324OpenServer, you must have at least the first maintenance pack installed
2325(this includes the relevant portions of OSS646). OSS646, also known as
2326the "Execution Environment Update", provides updated link editors and
2327assemblers, as well as updated standard C and math libraries. The C
2328startup modules are also updated to support the System V gABI draft, and
2329GCC relies on that behaviour. OSS631 provides a collection of commonly
2330used open source libraries, some of which GCC depends on (such as GNU
2331gettext and zlib). SCO OpenServer Release 5.0.7 has all of this built
2332in by default, but OSS631C and later also apply to that release. Please
2333visit
2334@uref{ftp://ftp.sco.com/pub/openserver5,,ftp://ftp.sco.com/pub/openserver5}
2335for the latest versions of these (and other potentially useful)
2336supplements.
2337
2338Although there is support for using the native assembler, it is
2339recommended that you configure GCC to use the GNU assembler. You do
2340this by using the flags
2341@uref{./configure.html#with-gnu-as,,@option{--with-gnu-as}}. You should
2342use a modern version of GNU binutils. Version 2.13.2.1 was used for all
2343testing. In general, only the @option{--with-gnu-as} option is tested.
2344A modern bintuils (as well as a plethora of other development related
2345GNU utilities) can be found in Support Level Supplement OSS658A, the
2346"GNU Development Tools" package. See the SCO web and ftp sites for details.
2347That package also contains the currently "officially supported" version of
2348GCC, version 2.95.3. It is useful for bootstrapping this version.
f42974dc 2349
f42974dc 2350@html
b8db17af 2351<hr />
f42974dc 2352@end html
ef88b07d 2353@heading @anchor{ix86-*-udk}i?86-*-udk
f42974dc
DW
2354
2355This target emulates the SCO Universal Development Kit and requires that
f9047ed3
JM
2356package be installed. (If it is installed, you will have a
2357@file{/udk/usr/ccs/bin/cc} file present.) It's very much like the
b953cc4b 2358@samp{i?86-*-unixware7*} target
f42974dc
DW
2359but is meant to be used when hosting on a system where UDK isn't the
2360default compiler such as OpenServer 5 or Unixware 2. This target will
f9047ed3 2361generate binaries that will run on OpenServer, Unixware 2, or Unixware 7,
161d7b59 2362with the same warnings and caveats as the SCO UDK@.
f42974dc 2363
f42974dc
DW
2364This target is a little tricky to build because we have to distinguish
2365it from the native tools (so it gets headers, startups, and libraries
f9047ed3 2366from the right place) while making the tools not think we're actually
f42974dc
DW
2367building a cross compiler. The easiest way to do this is with a configure
2368command like this:
2369
8c085f6f
JJ
2370@example
2371 CC=/udk/usr/ccs/bin/cc @var{/your/path/to}/gcc/configure \
2372 --host=i686-pc-udk --target=i686-pc-udk --program-prefix=udk-
2373@end example
f42974dc 2374
6cfb3f16 2375@emph{You should substitute @samp{i686} in the above command with the appropriate
f42974dc
DW
2376processor for your host.}
2377
021c4bfd
RO
2378After the usual @samp{make bootstrap} and
2379@samp{make install}, you can then access the UDK-targeted GCC
38209993
LG
2380tools by adding @command{udk-} before the commonly known name. For
2381example, to invoke the C compiler, you would use @command{udk-gcc}.
2382They will coexist peacefully with any native-target GCC tools you may
2383have installed.
f42974dc
DW
2384
2385
b499d9ab 2386@html
b8db17af 2387<hr />
b499d9ab
JJ
2388@end html
2389@heading @anchor{ia64-*-linux}ia64-*-linux
2390IA-64 processor (also known as IPF, or Itanium Processor Family)
2391running GNU/Linux.
2392
2393The toolchain is not completely finished, so requirements will continue
2394to change.
2395GCC 3.0.1 and later require glibc 2.2.4.
2396GCC 3.0.2 requires binutils from 2001-09-05 or later.
2397GCC 3.0.1 requires binutils 2.11.1 or later.
2398
2399None of the following versions of GCC has an ABI that is compatible
2400with any of the other versions in this list, with the exception that
2401Red Hat 2.96 and Trillian 000171 are compatible with each other:
24023.0.2, 3.0.1, 3.0, Red Hat 2.96, and Trillian 000717.
2403This primarily affects C++ programs and programs that create shared libraries.
2404Because of these ABI incompatibilities, GCC 3.0.2 is not recommended for
2405user programs on GNU/Linux systems built using earlier compiler releases.
2406GCC 3.0.2 is recommended for compiling linux, the kernel.
2407GCC 3.0.2 is believed to be fully ABI compliant, and hence no more major
2408ABI changes are expected.
2409
f42974dc 2410@html
b8db17af 2411<hr />
f42974dc
DW
2412<!-- rs6000-ibm-aix*, powerpc-ibm-aix* -->
2413@end html
ef88b07d 2414@heading @anchor{*-ibm-aix*}*-ibm-aix*
2aea0b53 2415AIX version 3 or older is no longer supported.
f42974dc
DW
2416
2417AIX Make frequently has problems with GCC makefiles. GNU Make 3.76 or
2418newer is recommended to build on this platform.
2419
6cfb3f16 2420Errors involving @code{alloca} when building GCC generally are due
021c4bfd 2421to an incorrect definition of @code{CC} in the Makefile or mixing files
161d7b59 2422compiled with the native C compiler and GCC@. During the stage1 phase of
6cfb3f16
JM
2423the build, the native AIX compiler @strong{must} be invoked as @command{cc}
2424(not @command{xlc}). Once @command{configure} has been informed of
2425@command{xlc}, one needs to use @samp{make distclean} to remove the
38209993 2426configure cache files and ensure that @env{CC} environment variable
f42974dc
DW
2427does not provide a definition that will confuse @command{configure}.
2428If this error occurs during stage2 or later, then the problem most likely
2429is the version of Make (see above).
2430
2705baf5 2431The GNU Assembler incorrectly reports that it supports WEAK symbols on
225cee28
DE
2432AIX which causes GCC to try to utilize weak symbol functionality although
2433it is not supported on the platform. The native @command{as} and
2705baf5 2434@command{ld} still are recommended. The native AIX tools do
161d7b59 2435interoperate with GCC@.
df002c7d 2436
04d2be8e 2437Building @file{libstdc++.a} requires a fix for an AIX Assembler bug
2705baf5
DE
2438APAR IY26685 (AIX 4.3) or APAR IY25528 (AIX 5.1).
2439
fdf68669
DE
2440@samp{libstdc++} in GCC 3.2 increments the major version number of the
2441shared object and GCC installation places the @file{libstdc++.a}
2442shared library in a common location which will overwrite the GCC 3.1
2443version of the shared library. Applications either need to be
2444re-linked against the new shared library or the GCC 3.1 version of the
2445@samp{libstdc++} shared object needs to be available to the AIX
2446runtime loader. The GCC 3.1 @samp{libstdc++.so.4} shared object can
2447be installed for runtime dynamic loading using the following steps to
2448set the @samp{F_LOADONLY} flag in the shared object for @emph{each}
2449multilib @file{libstdc++.a} installed:
2450
2451Extract the shared object from each the GCC 3.1 @file{libstdc++.a}
2452archive:
2453@example
35fb4cf6 2454 % ar -x libstdc++.a libstdc++.so.4
fdf68669
DE
2455@end example
2456
2457Enable the @samp{F_LOADONLY} flag so that the shared object will be
2458available for runtime dynamic loading, but not linking:
2459@example
2460 % strip -e libstdc++.so.4
2461@end example
2462
2463Archive the runtime-only shared object in the GCC 3.2
2464@file{libstdc++.a} archive:
2465@example
35fb4cf6 2466 % ar -q libstdc++.a libstdc++.so.4
fdf68669
DE
2467@end example
2468
df002c7d
DE
2469Linking executables and shared libraries may produce warnings of
2470duplicate symbols. The assembly files generated by GCC for AIX always
2471have included multiple symbol definitions for certain global variable
2472and function declarations in the original program. The warnings should
2473not prevent the linker from producing a correct library or runnable
2474executable.
2475
6cfb3f16 2476AIX 4.3 utilizes a ``large format'' archive to support both 32-bit and
df002c7d
DE
247764-bit object modules. The routines provided in AIX 4.3.0 and AIX 4.3.1
2478to parse archive libraries did not handle the new format correctly.
2479These routines are used by GCC and result in error messages during
6cfb3f16 2480linking such as ``not a COFF file''. The version of the routines shipped
df002c7d
DE
2481with AIX 4.3.1 should work for a 32-bit environment. The @option{-g}
2482option of the archive command may be used to create archives of 32-bit
6cfb3f16 2483objects using the original ``small format''. A correct version of the
d5d8d540 2484routines is shipped with AIX 4.3.2 and above.
df002c7d 2485
f42974dc
DW
2486Some versions of the AIX binder (linker) can fail with a relocation
2487overflow severe error when the @option{-bbigtoc} option is used to link
161d7b59 2488GCC-produced object files into an executable that overflows the TOC@. A fix
f42974dc
DW
2489for APAR IX75823 (OVERFLOW DURING LINK WHEN USING GCC AND -BBIGTOC) is
2490available from IBM Customer Support and from its
d5d8d540 2491@uref{http://techsupport.services.ibm.com/,,techsupport.services.ibm.com}
f42974dc
DW
2492website as PTF U455193.
2493
df002c7d 2494The AIX 4.3.2.1 linker (bos.rte.bind_cmds Level 4.3.2.1) will dump core
161d7b59 2495with a segmentation fault when invoked by any version of GCC@. A fix for
df002c7d 2496APAR IX87327 is available from IBM Customer Support and from its
d5d8d540 2497@uref{http://techsupport.services.ibm.com/,,techsupport.services.ibm.com}
df002c7d 2498website as PTF U461879. This fix is incorporated in AIX 4.3.3 and above.
f42974dc
DW
2499
2500The initial assembler shipped with AIX 4.3.0 generates incorrect object
2501files. A fix for APAR IX74254 (64BIT DISASSEMBLED OUTPUT FROM COMPILER FAILS
2502TO ASSEMBLE/BIND) is available from IBM Customer Support and from its
d5d8d540 2503@uref{http://techsupport.services.ibm.com/,,techsupport.services.ibm.com}
f42974dc
DW
2504website as PTF U453956. This fix is incorporated in AIX 4.3.1 and above.
2505
161d7b59 2506AIX provides National Language Support (NLS)@. Compilers and assemblers
df002c7d 2507use NLS to support locale-specific representations of various data
6cfb3f16 2508formats including floating-point numbers (e.g., @samp{.} vs @samp{,} for
df002c7d
DE
2509separating decimal fractions). There have been problems reported where
2510GCC does not produce the same floating-point formats that the assembler
c771326b 2511expects. If one encounters this problem, set the @env{LANG}
6cfb3f16 2512environment variable to @samp{C} or @samp{En_US}.
f42974dc 2513
5791e6da
DE
2514By default, GCC for AIX 4.1 and above produces code that can be used on
2515both Power or PowerPC processors.
2516
d5d8d540
DE
2517A default can be specified with the @option{-mcpu=@var{cpu_type}}
2518switch and using the configure option @option{--with-cpu-@var{cpu_type}}.
f42974dc 2519
e3223ea2 2520@html
b8db17af 2521<hr />
e3223ea2
DC
2522@end html
2523@heading @anchor{ip2k-*-elf}ip2k-*-elf
2524Ubicom IP2022 micro controller.
2525This configuration is intended for embedded systems.
2526There are no standard Unix configurations.
2527
2528Use @samp{configure --target=ip2k-elf --enable-languages=c} to configure GCC@.
2529
b8df899a 2530@html
b8db17af 2531<hr />
b8df899a
JM
2532@end html
2533@heading @anchor{m32r-*-elf}m32r-*-elf
2534Mitsubishi M32R processor.
2535This configuration is intended for embedded systems.
2536
b8df899a 2537@html
b8db17af 2538<hr />
b8df899a
JM
2539@end html
2540@heading @anchor{m6811-elf}m6811-elf
2541Motorola 68HC11 family micro controllers. These are used in embedded
2542applications. There are no standard Unix configurations.
2543
2544@html
b8db17af 2545<hr />
b8df899a
JM
2546@end html
2547@heading @anchor{m6812-elf}m6812-elf
2548Motorola 68HC12 family micro controllers. These are used in embedded
2549applications. There are no standard Unix configurations.
2550
b8df899a 2551@html
b8db17af 2552<hr />
b8df899a
JM
2553@end html
2554@heading @anchor{m68k-hp-hpux}m68k-hp-hpux
161d7b59
JM
2555HP 9000 series 300 or 400 running HP-UX@. HP-UX version 8.0 has a bug in
2556the assembler that prevents compilation of GCC@. This
b8df899a
JM
2557bug manifests itself during the first stage of compilation, while
2558building @file{libgcc2.a}:
2559
2560@smallexample
2561_floatdisf
2562cc1: warning: `-g' option not supported on this version of GCC
2563cc1: warning: `-g1' option not supported on this version of GCC
2564./xgcc: Internal compiler error: program as got fatal signal 11
2565@end smallexample
2566
2567A patched version of the assembler is available as the file
2568@uref{ftp://altdorf.ai.mit.edu/archive/cph/hpux-8.0-assembler}. If you
2569have HP software support, the patch can also be obtained directly from
2570HP, as described in the following note:
2571
2572@quotation
2573This is the patched assembler, to patch SR#1653-010439, where the
2574assembler aborts on floating point constants.
2575
2576The bug is not really in the assembler, but in the shared library
2577version of the function ``cvtnum(3c)''. The bug on ``cvtnum(3c)'' is
2578SR#4701-078451. Anyway, the attached assembler uses the archive
2579library version of ``cvtnum(3c)'' and thus does not exhibit the bug.
2580@end quotation
2581
2582This patch is also known as PHCO_4484.
2583
021c4bfd 2584In addition, if you wish to use gas, you must use
b8df899a
JM
2585gas version 2.1 or later, and you must use the GNU linker version 2.1 or
2586later. Earlier versions of gas relied upon a program which converted the
2587gas output into the native HP-UX format, but that program has not been
2588kept up to date. gdb does not understand that native HP-UX format, so
2589you must use gas if you wish to use gdb.
2590
2591On HP-UX version 8.05, but not on 8.07 or more recent versions, the
7ba4ca63 2592@command{fixproto} shell script triggers a bug in the system shell. If you
b8df899a 2593encounter this problem, upgrade your operating system or use BASH (the
7ba4ca63 2594GNU shell) to run @command{fixproto}. This bug will cause the fixproto
b8df899a
JM
2595program to report an error of the form:
2596
2597@example
2598./fixproto: sh internal 1K buffer overflow
2599@end example
2600
2601To fix this, you can also change the first line of the fixproto script
2602to look like:
2603
2604@example
2605#!/bin/ksh
2606@end example
2607
b8df899a 2608@html
b8db17af 2609<hr />
b8df899a
JM
2610@end html
2611@heading @anchor{mips-*-*}mips-*-*
b8df899a
JM
2612If on a MIPS system you get an error message saying ``does not have gp
2613sections for all it's [sic] sectons [sic]'', don't worry about it. This
2614happens whenever you use GAS with the MIPS linker, but there is not
2615really anything wrong, and it is okay to use the output file. You can
2616stop such warnings by installing the GNU linker.
2617
2618It would be nice to extend GAS to produce the gp tables, but they are
2619optional, and there should not be a warning about their absence.
2620
26979a17
PE
2621The libstdc++ atomic locking routines for MIPS targets requires MIPS II
2622and later. A patch went in just after the GCC 3.3 release to
2623make @samp{mips*-*-*} use the generic implementation instead. You can also
2624configure for @samp{mipsel-elf} as a workaround. The
2625@samp{mips*-*-linux*} target continues to use the MIPS II routines. More
2626work on this is expected in future releases.
2627
b953cc4b
RO
2628@heading @anchor{mips-sgi-irix5}mips-sgi-irix5
2629
2630This configuration has considerable problems, which will be fixed in a
2631future release.
f42974dc 2632
213ba345
RO
2633In order to compile GCC on an SGI running IRIX 5, the ``compiler_dev.hdr''
2634subsystem must be installed from the IDO CD-ROM supplied by Silicon
2635Graphics. It is also available for download from
2636@uref{http://www.sgi.com/developers/devtools/apis/ido.html,,http://www.sgi.com/developers/devtools/apis/ido.html}.
f42974dc 2637
7ba4ca63 2638@samp{make compare} may fail on version 5 of IRIX unless you add
213ba345
RO
2639@option{-save-temps} to @code{CFLAGS}. On these systems, the name of the
2640assembler input file is stored in the object file, and that makes
2641comparison fail if it differs between the @code{stage1} and
2642@code{stage2} compilations. The option @option{-save-temps} forces a
2643fixed name to be used for the assembler input file, instead of a
2644randomly chosen name in @file{/tmp}. Do not add @option{-save-temps}
2645unless the comparisons fail without that option. If you do you
2646@option{-save-temps}, you will have to manually delete the @samp{.i} and
2647@samp{.s} files after each series of compilations.
f42974dc 2648
213ba345
RO
2649If you use the MIPS C compiler to bootstrap, it may be necessary
2650to increase its table size for switch statements with the
2651@option{-Wf,-XNg1500} option. If you use the @option{-O2}
2652optimization option, you also need to use @option{-Olimit 3000}.
f42974dc 2653
b953cc4b 2654To enable debugging under IRIX 5, you must use GNU @command{as} 2.11.2
f282ffb3 2655or later,
213ba345
RO
2656and use the @option{--with-gnu-as} configure option when configuring GCC.
2657GNU @command{as} is distributed as part of the binutils package.
f282ffb3 2658When using release 2.11.2, you need to apply a patch
b953cc4b
RO
2659@uref{http://sources.redhat.com/ml/binutils/2001-07/msg00352.html,,http://sources.redhat.com/ml/binutils/2001-07/msg00352.html}
2660which will be included in the next release of binutils.
f42974dc 2661
213ba345
RO
2662When building GCC, the build process loops rebuilding @command{cc1} over
2663and over again. This happens on @samp{mips-sgi-irix5.2}, and possibly
2664other platforms. It has been reported that this is a known bug in the
2665@command{make} shipped with IRIX 5.2. We recommend you use GNU
2666@command{make} instead of the vendor supplied @command{make} program;
2667however, you may have success with @command{smake} on IRIX 5.2 if you do
2668not have GNU @command{make} available.
f42974dc
DW
2669
2670@html
b8db17af 2671<hr />
f42974dc 2672@end html
b953cc4b 2673@heading @anchor{mips-sgi-irix6}mips-sgi-irix6
f42974dc 2674
213ba345 2675If you are using IRIX @command{cc} as your bootstrap compiler, you must
f42974dc
DW
2676ensure that the N32 ABI is in use. To test this, compile a simple C
2677file with @command{cc} and then run @command{file} on the
2678resulting object file. The output should look like:
2679
2680@example
213ba345 2681test.o: ELF N32 MSB @dots{}
f42974dc
DW
2682@end example
2683
2684If you see:
213ba345
RO
2685
2686@example
2687test.o: ELF 32-bit MSB @dots{}
2688@end example
2689
2690or
2691
f42974dc 2692@example
213ba345 2693test.o: ELF 64-bit MSB @dots{}
f42974dc
DW
2694@end example
2695
213ba345 2696then your version of @command{cc} uses the O32 or N64 ABI by default. You
38209993 2697should set the environment variable @env{CC} to @samp{cc -n32}
161d7b59 2698before configuring GCC@.
f42974dc 2699
0fca60ab
RO
2700If you want the resulting @command{gcc} to run on old 32-bit systems
2701with the MIPS R4400 CPU, you need to ensure that only code for the mips3
2702instruction set architecture (ISA) is generated. While GCC 3.x does
2703this correctly, both GCC 2.95 and SGI's MIPSpro @command{cc} may change
2704the ISA depending on the machine where GCC is built. Using one of them
2705as the bootstrap compiler may result in mips4 code, which won't run at
2706all on mips3-only systems. For the test program above, you should see:
2707
2708@example
2709test.o: ELF N32 MSB mips-3 @dots{}
2710@end example
2711
2712If you get:
2713
2714@example
2715test.o: ELF N32 MSB mips-4 @dots{}
2716@end example
2717
2718instead, you should set the environment variable @env{CC} to @samp{cc
2719-n32 -mips3} or @samp{gcc -mips3} respectively before configuring GCC@.
2720
213ba345
RO
2721GCC on IRIX 6 is usually built to support both the N32 and N64 ABIs. If
2722you build GCC on a system that doesn't have the N64 libraries installed,
2723you need to configure with @option{--disable-multilib} so GCC doesn't
2724try to use them. Look for @file{/usr/lib64/libc.so.1} to see if you
2725have the 64-bit libraries installed.
2726
2727You must @emph{not} use GNU @command{as} (which isn't built anyway as of
2728binutils 2.11.2) on IRIX 6 platforms; doing so will only cause problems.
2729
f42974dc 2730GCC does not currently support generating O32 ABI binaries in the
b953cc4b 2731@samp{mips-sgi-irix6} configurations. It is possible to create a GCC
213ba345 2732with O32 ABI only support by configuring it for the @samp{mips-sgi-irix5}
b953cc4b
RO
2733target and using a patched GNU @command{as} 2.11.2 as documented in the
2734@uref{#mips-sgi-irix5,,@samp{mips-sgi-irix5}} section above. Using the
2735native assembler requires patches to GCC which will be included in a
2736future release. It is
213ba345 2737expected that O32 ABI support will be available again in a future release.
f42974dc 2738
b953cc4b
RO
2739The @option{--enable-threads} option doesn't currently work, a patch is
2740in preparation for a future release. The @option{--enable-libgcj}
2741option is disabled by default: IRIX 6 uses a very low default limit
2742(20480) for the command line length. Although libtool contains a
2743workaround for this problem, at least the N64 @samp{libgcj} is known not
2744to build despite this, running into an internal error of the native
2745@command{ld}. A sure fix is to increase this limit (@samp{ncargs}) to
2746its maximum of 262144 bytes. If you have root access, you can use the
2747@command{systune} command to do this.
2748
f42974dc 2749GCC does not correctly pass/return structures which are
767094dd
JM
2750smaller than 16 bytes and which are not 8 bytes. The problem is very
2751involved and difficult to fix. It affects a number of other targets also,
57694e40 2752but IRIX 6 is affected the most, because it is a 64-bit target, and 4 byte
767094dd 2753structures are common. The exact problem is that structures are being padded
e979f9e8 2754at the wrong end, e.g.@: a 4 byte structure is loaded into the lower 4 bytes
f42974dc
DW
2755of the register when it should be loaded into the upper 4 bytes of the
2756register.
2757
2758GCC is consistent with itself, but not consistent with the SGI C compiler
2759(and the SGI supplied runtime libraries), so the only failures that can
2760happen are when there are library functions that take/return such
213ba345
RO
2761structures. There are very few such library functions. Currently this
2762is known to affect @code{inet_ntoa}, @code{inet_lnaof},
46d2e8d7
RO
2763@code{inet_netof}, @code{inet_makeaddr}, and @code{semctl}. Until the
2764bug is fixed, GCC contains workarounds for the known affected functions.
f42974dc 2765
3aa8219e
GP
2766See @uref{http://freeware.sgi.com/,,http://freeware.sgi.com/} for more
2767information about using GCC on IRIX platforms.
f42974dc 2768
b8df899a 2769@html
b8db17af 2770<hr />
b8df899a 2771@end html
021c4bfd 2772@heading @anchor{powerpc*-*-*}powerpc-*-*
b8df899a 2773
6cfb3f16
JM
2774You can specify a default version for the @option{-mcpu=@var{cpu_type}}
2775switch by using the configure option @option{--with-cpu-@var{cpu_type}}.
b8df899a 2776
4f2b1139 2777@html
b8db17af 2778<hr />
4f2b1139
SS
2779@end html
2780@heading @anchor{powerpc-*-darwin*}powerpc-*-darwin*
2781PowerPC running Darwin (Mac OS X kernel).
2782
4f2b1139
SS
2783Pre-installed versions of Mac OS X may not include any developer tools,
2784meaning that you will not be able to build GCC from source. Tool
2785binaries are available at
11292480 2786@uref{http://developer.apple.com/tools/compilers.html} (free
4f2b1139
SS
2787registration required).
2788
b89a3806
GK
2789The default stack limit of 512K is too small, which may cause compiles
2790to fail with 'Bus error'. Set the stack larger, for instance
2791by doing @samp{limit stack 800}. It's a good idea to use the GNU
2792preprocessor instead of Apple's @file{cpp-precomp} during the first stage of
2793bootstrapping; this is automatic when doing @samp{make bootstrap}, but
2794to do it from the toplevel objdir you will need to say @samp{make
2795CC='cc -no-cpp-precomp' bootstrap}.
2796
2797The version of GCC shipped by Apple typically includes a number of
2798extensions not available in a standard GCC release. These extensions
2799are generally specific to Mac programming.
4f2b1139 2800
021c4bfd 2801@html
b8db17af 2802<hr />
021c4bfd
RO
2803@end html
2804@heading @anchor{powerpc-*-elf}powerpc-*-elf, powerpc-*-sysv4
2805PowerPC system in big endian mode, running System V.4.
2806
f42974dc 2807@html
b8db17af 2808<hr />
f42974dc 2809@end html
ef88b07d 2810@heading @anchor{powerpc-*-linux-gnu*}powerpc-*-linux-gnu*
f42974dc 2811
f9047ed3 2812You will need
e8a7b0c2 2813@uref{ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/devel/binutils,,binutils 2.13.90.0.10}
791a949f 2814or newer for a working GCC@.
f42974dc 2815
edf1b3f3 2816@html
b8db17af 2817<hr />
edf1b3f3
AC
2818@end html
2819@heading @anchor{powerpc-*-netbsd*}powerpc-*-netbsd*
2820PowerPC system in big endian mode running NetBSD@. To build the
a38f87a9 2821documentation you will need Texinfo version 4.2 (NetBSD 1.5.1 included
edf1b3f3
AC
2822Texinfo version 3.12).
2823
b8df899a 2824@html
b8db17af 2825<hr />
b8df899a
JM
2826@end html
2827@heading @anchor{powerpc-*-eabisim}powerpc-*-eabisim
2828Embedded PowerPC system in big endian mode for use in running under the
2829PSIM simulator.
2830
b8df899a 2831@html
b8db17af 2832<hr />
b8df899a
JM
2833@end html
2834@heading @anchor{powerpc-*-eabi}powerpc-*-eabi
2835Embedded PowerPC system in big endian mode.
2836
b8df899a 2837@html
b8db17af 2838<hr />
b8df899a
JM
2839@end html
2840@heading @anchor{powerpcle-*-elf}powerpcle-*-elf, powerpcle-*-sysv4
2841PowerPC system in little endian mode, running System V.4.
2842
b8df899a 2843@html
b8db17af 2844<hr />
b8df899a
JM
2845@end html
2846@heading @anchor{powerpcle-*-eabisim}powerpcle-*-eabisim
2847Embedded PowerPC system in little endian mode for use in running under
2848the PSIM simulator.
2849
2850@html
b8db17af 2851<hr />
b8df899a
JM
2852@end html
2853@heading @anchor{powerpcle-*-eabi}powerpcle-*-eabi
2854Embedded PowerPC system in little endian mode.
2855
b8df899a 2856@html
b8db17af 2857<hr />
b8df899a
JM
2858@end html
2859@heading @anchor{powerpcle-*-winnt}powerpcle-*-winnt, powerpcle-*-pe
161d7b59 2860PowerPC system in little endian mode running Windows NT@.
b8df899a 2861
91abf72d 2862@html
b8db17af 2863<hr />
91abf72d
HP
2864@end html
2865@heading @anchor{s390-*-linux*}s390-*-linux*
f282ffb3 2866S/390 system running Linux for S/390@.
91abf72d
HP
2867
2868@html
b8db17af 2869<hr />
91abf72d
HP
2870@end html
2871@heading @anchor{s390x-*-linux*}s390x-*-linux*
57694e40 2872zSeries system (64-bit) running Linux for zSeries@.
91abf72d 2873
f42974dc 2874@html
b8db17af 2875<hr />
f42974dc 2876@end html
250d5688
RO
2877@c Please use Solaris 2 to refer to all release of Solaris, starting
2878@c with 2.0 until 2.6, 7, and 8. Solaris 1 was a marketing name for
2879@c SunOS 4 releases which we don't use to avoid confusion. Solaris
2880@c alone is too unspecific and must be avoided.
2881@heading @anchor{*-*-solaris2*}*-*-solaris2*
f42974dc 2882
250d5688 2883Sun does not ship a C compiler with Solaris 2. To bootstrap and install
dbd210ef
KC
2884GCC you first have to install a pre-built compiler, see our
2885@uref{binaries.html,,binaries page} for details.
f42974dc 2886
250d5688 2887The Solaris 2 @command{/bin/sh} will often fail to configure
92441f83
GP
2888@file{libstdc++-v3}, @file{boehm-gc} or @file{libjava}. We therefore
2889recommend to set @env{CONFIG_SHELL} to @command{/bin/ksh} in your
2890environment.
e6855a2d 2891
b8df899a 2892Solaris 2 comes with a number of optional OS packages. Some of these
92441f83 2893are needed to use GCC fully, namely @code{SUNWarc},
dbd210ef
KC
2894@code{SUNWbtool}, @code{SUNWesu}, @code{SUNWhea}, @code{SUNWlibm},
2895@code{SUNWsprot}, and @code{SUNWtoo}. If you did not install all
250d5688 2896optional packages when installing Solaris 2, you will need to verify that
b8df899a
JM
2897the packages that GCC needs are installed.
2898
2899To check whether an optional package is installed, use
dbd210ef 2900the @command{pkginfo} command. To add an optional package, use the
250d5688 2901@command{pkgadd} command. For further details, see the Solaris 2
b8df899a
JM
2902documentation.
2903
250d5688 2904Trying to use the linker and other tools in
b8df899a
JM
2905@file{/usr/ucb} to install GCC has been observed to cause trouble.
2906For example, the linker may hang indefinitely. The fix is to remove
250d5688 2907@file{/usr/ucb} from your @env{PATH}.
f42974dc 2908
021c4bfd
RO
2909All releases of GNU binutils prior to 2.11.2 have known bugs on this
2910platform. We recommend the use of GNU binutils 2.11.2 or the vendor
2911tools (Sun @command{as}, Sun @command{ld}).
f42974dc 2912
250d5688
RO
2913Sun bug 4296832 turns up when compiling X11 headers with GCC 2.95 or
2914newer: @command{g++} will complain that types are missing. These headers assume
2915that omitting the type means @code{int}; this assumption worked for C89 but
2916is wrong for C++, and is now wrong for C99 also.
2917
13ba36b4 2918@command{g++} accepts such (invalid) constructs with the option
250d5688
RO
2919@option{-fpermissive}; it
2920will assume that any missing type is @code{int} (as defined by C89).
2921
2922There are patches for Solaris 2.6 (105633-56 or newer for SPARC,
2923106248-42 or newer for Intel), Solaris 7 (108376-21 or newer for SPARC,
2924108377-20 for Intel), and Solaris 8 (108652-24 or newer for SPARC,
2925108653-22 for Intel) that fix this bug.
f42974dc 2926
dbd210ef 2927@html
b8db17af 2928<hr />
dbd210ef 2929@end html
250d5688 2930@heading @anchor{sparc-sun-solaris2*}sparc-sun-solaris2*
dbd210ef 2931
1405141b
DN
2932When GCC is configured to use binutils 2.11.2 or later the binaries
2933produced are smaller than the ones produced using Sun's native tools;
2934this difference is quite significant for binaries containing debugging
2935information.
2936
250d5688 2937Sun @command{as} 4.x is broken in that it cannot cope with long symbol names.
dbd210ef
KC
2938A typical error message might look similar to the following:
2939
8c085f6f
JJ
2940@smallexample
2941/usr/ccs/bin/as: "/var/tmp/ccMsw135.s", line 11041: error:
2942 can't compute value of an expression involving an external symbol.
2943@end smallexample
dbd210ef 2944
250d5688
RO
2945This is Sun bug 4237974. This is fixed with patch 108908-02 for Solaris
29462.6 and has been fixed in later (5.x) versions of the assembler,
2947starting with Solaris 7.
dbd210ef 2948
03b272d2 2949Starting with Solaris 7, the operating system is capable of executing
975c6e4e
RO
295064-bit SPARC V9 binaries. GCC 3.1 and later properly supports
2951this; the @option{-m64} option enables 64-bit code generation.
2952However, if all you want is code tuned for the UltraSPARC CPU, you
2953should try the @option{-mtune=ultrasparc} option instead, which produces
2954code that, unlike full 64-bit code, can still run on non-UltraSPARC
edf1c8df 2955machines.
03b272d2 2956
975c6e4e 2957When configuring on a Solaris 7 or later system that is running a kernel
8947df0c
RH
2958that supports only 32-bit binaries, one must configure with
2959@option{--disable-multilib}, since we will not be able to build the
296064-bit target libraries.
3fc602a0 2961
f42974dc 2962@html
b8db17af 2963<hr />
f42974dc 2964@end html
ef88b07d 2965@heading @anchor{sparc-sun-solaris2.7}sparc-sun-solaris2.7
f42974dc 2966
250d5688 2967Sun patch 107058-01 (1999-01-13) for Solaris 7/SPARC triggers a bug in
f42974dc
DW
2968the dynamic linker. This problem (Sun bug 4210064) affects GCC 2.8
2969and later, including all EGCS releases. Sun formerly recommended
2970107058-01 for all Solaris 7 users, but around 1999-09-01 it started to
2971recommend it only for people who use Sun's compilers.
f9047ed3 2972
f42974dc
DW
2973Here are some workarounds to this problem:
2974@itemize @bullet
2975@item
2976Do not install Sun patch 107058-01 until after Sun releases a
2977complete patch for bug 4210064. This is the simplest course to take,
2978unless you must also use Sun's C compiler. Unfortunately 107058-01
250d5688 2979is preinstalled on some new Solaris 7-based hosts, so you may have to
f42974dc 2980back it out.
f9047ed3 2981
f42974dc
DW
2982@item
2983Copy the original, unpatched Solaris 7
2984@command{/usr/ccs/bin/as} into
975c6e4e 2985@command{/usr/local/lib/gcc-lib/sparc-sun-solaris2.7/3.1/as},
f42974dc
DW
2986adjusting the latter name to fit your local conventions and software
2987version numbers.
2988
2989@item
2990Install Sun patch 106950-03 (1999-05-25) or later. Nobody with
2991both 107058-01 and 106950-03 installed has reported the bug with GCC
2992and Sun's dynamic linker. This last course of action is riskiest,
2993for two reasons. First, you must install 106950 on all hosts that
2994run code generated by GCC; it doesn't suffice to install it only on
2995the hosts that run GCC itself. Second, Sun says that 106950-03 is
2996only a partial fix for bug 4210064, but Sun doesn't know whether the
161d7b59 2997partial fix is adequate for GCC@. Revision -08 or later should fix
250d5688 2998the bug. The current (as of 2001-09-24) revision is -14, and is included in
f282ffb3 2999the Solaris 7 Recommended Patch Cluster.
f9047ed3 3000@end itemize
f42974dc 3001
fdbf04c8
EB
3002GCC 3.3 triggers a bug in version 5.0 Alpha 03/27/98 of the Sun assembler,
3003which causes a bootstrap failure when linking the 64-bit shared version of
3004libgcc. A typical error message is:
3005
3006@smallexample
3007ld: fatal: relocation error: R_SPARC_32: file libgcc/sparcv9/_muldi3.o:
3008 symbol <unknown>: offset 0xffffffff7ec133e7 is non-aligned.
3009@end smallexample
3010
3011This bug has been fixed in the final 5.0 version of the assembler.
f42974dc 3012
c6fa9728 3013@html
b8db17af 3014<hr />
c6fa9728
JS
3015@end html
3016@heading @anchor{sparc-*-linux*}sparc-*-linux*
3017
3018GCC versions 3.0 and higher require binutils 2.11.2 and glibc 2.2.4
3019or newer on this platform. All earlier binutils and glibc
3020releases mishandled unaligned relocations on @code{sparc-*-*} targets.
3021
3022
f42974dc 3023@html
b8db17af 3024<hr />
f42974dc 3025@end html
0dc7ee3c 3026@heading @anchor{sparc64-*-solaris2*}sparc64-*-solaris2*
e403b4bc
CR
3027
3028The following compiler flags must be specified in the configure
3029step in order to bootstrap this target with the Sun compiler:
3030
3031@example
3032 % CC="cc -xildoff -xarch=v9" @var{srcdir}/configure [@var{options}] [@var{target}]
3033@end example
3034
3035@option{-xildoff} turns off the incremental linker, and @option{-xarch=v9}
0dc7ee3c
EB
3036specifies the SPARC-V9 architecture to the Sun linker and assembler.
3037
3038@html
3039<hr />
3040@end html
3041@heading @anchor{sparcv9-*-solaris2*}sparcv9-*-solaris2*
3042
3043This is a synonym for sparc64-*-solaris2*.
f42974dc 3044
b8df899a 3045@html
b8db17af 3046<hr />
b8df899a
JM
3047@end html
3048@heading @anchor{#*-*-sysv*}*-*-sysv*
3049On System V release 3, you may get this error message
3050while linking:
3051
3052@smallexample
3053ld fatal: failed to write symbol name @var{something}
3054 in strings table for file @var{whatever}
3055@end smallexample
3056
021c4bfd 3057This probably indicates that the disk is full or your ulimit won't allow
b8df899a
JM
3058the file to be as large as it needs to be.
3059
3060This problem can also result because the kernel parameter @code{MAXUMEM}
3061is too small. If so, you must regenerate the kernel and make the value
3062much larger. The default value is reported to be 1024; a value of 32768
3063is said to work. Smaller values may also work.
3064
3065On System V, if you get an error like this,
3066
3067@example
3068/usr/local/lib/bison.simple: In function `yyparse':
3069/usr/local/lib/bison.simple:625: virtual memory exhausted
3070@end example
3071
3072@noindent
021c4bfd 3073that too indicates a problem with disk space, ulimit, or @code{MAXUMEM}.
b8df899a 3074
f85b8d1a 3075On a System V release 4 system, make sure @file{/usr/bin} precedes
7ba4ca63 3076@file{/usr/ucb} in @code{PATH}. The @command{cc} command in
f85b8d1a 3077@file{/usr/ucb} uses libraries which have bugs.
b8df899a
JM
3078
3079@html
b8db17af 3080<hr />
b8df899a
JM
3081@end html
3082@heading @anchor{vax-dec-ultrix}vax-dec-ultrix
7ba4ca63 3083Don't try compiling with VAX C (@command{vcc}). It produces incorrect code
b8df899a
JM
3084in some cases (for example, when @code{alloca} is used).
3085
4977bab6
ZW
3086@html
3087<hr />
3088@end html
3089@heading @anchor{*-*-vxworks*}*-*-vxworks*
3090Support for VxWorks is in flux. At present GCC supports @emph{only} the
3091very recent VxWorks 5.5 (aka Tornado 2.2) release, and only on PowerPC.
3092We welcome patches for other architectures supported by VxWorks 5.5.
3093Support for VxWorks AE would also be welcome; we believe this is merely
3094a matter of writing an appropriate ``configlette'' (see below). We are
3095not interested in supporting older, a.out or COFF-based, versions of
3096VxWorks in GCC 3.
3097
3098VxWorks comes with an older version of GCC installed in
3099@file{@var{$WIND_BASE}/host}; we recommend you do not overwrite it.
3100Choose an installation @var{prefix} entirely outside @var{$WIND_BASE}.
3101Before running @command{configure}, create the directories @file{@var{prefix}}
3102and @file{@var{prefix}/bin}. Link or copy the appropriate assembler,
3103linker, etc. into @file{@var{prefix}/bin}, and set your @var{PATH} to
3104include that directory while running both @command{configure} and
3105@command{make}.
3106
3107You must give @command{configure} the
3108@option{--with-headers=@var{$WIND_BASE}/target/h} switch so that it can
3109find the VxWorks system headers. Since VxWorks is a cross compilation
3110target only, you must also specify @option{--target=@var{target}}.
3111@command{configure} will attempt to create the directory
3112@file{@var{prefix}/@var{target}/sys-include} and copy files into it;
3113make sure the user running @command{configure} has sufficient privilege
3114to do so.
3115
3116GCC's exception handling runtime requires a special ``configlette''
3117module, @file{contrib/gthr_supp_vxw_5x.c}. Follow the instructions in
3118that file to add the module to your kernel build. (Future versions of
3119VxWorks will incorporate this module.)
3120
fd29f6ea 3121@html
b8db17af 3122<hr />
fd29f6ea
BW
3123@end html
3124@heading @anchor{xtensa-*-elf}xtensa-*-elf
3125
3126This target is intended for embedded Xtensa systems using the
3127@samp{newlib} C library. It uses ELF but does not support shared
3128objects. Designed-defined instructions specified via the
3129Tensilica Instruction Extension (TIE) language are only supported
3130through inline assembly.
3131
3132The Xtensa configuration information must be specified prior to
3133building GCC@. The @file{gcc/config/xtensa/xtensa-config.h} header
3134file contains the configuration information. If you created your
3135own Xtensa configuration with the Xtensa Processor Generator, the
3136downloaded files include a customized copy of this header file,
3137which you can use to replace the default header file.
3138
3139@html
b8db17af 3140<hr />
fd29f6ea
BW
3141@end html
3142@heading @anchor{xtensa-*-linux*}xtensa-*-linux*
3143
3144This target is for Xtensa systems running GNU/Linux. It supports ELF
3145shared objects and the GNU C library (glibc). It also generates
3146position-independent code (PIC) regardless of whether the
3147@option{-fpic} or @option{-fPIC} options are used. In other
f282ffb3 3148respects, this target is the same as the
fd29f6ea
BW
3149@uref{#xtensa-*-elf,,@samp{xtensa-*-elf}} target.
3150
f42974dc 3151@html
b8db17af 3152<hr />
f42974dc 3153@end html
57694e40 3154@heading @anchor{windows}Microsoft Windows (32-bit)
f42974dc 3155
f9047ed3 3156A port of GCC 2.95.x is included with the
f42974dc
DW
3157@uref{http://www.cygwin.com/,,Cygwin environment}.
3158
3159Current (as of early 2001) snapshots of GCC will build under Cygwin
3160without modification.
3161
3162@html
b8db17af 3163<hr />
f42974dc 3164@end html
ef88b07d 3165@heading @anchor{os2}OS/2
f42974dc
DW
3166
3167GCC does not currently support OS/2. However, Andrew Zabolotny has been
14976c58 3168working on a generic OS/2 port with pgcc. The current code can be found
f42974dc
DW
3169at @uref{http://www.goof.com/pcg/os2/,,http://www.goof.com/pcg/os2/}.
3170
f9047ed3 3171An older copy of GCC 2.8.1 is included with the EMX tools available at
f42974dc
DW
3172@uref{ftp://ftp.leo.org/pub/comp/os/os2/leo/devtools/emx+gcc/,,
3173ftp://ftp.leo.org/pub/comp/os/os2/leo/devtools/emx+gcc/}.
3174
3175@html
b8db17af 3176<hr />
f42974dc 3177@end html
ef88b07d 3178@heading @anchor{older}Older systems
f9047ed3
JM
3179
3180GCC contains support files for many older (1980s and early
31811990s) Unix variants. For the most part, support for these systems
3182has not been deliberately removed, but it has not been maintained for
c7bdf0a6 3183several years and may suffer from bitrot.
f9047ed3 3184
c7bdf0a6 3185Starting with GCC 3.1, each release has a list of ``obsoleted'' systems.
9340544b
ZW
3186Support for these systems is still present in that release, but
3187@command{configure} will fail unless the @option{--enable-obsolete}
c7bdf0a6
ZW
3188option is given. Unless a maintainer steps forward, support for these
3189systems will be removed from the next release of GCC@.
f9047ed3
JM
3190
3191Support for old systems as hosts for GCC can cause problems if the
3192workarounds for compiler, library and operating system bugs affect the
161d7b59 3193cleanliness or maintainability of the rest of GCC@. In some cases, to
f9047ed3
JM
3194bring GCC up on such a system, if still possible with current GCC, may
3195require first installing an old version of GCC which did work on that
c7bdf0a6
ZW
3196system, and using it to compile a more recent GCC, to avoid bugs in the
3197vendor compiler. Old releases of GCC 1 and GCC 2 are available in the
3198@file{old-releases} directory on the @uref{../mirrors.html,,GCC mirror
3199sites}. Header bugs may generally be avoided using
3200@command{fixincludes}, but bugs or deficiencies in libraries and the
3201operating system may still cause problems.
3202
3203Support for older systems as targets for cross-compilation is less
3204problematic than support for them as hosts for GCC; if an enthusiast
3205wishes to make such a target work again (including resurrecting any of
3206the targets that never worked with GCC 2, starting from the last CVS
3207version before they were removed), patches
3208@uref{../contribute.html,,following the usual requirements} would be
3209likely to be accepted, since they should not affect the support for more
3210modern targets.
f9047ed3
JM
3211
3212For some systems, old versions of GNU binutils may also be useful,
021c4bfd 3213and are available from @file{pub/binutils/old-releases} on
f42974dc 3214@uref{http://sources.redhat.com/mirrors.html,,sources.redhat.com mirror sites}.
f9047ed3
JM
3215
3216Some of the information on specific systems above relates to
3217such older systems, but much of the information
3218about GCC on such systems (which may no longer be applicable to
f42974dc 3219current GCC) is to be found in the GCC texinfo manual.
f9047ed3 3220
f42974dc 3221@html
b8db17af 3222<hr />
f42974dc 3223@end html
250d5688 3224@heading @anchor{elf_targets}all ELF targets (SVR4, Solaris 2, etc.)
f42974dc 3225
38209993
LG
3226C++ support is significantly better on ELF targets if you use the
3227@uref{./configure.html#with-gnu-ld,,GNU linker}; duplicate copies of
3228inlines, vtables and template instantiations will be discarded
3229automatically.
f42974dc
DW
3230
3231
3232@html
b8db17af 3233<hr />
f42974dc
DW
3234<p>
3235@end html
3236@ifhtml
3237@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
3238@end ifhtml
3239@end ifset
3240
73e2155a
JM
3241@c ***Old documentation******************************************************
3242@ifset oldhtml
3243@include install-old.texi
3244@html
b8db17af 3245<hr />
73e2155a
JM
3246<p>
3247@end html
3248@ifhtml
3249@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
3250@end ifhtml
3251@end ifset
3252
aed5964b
JM
3253@c ***GFDL********************************************************************
3254@ifset gfdlhtml
3255@include fdl.texi
3256@html
b8db17af 3257<hr />
aed5964b
JM
3258<p>
3259@end html
3260@ifhtml
3261@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
3262@end ifhtml
3263@end ifset
3264
f42974dc
DW
3265@c ***************************************************************************
3266@c Part 6 The End of the Document
3267@ifinfo
3268@comment node-name, next, previous, up
aed5964b 3269@node Concept Index, , GNU Free Documentation License, Top
f42974dc
DW
3270@end ifinfo
3271
3272@ifinfo
3273@unnumbered Concept Index
3274
3275@printindex cp
3276
3277@contents
3278@end ifinfo
3279@bye