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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
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10@include gcc-common.texi
11
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12@c Specify title for specific html page
13@ifset indexhtml
14@settitle Installing GCC
15@end ifset
16@ifset specifichtml
17@settitle Host/Target specific installation notes for GCC
18@end ifset
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19@ifset prerequisiteshtml
20@settitle Prerequisites for GCC
21@end ifset
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22@ifset downloadhtml
23@settitle Downloading GCC
24@end ifset
25@ifset configurehtml
26@settitle Installing GCC: Configuration
27@end ifset
28@ifset buildhtml
29@settitle Installing GCC: Building
30@end ifset
31@ifset testhtml
32@settitle Installing GCC: Testing
33@end ifset
34@ifset finalinstallhtml
35@settitle Installing GCC: Final installation
36@end ifset
37@ifset binarieshtml
38@settitle Installing GCC: Binaries
39@end ifset
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40@ifset oldhtml
41@settitle Installing GCC: Old documentation
42@end ifset
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43@ifset gfdlhtml
44@settitle Installing GCC: GNU Free Documentation License
45@end ifset
f42974dc 46
aed5964b 47@c Copyright (C) 1988, 1989, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998,
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48@c 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009,
49@c 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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50@c *** Converted to texinfo by Dean Wakerley, dean@wakerley.com
51
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52@c IMPORTANT: whenever you modify this file, run `install.texi2html' to
53@c test the generation of HTML documents for the gcc.gnu.org web pages.
54@c
55@c Do not use @footnote{} in this file as it breaks install.texi2html!
56
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57@c Include everything if we're not making html
58@ifnothtml
59@set indexhtml
60@set specifichtml
67b1fbb9 61@set prerequisiteshtml
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62@set downloadhtml
63@set configurehtml
64@set buildhtml
65@set testhtml
66@set finalinstallhtml
67@set binarieshtml
73e2155a 68@set oldhtml
aed5964b 69@set gfdlhtml
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70@end ifnothtml
71
72@c Part 2 Summary Description and Copyright
bdefb2ab 73@copying
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74Copyright @copyright{} 1988, 1989, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997,
751998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007,
762008 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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77@sp 1
78Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
b3a8389d 79under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or
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80any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
81Invariant Sections, the Front-Cover texts being (a) (see below), and
82with the Back-Cover Texts being (b) (see below). A copy of the
83license is included in the section entitled ``@uref{./gfdl.html,,GNU
84Free Documentation License}''.
85
86(a) The FSF's Front-Cover Text is:
87
88 A GNU Manual
89
90(b) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is:
91
92 You have freedom to copy and modify this GNU Manual, like GNU
93 software. Copies published by the Free Software Foundation raise
94 funds for GNU development.
bdefb2ab 95@end copying
f42974dc 96@ifinfo
bdefb2ab 97@insertcopying
f42974dc 98@end ifinfo
c3cb54c6 99@dircategory Software development
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100@direntry
101* gccinstall: (gccinstall). Installing the GNU Compiler Collection.
102@end direntry
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103
104@c Part 3 Titlepage and Copyright
105@titlepage
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106@title Installing GCC
107@versionsubtitle
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108
109@c The following two commands start the copyright page.
110@page
ef88b07d 111@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
bdefb2ab 112@insertcopying
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113@end titlepage
114
7771bb62 115@c Part 4 Top node, Master Menu, and/or Table of Contents
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116@ifinfo
117@node Top, , , (dir)
118@comment node-name, next, Previous, up
119
120@menu
121* Installing GCC:: This document describes the generic installation
122 procedure for GCC as well as detailing some target
f9047ed3 123 specific installation instructions.
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124
125* Specific:: Host/target specific installation notes for GCC.
126* Binaries:: Where to get pre-compiled binaries.
127
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128* Old:: Old installation documentation.
129
aed5964b 130* GNU Free Documentation License:: How you can copy and share this manual.
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131* Concept Index:: This index has two entries.
132@end menu
133@end ifinfo
134
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135@iftex
136@contents
137@end iftex
138
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139@c Part 5 The Body of the Document
140@c ***Installing GCC**********************************************************
6cfb3f16 141@ifnothtml
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142@comment node-name, next, previous, up
143@node Installing GCC, Binaries, , Top
6cfb3f16 144@end ifnothtml
f42974dc 145@ifset indexhtml
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146@ifnothtml
147@chapter Installing GCC
148@end ifnothtml
149
150The latest version of this document is always available at
f9047ed3 151@uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/install/,,http://gcc.gnu.org/install/}.
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152
153This document describes the generic installation procedure for GCC as well
f9047ed3 154as detailing some target specific installation instructions.
f42974dc 155
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156GCC includes several components that previously were separate distributions
157with their own installation instructions. This document supersedes all
eea81d3e 158package specific installation instructions.
f42974dc 159
f9047ed3 160@emph{Before} starting the build/install procedure please check the
f42974dc 161@ifnothtml
eea81d3e 162@ref{Specific, host/target specific installation notes}.
f42974dc 163@end ifnothtml
c009f01f 164@ifhtml
f9047ed3 165@uref{specific.html,,host/target specific installation notes}.
c009f01f 166@end ifhtml
f9047ed3 167We recommend you browse the entire generic installation instructions before
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168you proceed.
169
c009f01f 170Lists of successful builds for released versions of GCC are
daf2f129 171available at @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/buildstat.html}.
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172These lists are updated as new information becomes available.
173
f9047ed3 174The installation procedure itself is broken into five steps.
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175
176@ifinfo
177@menu
67b1fbb9 178* Prerequisites::
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179* Downloading the source::
180* Configuration::
181* Building::
182* Testing:: (optional)
183* Final install::
184@end menu
185@end ifinfo
c009f01f 186@ifhtml
f42974dc 187@enumerate
f9047ed3 188@item
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189@uref{prerequisites.html,,Prerequisites}
190@item
f42974dc 191@uref{download.html,,Downloading the source}
f42974dc 192@item
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193@uref{configure.html,,Configuration}
194@item
195@uref{build.html,,Building}
196@item
197@uref{test.html,,Testing} (optional)
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198@item
199@uref{finalinstall.html,,Final install}
200@end enumerate
c009f01f 201@end ifhtml
f42974dc 202
38209993 203Please note that GCC does not support @samp{make uninstall} and probably
f9047ed3 204won't do so in the near future as this would open a can of worms. Instead,
f42974dc 205we suggest that you install GCC into a directory of its own and simply
38209993 206remove that directory when you do not need that specific version of GCC
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207any longer, and, if shared libraries are installed there as well, no
208more binaries exist that use them.
f42974dc 209
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210@ifhtml
211There are also some @uref{old.html,,old installation instructions},
212which are mostly obsolete but still contain some information which has
213not yet been merged into the main part of this manual.
214@end ifhtml
215
f42974dc 216@html
b8db17af 217<hr />
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218<p>
219@end html
220@ifhtml
221@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
aed5964b 222
bdefb2ab 223@insertcopying
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224@end ifhtml
225@end ifset
226
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227@c ***Prerequisites**************************************************
228@ifnothtml
229@comment node-name, next, previous, up
230@node Prerequisites, Downloading the source, , Installing GCC
231@end ifnothtml
232@ifset prerequisiteshtml
233@ifnothtml
234@chapter Prerequisites
235@end ifnothtml
236@cindex Prerequisites
237
238GCC requires that various tools and packages be available for use in the
239build procedure. Modifying GCC sources requires additional tools
240described below.
241
242@heading Tools/packages necessary for building GCC
243@table @asis
244@item ISO C90 compiler
80521187 245Necessary to bootstrap GCC, although versions of GCC prior
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246to 3.4 also allow bootstrapping with a traditional (K&R) C compiler.
247
80521187 248To build all languages in a cross-compiler or other configuration where
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2493-stage bootstrap is not performed, you need to start with an existing
250GCC binary (version 2.95 or later) because source code for language
251frontends other than C might use GCC extensions.
252
253@item GNAT
254
255In order to build the Ada compiler (GNAT) you must already have GNAT
256installed because portions of the Ada frontend are written in Ada (with
257GNAT extensions.) Refer to the Ada installation instructions for more
258specific information.
259
260@item A ``working'' POSIX compatible shell, or GNU bash
261
262Necessary when running @command{configure} because some
263@command{/bin/sh} shells have bugs and may crash when configuring the
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264target libraries. In other cases, @command{/bin/sh} or @command{ksh}
265have disastrous corner-case performance problems. This
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266can cause target @command{configure} runs to literally take days to
267complete in some cases.
268
269So on some platforms @command{/bin/ksh} is sufficient, on others it
270isn't. See the host/target specific instructions for your platform, or
271use @command{bash} to be sure. Then set @env{CONFIG_SHELL} in your
272environment to your ``good'' shell prior to running
273@command{configure}/@command{make}.
274
daf2f129 275@command{zsh} is not a fully compliant POSIX shell and will not
8a36672b 276work when configuring GCC@.
1b49d06f 277
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278@item A POSIX or SVR4 awk
279
280Necessary for creating some of the generated source files for GCC@.
281If in doubt, use a recent GNU awk version, as some of the older ones
282are broken. GNU awk version 3.1.5 is known to work.
283
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284@item GNU binutils
285
286Necessary in some circumstances, optional in others. See the
287host/target specific instructions for your platform for the exact
288requirements.
289
290@item gzip version 1.2.4 (or later) or
291@itemx bzip2 version 1.0.2 (or later)
292
293Necessary to uncompress GCC @command{tar} files when source code is
294obtained via FTP mirror sites.
295
6cba282a 296@item GNU make version 3.80 (or later)
e158a5fb 297
8a36672b 298You must have GNU make installed to build GCC@.
e158a5fb 299
f44a5ab6 300@item GNU tar version 1.14 (or later)
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301
302Necessary (only on some platforms) to untar the source code. Many
303systems' @command{tar} programs will also work, only try GNU
304@command{tar} if you have problems.
305
a3337ea2 306@item GNU Multiple Precision Library (GMP) version 4.2 (or later)
bda4d063 307
0ee2ea09 308Necessary to build GCC@. If you do not have it installed in your
70ec446f 309library search path, you will have to configure with the
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310@option{--with-gmp} configure option. See also @option{--with-gmp-lib}
311and @option{--with-gmp-include}. Alternatively, if a GMP source
312distribution is found in a subdirectory of your GCC sources named
313@file{gmp}, it will be built together with GCC@.
bda4d063 314
36c713e0 315@item MPFR Library version 2.3.2 (or later)
bebf829d 316
0ee2ea09 317Necessary to build GCC@. It can be downloaded from
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318@uref{http://www.mpfr.org/}. The @option{--with-mpfr} configure
319option should be used if your MPFR Library is not installed in your
320default library search path. See also @option{--with-mpfr-lib} and
321@option{--with-mpfr-include}. Alternatively, if a MPFR source
322distribution is found in a subdirectory of your GCC sources named
323@file{mpfr}, it will be built together with GCC@.
641afcff 324
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325@item MPC Library version 0.8.0 (or later)
326
327Necessary to build GCC@. It can be downloaded from
328@uref{http://www.multiprecision.org/}. The @option{--with-mpc}
329configure option should be used if your MPC Library is not installed
330in your default library search path. See also @option{--with-mpc-lib}
331and @option{--with-mpc-include}. Alternatively, if an MPC source
332distribution is found in a subdirectory of your GCC sources named
333@file{mpc}, it will be built together with GCC@.
334
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335@item Parma Polyhedra Library (PPL) version 0.10
336
337Necessary to build GCC with the Graphite loop optimizations.
338It can be downloaded from @uref{http://www.cs.unipr.it/ppl/Download/}.
339
340The @option{--with-ppl} configure option should be used if PPL is not
341installed in your default library search path.
342
343@item CLooG-PPL version 0.15
344
345Necessary to build GCC with the Graphite loop optimizations. It can
346be downloaded from @uref{ftp://gcc.gnu.org/pub/gcc/infrastructure/}.
347The code in @file{cloog-ppl-0.15.tar.gz} comes from a branch of CLooG
348available from @uref{http://repo.or.cz/w/cloog-ppl.git}. CLooG-PPL
349should be configured with @option{--with-ppl}.
350
351The @option{--with-cloog} configure option should be used if CLooG is
352not installed in your default library search path.
bebf829d 353
02809848 354@item @command{jar}, or InfoZIP (@command{zip} and @command{unzip})
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355
356Necessary to build libgcj, the GCJ runtime.
357
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358@item libelf version 0.8.12 (or later)
359
360Necessary to build link-time optimization (LTO) support. It can be
361downloaded from @uref{http://www.mr511.de/software/libelf-0.8.12.tar.gz},
362though it is commonly available in several systems.
363
364The @option{--with-libelf} configure option should be used if libelf is
365not installed in your default library search patch.
366
f9bab007 367@end table
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368
369@heading Tools/packages necessary for modifying GCC
370@table @asis
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371@item autoconf version 2.64
372@itemx GNU m4 version 1.4.6 (or later)
67b1fbb9 373
89acbae0 374Necessary when modifying @file{configure.ac}, @file{aclocal.m4}, etc.@:
565f8ce5 375to regenerate @file{configure} and @file{config.in} files.
67b1fbb9 376
70fa0efa 377@item automake version 1.11
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378
379Necessary when modifying a @file{Makefile.am} file to regenerate its
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380associated @file{Makefile.in}.
381
382Much of GCC does not use automake, so directly edit the @file{Makefile.in}
383file. Specifically this applies to the @file{gcc}, @file{intl},
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384@file{libcpp}, @file{libiberty}, @file{libobjc} directories as well
385as any of their subdirectories.
ce5c1cf3 386
ae8cacc6 387For directories that use automake, GCC requires the latest release in
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388the 1.11 series, which is currently 1.11. When regenerating a directory
389to a newer version, please update all the directories using an older 1.11
ae8cacc6 390to the latest released version.
ccfca4ae 391
4b794eaf 392@item gettext version 0.14.5 (or later)
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393
394Needed to regenerate @file{gcc.pot}.
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395
396@item gperf version 2.7.2 (or later)
397
398Necessary when modifying @command{gperf} input files, e.g.@:
399@file{gcc/cp/cfns.gperf} to regenerate its associated header file, e.g.@:
400@file{gcc/cp/cfns.h}.
401
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402@item DejaGnu 1.4.4
403@itemx Expect
404@itemx Tcl
67b1fbb9 405
80521187 406Necessary to run the GCC testsuite; see the section on testing for details.
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407
408@item autogen version 5.5.4 (or later) and
409@itemx guile version 1.4.1 (or later)
410
411Necessary to regenerate @file{fixinc/fixincl.x} from
412@file{fixinc/inclhack.def} and @file{fixinc/*.tpl}.
413
80521187 414Necessary to run @samp{make check} for @file{fixinc}.
67b1fbb9 415
ce5c1cf3 416Necessary to regenerate the top level @file{Makefile.in} file from
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417@file{Makefile.tpl} and @file{Makefile.def}.
418
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419@item Flex version 2.5.4 (or later)
420
421Necessary when modifying @file{*.l} files.
422
423Necessary to build GCC during development because the generated output
80521187 424files are not included in the SVN repository. They are included in
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425releases.
426
7326a39e 427@item Texinfo version 4.7 (or later)
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428
429Necessary for running @command{makeinfo} when modifying @file{*.texi}
430files to test your changes.
431
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432Necessary for running @command{make dvi} or @command{make pdf} to
433create printable documentation in DVI or PDF format. Texinfo version
4344.8 or later is required for @command{make pdf}.
435
67b1fbb9 436Necessary to build GCC documentation during development because the
80521187 437generated output files are not included in the SVN repository. They are
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438included in releases.
439
440@item @TeX{} (any working version)
441
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442Necessary for running @command{texi2dvi} and @command{texi2pdf}, which
443are used when running @command{make dvi} or @command{make pdf} to create
444DVI or PDF files, respectively.
67b1fbb9 445
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446@item SVN (any version)
447@itemx SSH (any version)
67b1fbb9 448
80521187 449Necessary to access the SVN repository. Public releases and weekly
8a36672b 450snapshots of the development sources are also available via FTP@.
67b1fbb9 451
80521187 452@item Perl version 5.6.1 (or later)
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453
454Necessary when regenerating @file{Makefile} dependencies in libiberty.
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455Necessary when regenerating @file{libiberty/functions.texi}.
456Necessary when generating manpages from Texinfo manuals.
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457Necessary when targetting Darwin, building libstdc++,
458and not using @option{--disable-symvers}.
80521187 459Used by various scripts to generate some files included in SVN (mainly
4f3ce03f 460Unicode-related and rarely changing) from source tables.
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461
462@item GNU diffutils version 2.7 (or later)
463
80521187 464Useful when submitting patches for the GCC source code.
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465
466@item patch version 2.5.4 (or later)
467
468Necessary when applying patches, created with @command{diff}, to one's
469own sources.
470
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471@item ecj1
472@itemx gjavah
473
474If you wish to modify @file{.java} files in libjava, you will need to
475configure with @option{--enable-java-maintainer-mode}, and you will need
476to have executables named @command{ecj1} and @command{gjavah} in your path.
477The @command{ecj1} executable should run the Eclipse Java compiler via
478the GCC-specific entry point. You can download a suitable jar from
479@uref{ftp://sourceware.org/pub/java/}, or by running the script
480@command{contrib/download_ecj}.
481
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482@item antlr.jar version 2.7.1 (or later)
483@itemx antlr binary
484
485If you wish to build the @command{gjdoc} binary in libjava, you will
e4ae5e77 486need to have an @file{antlr.jar} library available. The library is
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487searched in system locations but can be configured with
488@option{--with-antlr-jar=} instead. When configuring with
489@option{--enable-java-maintainer-mode}, you will need to have one of
490the executables named @command{cantlr}, @command{runantlr} or
491@command{antlr} in your path.
492
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493@end table
494
495@html
496<hr />
497<p>
498@end html
499@ifhtml
500@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
501@end ifhtml
502@end ifset
503
f42974dc 504@c ***Downloading the source**************************************************
6cfb3f16 505@ifnothtml
f42974dc 506@comment node-name, next, previous, up
67b1fbb9 507@node Downloading the source, Configuration, Prerequisites, Installing GCC
6cfb3f16 508@end ifnothtml
f42974dc 509@ifset downloadhtml
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510@ifnothtml
511@chapter Downloading GCC
512@end ifnothtml
513@cindex Downloading GCC
514@cindex Downloading the Source
515
80521187 516GCC is distributed via @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/svn.html,,SVN} and FTP
eea81d3e 517tarballs compressed with @command{gzip} or
6cfb3f16 518@command{bzip2}. It is possible to download a full distribution or specific
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519components.
520
962e6e00 521Please refer to the @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/releases.html,,releases web page}
161d7b59 522for information on how to obtain GCC@.
f42974dc 523
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524The full distribution includes the C, C++, Objective-C, Fortran, Java,
525and Ada (in the case of GCC 3.1 and later) compilers. The full
526distribution also includes runtime libraries for C++, Objective-C,
527Fortran, and Java. In GCC 3.0 and later versions, the GNU compiler
528testsuites are also included in the full distribution.
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529
530If you choose to download specific components, you must download the core
eea81d3e 531GCC distribution plus any language specific distributions you wish to
6c0a4eab 532use. The core distribution includes the C language front end as well as the
767094dd 533shared components. Each language has a tarball which includes the language
6c0a4eab 534front end as well as the language runtime (when appropriate).
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535
536Unpack the core distribution as well as any language specific
537distributions in the same directory.
538
539If you also intend to build binutils (either to upgrade an existing
540installation or for use in place of the corresponding tools of your
541OS), unpack the binutils distribution either in the same directory or
542a separate one. In the latter case, add symbolic links to any
543components of the binutils you intend to build alongside the compiler
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544(@file{bfd}, @file{binutils}, @file{gas}, @file{gprof}, @file{ld},
545@file{opcodes}, @dots{}) to the directory containing the GCC sources.
f42974dc 546
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547Likewise the GMP, MPFR and MPC libraries can be automatically built
548together with GCC. Unpack the GMP, MPFR and/or MPC source
549distributions in the directory containing the GCC sources and rename
550their directories to @file{gmp}, @file{mpfr} and @file{mpc},
551respectively (or use symbolic links with the same name).
641afcff 552
f42974dc 553@html
b8db17af 554<hr />
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555<p>
556@end html
557@ifhtml
558@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
559@end ifhtml
560@end ifset
561
562@c ***Configuration***********************************************************
6cfb3f16 563@ifnothtml
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564@comment node-name, next, previous, up
565@node Configuration, Building, Downloading the source, Installing GCC
6cfb3f16 566@end ifnothtml
f42974dc 567@ifset configurehtml
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568@ifnothtml
569@chapter Installing GCC: Configuration
570@end ifnothtml
571@cindex Configuration
572@cindex Installing GCC: Configuration
573
574Like most GNU software, GCC must be configured before it can be built.
575This document describes the recommended configuration procedure
576for both native and cross targets.
577
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578We use @var{srcdir} to refer to the toplevel source directory for
579GCC; we use @var{objdir} to refer to the toplevel build/object directory.
580
80521187 581If you obtained the sources via SVN, @var{srcdir} must refer to the top
0b70519f
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582@file{gcc} directory, the one where the @file{MAINTAINERS} file can be
583found, and not its @file{gcc} subdirectory, otherwise the build will fail.
f42974dc 584
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585If either @var{srcdir} or @var{objdir} is located on an automounted NFS
586file system, the shell's built-in @command{pwd} command will return
587temporary pathnames. Using these can lead to various sorts of build
588problems. To avoid this issue, set the @env{PWDCMD} environment
589variable to an automounter-aware @command{pwd} command, e.g.,
7ba4ca63 590@command{pawd} or @samp{amq -w}, during the configuration and build
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591phases.
592
102b60d1 593First, we @strong{highly} recommend that GCC be built into a
0b70519f 594separate directory from the sources which does @strong{not} reside
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595within the source tree. This is how we generally build GCC; building
596where @var{srcdir} == @var{objdir} should still work, but doesn't
597get extensive testing; building where @var{objdir} is a subdirectory
598of @var{srcdir} is unsupported.
f42974dc 599
eea81d3e 600If you have previously built GCC in the same directory for a
f85b8d1a 601different target machine, do @samp{make distclean} to delete all files
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602that might be invalid. One of the files this deletes is @file{Makefile};
603if @samp{make distclean} complains that @file{Makefile} does not exist
604or issues a message like ``don't know how to make distclean'' it probably
605means that the directory is already suitably clean. However, with the
606recommended method of building in a separate @var{objdir}, you should
607simply use a different @var{objdir} for each target.
f85b8d1a 608
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609Second, when configuring a native system, either @command{cc} or
610@command{gcc} must be in your path or you must set @env{CC} in
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611your environment before running configure. Otherwise the configuration
612scripts may fail.
f42974dc 613
cc11cc9b 614@ignore
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615Note that the bootstrap compiler and the resulting GCC must be link
616compatible, else the bootstrap will fail with linker errors about
617incompatible object file formats. Several multilibed targets are
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618affected by this requirement, see
619@ifnothtml
620@ref{Specific, host/target specific installation notes}.
621@end ifnothtml
c009f01f 622@ifhtml
e69aa433 623@uref{specific.html,,host/target specific installation notes}.
c009f01f 624@end ifhtml
cc11cc9b 625@end ignore
eea81d3e 626
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627To configure GCC:
628
3ab51846 629@smallexample
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630 % mkdir @var{objdir}
631 % cd @var{objdir}
eea81d3e 632 % @var{srcdir}/configure [@var{options}] [@var{target}]
3ab51846 633@end smallexample
f42974dc 634
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635@heading Distributor options
636
637If you will be distributing binary versions of GCC, with modifications
638to the source code, you should use the options described in this
639section to make clear that your version contains modifications.
640
641@table @code
642@item --with-pkgversion=@var{version}
643Specify a string that identifies your package. You may wish
644to include a build number or build date. This version string will be
645included in the output of @command{gcc --version}. This suffix does
646not replace the default version string, only the @samp{GCC} part.
647
648The default value is @samp{GCC}.
649
650@item --with-bugurl=@var{url}
651Specify the URL that users should visit if they wish to report a bug.
652You are of course welcome to forward bugs reported to you to the FSF,
653if you determine that they are not bugs in your modifications.
654
655The default value refers to the FSF's GCC bug tracker.
656
657@end table
f42974dc 658
ef88b07d 659@heading Target specification
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660@itemize @bullet
661@item
38209993 662GCC has code to correctly determine the correct value for @var{target}
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663for nearly all native systems. Therefore, we highly recommend you do
664not provide a configure target when configuring a native compiler.
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665
666@item
6cfb3f16 667@var{target} must be specified as @option{--target=@var{target}}
f9047ed3 668when configuring a cross compiler; examples of valid targets would be
52c0e446 669m68k-elf, sh-elf, etc.
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670
671@item
6cfb3f16 672Specifying just @var{target} instead of @option{--target=@var{target}}
38209993 673implies that the host defaults to @var{target}.
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674@end itemize
675
676
ef88b07d 677@heading Options specification
f42974dc 678
ef88b07d 679Use @var{options} to override several configure time options for
7ba4ca63 680GCC@. A list of supported @var{options} follows; @samp{configure
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681--help} may list other options, but those not listed below may not
682work and should not normally be used.
f42974dc 683
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ME
684Note that each @option{--enable} option has a corresponding
685@option{--disable} option and that each @option{--with} option has a
686corresponding @option{--without} option.
687
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688@table @code
689@item --prefix=@var{dirname}
690Specify the toplevel installation
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691directory. This is the recommended way to install the tools into a directory
692other than the default. The toplevel installation directory defaults to
6cfb3f16 693@file{/usr/local}.
f42974dc 694
38209993 695We @strong{highly} recommend against @var{dirname} being the same or a
a7582c8c
BE
696subdirectory of @var{objdir} or vice versa. If specifying a directory
697beneath a user's home directory tree, some shells will not expand
698@var{dirname} correctly if it contains the @samp{~} metacharacter; use
699@env{$HOME} instead.
f42974dc 700
8e5f33ff
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701The following standard @command{autoconf} options are supported. Normally you
702should not need to use these options.
ef88b07d 703@table @code
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704@item --exec-prefix=@var{dirname}
705Specify the toplevel installation directory for architecture-dependent
706files. The default is @file{@var{prefix}}.
707
708@item --bindir=@var{dirname}
709Specify the installation directory for the executables called by users
710(such as @command{gcc} and @command{g++}). The default is
711@file{@var{exec-prefix}/bin}.
712
713@item --libdir=@var{dirname}
714Specify the installation directory for object code libraries and
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GK
715internal data files of GCC@. The default is @file{@var{exec-prefix}/lib}.
716
717@item --libexecdir=@var{dirname}
718Specify the installation directory for internal executables of GCC@.
6ccde948 719The default is @file{@var{exec-prefix}/libexec}.
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720
721@item --with-slibdir=@var{dirname}
722Specify the installation directory for the shared libgcc library. The
723default is @file{@var{libdir}}.
724
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725@item --datarootdir=@var{dirname}
726Specify the root of the directory tree for read-only architecture-independent
727data files referenced by GCC@. The default is @file{@var{prefix}/share}.
728
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729@item --infodir=@var{dirname}
730Specify the installation directory for documentation in info format.
70fa0efa 731The default is @file{@var{datarootdir}/info}.
ab130aa5 732
8567c70f
TT
733@item --datadir=@var{dirname}
734Specify the installation directory for some architecture-independent
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RW
735data files referenced by GCC@. The default is @file{@var{datarootdir}}.
736
737@item --docdir=@var{dirname}
738Specify the installation directory for documentation files (other
739than Info) for GCC@. The default is @file{@var{datarootdir}/doc}.
740
741@item --htmldir=@var{dirname}
742Specify the installation directory for HTML documentation files.
743The default is @file{@var{docdir}}.
744
745@item --pdfdir=@var{dirname}
746Specify the installation directory for PDF documentation files.
747The default is @file{@var{docdir}}.
8567c70f 748
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749@item --mandir=@var{dirname}
750Specify the installation directory for manual pages. The default is
70fa0efa
RW
751@file{@var{datarootdir}/man}. (Note that the manual pages are only extracts
752from the full GCC manuals, which are provided in Texinfo format. The manpages
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753are derived by an automatic conversion process from parts of the full
754manual.)
755
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756@item --with-gxx-include-dir=@var{dirname}
757Specify
ae5cc016
MM
758the installation directory for G++ header files. The default depends
759on other configuration options, and differs between cross and native
760configurations.
ecb7d6b3 761
ef88b07d 762@end table
f42974dc 763
b21d216c
AF
764@item --program-prefix=@var{prefix}
765GCC supports some transformations of the names of its programs when
8a36672b
JM
766installing them. This option prepends @var{prefix} to the names of
767programs to install in @var{bindir} (see above). For example, specifying
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AF
768@option{--program-prefix=foo-} would result in @samp{gcc}
769being installed as @file{/usr/local/bin/foo-gcc}.
770
771@item --program-suffix=@var{suffix}
772Appends @var{suffix} to the names of programs to install in @var{bindir}
8a36672b 773(see above). For example, specifying @option{--program-suffix=-3.1}
b21d216c
AF
774would result in @samp{gcc} being installed as
775@file{/usr/local/bin/gcc-3.1}.
776
777@item --program-transform-name=@var{pattern}
778Applies the @samp{sed} script @var{pattern} to be applied to the names
8a36672b 779of programs to install in @var{bindir} (see above). @var{pattern} has to
b21d216c 780consist of one or more basic @samp{sed} editing commands, separated by
8a36672b 781semicolons. For example, if you want the @samp{gcc} program name to be
b21d216c
AF
782transformed to the installed program @file{/usr/local/bin/myowngcc} and
783the @samp{g++} program name to be transformed to
784@file{/usr/local/bin/gspecial++} without changing other program names,
785you could use the pattern
786@option{--program-transform-name='s/^gcc$/myowngcc/; s/^g++$/gspecial++/'}
787to achieve this effect.
788
789All three options can be combined and used together, resulting in more
8a36672b 790complex conversion patterns. As a basic rule, @var{prefix} (and
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AF
791@var{suffix}) are prepended (appended) before further transformations
792can happen with a special transformation script @var{pattern}.
793
8c085f6f 794As currently implemented, this option only takes effect for native
b21d216c 795builds; cross compiler binaries' names are not transformed even when a
8c085f6f 796transformation is explicitly asked for by one of these options.
b21d216c
AF
797
798For native builds, some of the installed programs are also installed
799with the target alias in front of their name, as in
8a36672b 800@samp{i686-pc-linux-gnu-gcc}. All of the above transformations happen
78466c0e 801before the target alias is prepended to the name---so, specifying
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AF
802@option{--program-prefix=foo-} and @option{program-suffix=-3.1}, the
803resulting binary would be installed as
804@file{/usr/local/bin/i686-pc-linux-gnu-foo-gcc-3.1}.
805
8ecab453 806As a last shortcoming, none of the installed Ada programs are
b21d216c
AF
807transformed yet, which will be fixed in some time.
808
ef88b07d
JM
809@item --with-local-prefix=@var{dirname}
810Specify the
6ac48571
JM
811installation directory for local include files. The default is
812@file{/usr/local}. Specify this option if you want the compiler to
813search directory @file{@var{dirname}/include} for locally installed
814header files @emph{instead} of @file{/usr/local/include}.
815
816You should specify @option{--with-local-prefix} @strong{only} if your
817site has a different convention (not @file{/usr/local}) for where to put
818site-specific files.
819
820The default value for @option{--with-local-prefix} is @file{/usr/local}
821regardless of the value of @option{--prefix}. Specifying
822@option{--prefix} has no effect on which directory GCC searches for
823local header files. This may seem counterintuitive, but actually it is
824logical.
825
826The purpose of @option{--prefix} is to specify where to @emph{install
827GCC}. The local header files in @file{/usr/local/include}---if you put
161d7b59 828any in that directory---are not part of GCC@. They are part of other
6ac48571
JM
829programs---perhaps many others. (GCC installs its own header files in
830another directory which is based on the @option{--prefix} value.)
831
48209ce5 832Both the local-prefix include directory and the GCC-prefix include
78466c0e 833directory are part of GCC's ``system include'' directories. Although these
48209ce5
JDA
834two directories are not fixed, they need to be searched in the proper
835order for the correct processing of the include_next directive. The
836local-prefix include directory is searched before the GCC-prefix
837include directory. Another characteristic of system include directories
838is that pedantic warnings are turned off for headers in these directories.
839
840Some autoconf macros add @option{-I @var{directory}} options to the
841compiler command line, to ensure that directories containing installed
842packages' headers are searched. When @var{directory} is one of GCC's
843system include directories, GCC will ignore the option so that system
844directories continue to be processed in the correct order. This
845may result in a search order different from what was specified but the
846directory will still be searched.
847
848GCC automatically searches for ordinary libraries using
849@env{GCC_EXEC_PREFIX}. Thus, when the same installation prefix is
850used for both GCC and packages, GCC will automatically search for
851both headers and libraries. This provides a configuration that is
852easy to use. GCC behaves in a manner similar to that when it is
853installed as a system compiler in @file{/usr}.
854
855Sites that need to install multiple versions of GCC may not want to
856use the above simple configuration. It is possible to use the
857@option{--program-prefix}, @option{--program-suffix} and
858@option{--program-transform-name} options to install multiple versions
859into a single directory, but it may be simpler to use different prefixes
860and the @option{--with-local-prefix} option to specify the location of the
861site-specific files for each version. It will then be necessary for
862users to specify explicitly the location of local site libraries
863(e.g., with @env{LIBRARY_PATH}).
864
865The same value can be used for both @option{--with-local-prefix} and
866@option{--prefix} provided it is not @file{/usr}. This can be used
867to avoid the default search of @file{/usr/local/include}.
868
6ac48571
JM
869@strong{Do not} specify @file{/usr} as the @option{--with-local-prefix}!
870The directory you use for @option{--with-local-prefix} @strong{must not}
871contain any of the system's standard header files. If it did contain
872them, certain programs would be miscompiled (including GNU Emacs, on
873certain targets), because this would override and nullify the header
4c64396e 874file corrections made by the @command{fixincludes} script.
6ac48571
JM
875
876Indications are that people who use this option use it based on mistaken
877ideas of what it is for. People use it as if it specified where to
161d7b59 878install part of GCC@. Perhaps they make this assumption because
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JM
879installing GCC creates the directory.
880
6cfb3f16 881@item --enable-shared[=@var{package}[,@dots{}]]
0cb98517
AO
882Build shared versions of libraries, if shared libraries are supported on
883the target platform. Unlike GCC 2.95.x and earlier, shared libraries
07659e97 884are enabled by default on all platforms that support shared libraries.
0cb98517
AO
885
886If a list of packages is given as an argument, build shared libraries
887only for the listed packages. For other packages, only static libraries
888will be built. Package names currently recognized in the GCC tree are
889@samp{libgcc} (also known as @samp{gcc}), @samp{libstdc++} (not
e22df315 890@samp{libstdc++-v3}), @samp{libffi}, @samp{zlib}, @samp{boehm-gc},
07659e97 891@samp{ada}, @samp{libada}, @samp{libjava} and @samp{libobjc}.
55c45226 892Note @samp{libiberty} does not support shared libraries at all.
0cb98517
AO
893
894Use @option{--disable-shared} to build only static libraries. Note that
895@option{--disable-shared} does not accept a list of package names as
896argument, only @option{--enable-shared} does.
f42974dc 897
ef88b07d
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898@item @anchor{with-gnu-as}--with-gnu-as
899Specify that the compiler should assume that the
767094dd 900assembler it finds is the GNU assembler. However, this does not modify
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GP
901the rules to find an assembler and will result in confusion if the
902assembler found is not actually the GNU assembler. (Confusion may also
8c26c999
JM
903result if the compiler finds the GNU assembler but has not been
904configured with @option{--with-gnu-as}.) If you have more than one
38209993 905assembler installed on your system, you may want to use this option in
cc11cc9b
PB
906connection with @option{--with-as=@var{pathname}} or
907@option{--with-build-time-tools=@var{pathname}}.
38209993 908
8c085f6f
JJ
909The following systems are the only ones where it makes a difference
910whether you use the GNU assembler. On any other system,
911@option{--with-gnu-as} has no effect.
912
2ff16718 913@itemize @bullet
8c085f6f
JJ
914@item @samp{hppa1.0-@var{any}-@var{any}}
915@item @samp{hppa1.1-@var{any}-@var{any}}
8f2afc21
EB
916@item @samp{sparc-sun-solaris2.@var{any}}
917@item @samp{sparc64-@var{any}-solaris2.@var{any}}
8c085f6f 918@end itemize
8c26c999 919
8f2afc21 920@item @anchor{with-as}--with-as=@var{pathname}
cc11cc9b
PB
921Specify that the compiler should use the assembler pointed to by
922@var{pathname}, rather than the one found by the standard rules to find
923an assembler, which are:
f42974dc
DW
924@itemize @bullet
925@item
cc11cc9b
PB
926Unless GCC is being built with a cross compiler, check the
927@file{@var{libexec}/gcc/@var{target}/@var{version}} directory.
928@var{libexec} defaults to @file{@var{exec-prefix}/libexec};
929@var{exec-prefix} defaults to @var{prefix}, which
930defaults to @file{/usr/local} unless overridden by the
931@option{--prefix=@var{pathname}} switch described above. @var{target}
932is the target system triple, such as @samp{sparc-sun-solaris2.7}, and
933@var{version} denotes the GCC version, such as 3.0.
934
f42974dc 935@item
cc11cc9b
PB
936If the target system is the same that you are building on, check
937operating system specific directories (e.g.@: @file{/usr/ccs/bin} on
250d5688 938Sun Solaris 2).
cc11cc9b
PB
939
940@item
941Check in the @env{PATH} for a tool whose name is prefixed by the
942target system triple.
943
944@item
945Check in the @env{PATH} for a tool whose name is not prefixed by the
946target system triple, if the host and target system triple are
947the same (in other words, we use a host tool if it can be used for
948the target as well).
f42974dc 949@end itemize
cc11cc9b
PB
950
951You may want to use @option{--with-as} if no assembler
952is installed in the directories listed above, or if you have multiple
953assemblers installed and want to choose one that is not found by the
954above rules.
f42974dc 955
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956@item @anchor{with-gnu-ld}--with-gnu-ld
957Same as @uref{#with-gnu-as,,@option{--with-gnu-as}}
8f2afc21 958but for the linker.
f42974dc 959
eea81d3e 960@item --with-ld=@var{pathname}
8f2afc21
EB
961Same as @uref{#with-as,,@option{--with-as}}
962but for the linker.
f42974dc 963
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964@item --with-stabs
965Specify that stabs debugging
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LG
966information should be used instead of whatever format the host normally
967uses. Normally GCC uses the same debug format as the host system.
f42974dc 968
8c26c999
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969On MIPS based systems and on Alphas, you must specify whether you want
970GCC to create the normal ECOFF debugging format, or to use BSD-style
971stabs passed through the ECOFF symbol table. The normal ECOFF debug
161d7b59
JM
972format cannot fully handle languages other than C@. BSD stabs format can
973handle other languages, but it only works with the GNU debugger GDB@.
8c26c999
JM
974
975Normally, GCC uses the ECOFF debugging format by default; if you
161d7b59 976prefer BSD stabs, specify @option{--with-stabs} when you configure GCC@.
8c26c999
JM
977
978No matter which default you choose when you configure GCC, the user
979can use the @option{-gcoff} and @option{-gstabs+} options to specify explicitly
980the debug format for a particular compilation.
981
982@option{--with-stabs} is meaningful on the ISC system on the 386, also, if
983@option{--with-gas} is used. It selects use of stabs debugging
984information embedded in COFF output. This kind of debugging information
985supports C++ well; ordinary COFF debugging information does not.
986
987@option{--with-stabs} is also meaningful on 386 systems running SVR4. It
988selects use of stabs debugging information embedded in ELF output. The
989C++ compiler currently (2.6.0) does not support the DWARF debugging
990information normally used on 386 SVR4 platforms; stabs provide a
991workable alternative. This requires gas and gdb, as the normal SVR4
992tools can not generate or interpret stabs.
993
eea81d3e 994@item --disable-multilib
ef88b07d 995Specify that multiple target
eea81d3e 996libraries to support different target variants, calling
1eaf20ec 997conventions, etc.@: should not be built. The default is to build a
eea81d3e 998predefined set of them.
f42974dc 999
e8515283
DE
1000Some targets provide finer-grained control over which multilibs are built
1001(e.g., @option{--disable-softfloat}):
1002@table @code
e8515283
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1003@item arc-*-elf*
1004biendian.
1005
1006@item arm-*-*
1007fpu, 26bit, underscore, interwork, biendian, nofmult.
1008
1009@item m68*-*-*
1010softfloat, m68881, m68000, m68020.
1011
1012@item mips*-*-*
1013single-float, biendian, softfloat.
1014
1015@item powerpc*-*-*, rs6000*-*-*
1016aix64, pthread, softfloat, powercpu, powerpccpu, powerpcos, biendian,
f282ffb3 1017sysv, aix.
e8515283
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1018
1019@end table
1020
aca600aa
AS
1021@item --with-multilib-list=@var{list}
1022@itemx --without-multilib-list
1023Specify what multilibs to build.
1024Currently only implemented for sh*-*-*.
1025
1026@var{list} is a comma separated list of CPU names. These must be of the
1027form @code{sh*} or @code{m*} (in which case they match the compiler option
1028for that processor). The list should not contain any endian options -
1029these are handled by @option{--with-endian}.
1030
1031If @var{list} is empty, then there will be no multilibs for extra
1032processors. The multilib for the secondary endian remains enabled.
1033
1034As a special case, if an entry in the list starts with a @code{!}
1035(exclamation point), then it is added to the list of excluded multilibs.
1036Entries of this sort should be compatible with @samp{MULTILIB_EXCLUDES}
1037(once the leading @code{!} has been stripped).
1038
1039If @option{--with-multilib-list} is not given, then a default set of
1040multilibs is selected based on the value of @option{--target}. This is
1041usually the complete set of libraries, but some targets imply a more
1042specialized subset.
1043
1044Example 1: to configure a compiler for SH4A only, but supporting both
1045endians, with little endian being the default:
1046@smallexample
1047--with-cpu=sh4a --with-endian=little,big --with-multilib-list=
1048@end smallexample
1049
1050Example 2: to configure a compiler for both SH4A and SH4AL-DSP, but with
1051only little endian SH4AL:
1052@smallexample
1053--with-cpu=sh4a --with-endian=little,big --with-multilib-list=sh4al,!mb/m4al
1054@end smallexample
1055
1056@item --with-endian=@var{endians}
1057Specify what endians to use.
1058Currently only implemented for sh*-*-*.
1059
1060@var{endians} may be one of the following:
1061@table @code
1062@item big
1063Use big endian exclusively.
1064@item little
1065Use little endian exclusively.
1066@item big,little
1067Use big endian by default. Provide a multilib for little endian.
1068@item little,big
1069Use little endian by default. Provide a multilib for big endian.
1070@end table
1071
ef88b07d
JM
1072@item --enable-threads
1073Specify that the target
38209993
LG
1074supports threads. This affects the Objective-C compiler and runtime
1075library, and exception handling for other languages like C++ and Java.
6ac48571 1076On some systems, this is the default.
f42974dc 1077
f6160ed5
LR
1078In general, the best (and, in many cases, the only known) threading
1079model available will be configured for use. Beware that on some
2dd76960 1080systems, GCC has not been taught what threading models are generally
3c6bb1db
LR
1081available for the system. In this case, @option{--enable-threads} is an
1082alias for @option{--enable-threads=single}.
f6160ed5
LR
1083
1084@item --disable-threads
1085Specify that threading support should be disabled for the system.
3c6bb1db 1086This is an alias for @option{--enable-threads=single}.
f6160ed5 1087
ef88b07d
JM
1088@item --enable-threads=@var{lib}
1089Specify that
38209993
LG
1090@var{lib} is the thread support library. This affects the Objective-C
1091compiler and runtime library, and exception handling for other languages
f85b8d1a
JM
1092like C++ and Java. The possibilities for @var{lib} are:
1093
1094@table @code
1095@item aix
1096AIX thread support.
1097@item dce
1098DCE thread support.
4c80872c
RK
1099@item gnat
1100Ada tasking support. For non-Ada programs, this setting is equivalent
8a36672b 1101to @samp{single}. When used in conjunction with the Ada run time, it
4c80872c
RK
1102causes GCC to use the same thread primitives as Ada uses. This option
1103is necessary when using both Ada and the back end exception handling,
1104which is the default for most Ada targets.
f85b8d1a 1105@item mach
eea81d3e 1106Generic MACH thread support, known to work on NeXTSTEP@. (Please note
3c6bb1db 1107that the file needed to support this configuration, @file{gthr-mach.h}, is
f6160ed5
LR
1108missing and thus this setting will cause a known bootstrap failure.)
1109@item no
1110This is an alias for @samp{single}.
f85b8d1a 1111@item posix
18167442
EB
1112Generic POSIX/Unix98 thread support.
1113@item posix95
1114Generic POSIX/Unix95 thread support.
f6160ed5
LR
1115@item rtems
1116RTEMS thread support.
f85b8d1a
JM
1117@item single
1118Disable thread support, should work for all platforms.
1119@item solaris
67c330ae
RO
1120Sun Solaris 2/Unix International thread support. Only use this if you
1121really need to use this legacy API instead of the default, @samp{posix}.
f85b8d1a
JM
1122@item vxworks
1123VxWorks thread support.
1124@item win32
1125Microsoft Win32 API thread support.
61fec9ff
JB
1126@item nks
1127Novell Kernel Services thread support.
f85b8d1a 1128@end table
f42974dc 1129
8dea1cca
DD
1130@item --enable-tls
1131Specify that the target supports TLS (Thread Local Storage). Usually
1132configure can correctly determine if TLS is supported. In cases where
1133it guesses incorrectly, TLS can be explicitly enabled or disabled with
1134@option{--enable-tls} or @option{--disable-tls}. This can happen if
1135the assembler supports TLS but the C library does not, or if the
1136assumptions made by the configure test are incorrect.
1137
1138@item --disable-tls
1139Specify that the target does not support TLS.
1140This is an alias for @option{--enable-tls=no}.
1141
ef88b07d 1142@item --with-cpu=@var{cpu}
8981c15b
JM
1143@itemx --with-cpu-32=@var{cpu}
1144@itemx --with-cpu-64=@var{cpu}
7816bea0
DJ
1145Specify which cpu variant the compiler should generate code for by default.
1146@var{cpu} will be used as the default value of the @option{-mcpu=} switch.
59fbf3cb 1147This option is only supported on some targets, including ARM, i386, M68k,
8981c15b
JM
1148PowerPC, and SPARC@. The @option{--with-cpu-32} and
1149@option{--with-cpu-64} options specify separate default CPUs for
c5f0fe67
JM
115032-bit and 64-bit modes; these options are only supported for i386,
1151x86-64 and PowerPC.
7816bea0
DJ
1152
1153@item --with-schedule=@var{cpu}
1154@itemx --with-arch=@var{cpu}
8981c15b
JM
1155@itemx --with-arch-32=@var{cpu}
1156@itemx --with-arch-64=@var{cpu}
7816bea0 1157@itemx --with-tune=@var{cpu}
8981c15b
JM
1158@itemx --with-tune-32=@var{cpu}
1159@itemx --with-tune-64=@var{cpu}
7816bea0 1160@itemx --with-abi=@var{abi}
9b66ebb1 1161@itemx --with-fpu=@var{type}
7816bea0
DJ
1162@itemx --with-float=@var{type}
1163These configure options provide default values for the @option{-mschedule=},
9b66ebb1
PB
1164@option{-march=}, @option{-mtune=}, @option{-mabi=}, and @option{-mfpu=}
1165options and for @option{-mhard-float} or @option{-msoft-float}. As with
1166@option{--with-cpu}, which switches will be accepted and acceptable values
1167of the arguments depend on the target.
f42974dc 1168
3cf94279
PB
1169@item --with-mode=@var{mode}
1170Specify if the compiler should default to @option{-marm} or @option{-mthumb}.
1171This option is only supported on ARM targets.
1172
9f0df97a
DD
1173@item --with-divide=@var{type}
1174Specify how the compiler should generate code for checking for
1175division by zero. This option is only supported on the MIPS target.
1176The possibilities for @var{type} are:
1177@table @code
1178@item traps
1179Division by zero checks use conditional traps (this is the default on
1180systems that support conditional traps).
1181@item breaks
1182Division by zero checks use the break instruction.
1183@end table
1184
66471b47
DD
1185@c If you make --with-llsc the default for additional targets,
1186@c update the --with-llsc description in the MIPS section below.
1187
1188@item --with-llsc
1189On MIPS targets, make @option{-mllsc} the default when no
1190@option{-mno-lsc} option is passed. This is the default for
1191Linux-based targets, as the kernel will emulate them if the ISA does
1192not provide them.
1193
1194@item --without-llsc
1195On MIPS targets, make @option{-mno-llsc} the default when no
1196@option{-mllsc} option is passed.
1197
b96c5923
DD
1198@item --with-synci
1199On MIPS targets, make @option{-msynci} the default when no
1200@option{-mno-synci} option is passed.
1201
1202@item --without-synci
1203On MIPS targets, make @option{-mno-synci} the default when no
1204@option{-msynci} option is passed. This is the default.
1205
e21d5757
DJ
1206@item --with-mips-plt
1207On MIPS targets, make use of copy relocations and PLTs.
1208These features are extensions to the traditional
1209SVR4-based MIPS ABIs and require support from GNU binutils
1210and the runtime C library.
1211
354b7da5
DH
1212@item --enable-__cxa_atexit
1213Define if you want to use __cxa_atexit, rather than atexit, to
1214register C++ destructors for local statics and global objects.
1215This is essential for fully standards-compliant handling of
8a36672b
JM
1216destructors, but requires __cxa_atexit in libc. This option is currently
1217only available on systems with GNU libc. When enabled, this will cause
cea79118 1218@option{-fuse-cxa-atexit} to be passed by default.
354b7da5 1219
ef88b07d
JM
1220@item --enable-target-optspace
1221Specify that target
38209993
LG
1222libraries should be optimized for code space instead of code speed.
1223This is the default for the m32r platform.
f42974dc 1224
ab130aa5
JM
1225@item --with-cpp-install-dir=@var{dirname}
1226Specify that the user visible @command{cpp} program should be installed
1227in @file{@var{prefix}/@var{dirname}/cpp}, in addition to @var{bindir}.
f42974dc 1228
07cf4226
DM
1229@item --enable-initfini-array
1230Force the use of sections @code{.init_array} and @code{.fini_array}
1231(instead of @code{.init} and @code{.fini}) for constructors and
1232destructors. Option @option{--disable-initfini-array} has the
1233opposite effect. If neither option is specified, the configure script
1234will try to guess whether the @code{.init_array} and
1235@code{.fini_array} sections are supported and, if they are, use them.
1236
00020c16
ILT
1237@item --enable-build-with-cxx
1238Build GCC using a C++ compiler rather than a C compiler. This is an
1239experimental option which may become the default in a later release.
1240
ef88b07d 1241@item --enable-maintainer-mode
0b70519f
RW
1242The build rules that regenerate the Autoconf and Automake output files as
1243well as the GCC master message catalog @file{gcc.pot} are normally
767094dd
JM
1244disabled. This is because it can only be rebuilt if the complete source
1245tree is present. If you have changed the sources and want to rebuild the
6ac48571 1246catalog, configuring with @option{--enable-maintainer-mode} will enable
767094dd 1247this. Note that you need a recent version of the @code{gettext} tools
6ac48571
JM
1248to do so.
1249
f5c3bb4b
PB
1250@item --disable-bootstrap
1251For a native build, the default configuration is to perform
1252a 3-stage bootstrap of the compiler when @samp{make} is invoked,
1253testing that GCC can compile itself correctly. If you want to disable
1254this process, you can configure with @option{--disable-bootstrap}.
1255
1256@item --enable-bootstrap
1257In special cases, you may want to perform a 3-stage build
1258even if the target and host triplets are different.
0b70519f 1259This is possible when the host can run code compiled for
f5c3bb4b
PB
1260the target (e.g.@: host is i686-linux, target is i486-linux).
1261Starting from GCC 4.2, to do this you have to configure explicitly
1262with @option{--enable-bootstrap}.
1263
51b9ff45 1264@item --enable-generated-files-in-srcdir
80521187 1265Neither the .c and .h files that are generated from Bison and flex nor the
51b9ff45 1266info manuals and man pages that are built from the .texi files are present
80521187
GP
1267in the SVN development tree. When building GCC from that development tree,
1268or from one of our snapshots, those generated files are placed in your
1269build directory, which allows for the source to be in a readonly
1270directory.
51b9ff45
KC
1271
1272If you configure with @option{--enable-generated-files-in-srcdir} then those
1273generated files will go into the source directory. This is mainly intended
1274for generating release or prerelease tarballs of the GCC sources, since it
80521187
GP
1275is not a requirement that the users of source releases to have flex, Bison,
1276or makeinfo.
51b9ff45 1277
ef88b07d
JM
1278@item --enable-version-specific-runtime-libs
1279Specify
38209993 1280that runtime libraries should be installed in the compiler specific
8e5f33ff
GK
1281subdirectory (@file{@var{libdir}/gcc}) rather than the usual places. In
1282addition, @samp{libstdc++}'s include files will be installed into
1283@file{@var{libdir}} unless you overruled it by using
6cfb3f16 1284@option{--with-gxx-include-dir=@var{dirname}}. Using this option is
38209993 1285particularly useful if you intend to use several versions of GCC in
8a36672b 1286parallel. This is currently supported by @samp{libgfortran},
b9034bbd
AJ
1287@samp{libjava}, @samp{libmudflap}, @samp{libstdc++}, and @samp{libobjc}.
1288
ef88b07d
JM
1289@item --enable-languages=@var{lang1},@var{lang2},@dots{}
1290Specify that only a particular subset of compilers and
767094dd 1291their runtime libraries should be built. For a list of valid values for
6cfb3f16 1292@var{langN} you can issue the following command in the
eea81d3e 1293@file{gcc} directory of your GCC source tree:@*
3ab51846 1294@smallexample
eea81d3e 1295grep language= */config-lang.in
3ab51846 1296@end smallexample
eea81d3e 1297Currently, you can use any of the following:
47530dd9 1298@code{all}, @code{ada}, @code{c}, @code{c++}, @code{fortran}, @code{java},
e8645a40 1299@code{objc}, @code{obj-c++}.
f995c51f
JW
1300Building the Ada compiler has special requirements, see below.
1301If you do not pass this flag, or specify the option @code{all}, then all
1302default languages available in the @file{gcc} sub-tree will be configured.
e8645a40 1303Ada and Objective-C++ are not default languages; the rest are.
cc11cc9b
PB
1304Re-defining @code{LANGUAGES} when calling @samp{make} @strong{does not}
1305work anymore, as those language sub-directories might not have been
1306configured!
f42974dc 1307
80ca80e9
BM
1308@item --enable-stage1-languages=@var{lang1},@var{lang2},@dots{}
1309Specify that a particular subset of compilers and their runtime
1310libraries should be built with the system C compiler during stage 1 of
1311the bootstrap process, rather than only in later stages with the
1312bootstrapped C compiler. The list of valid values is the same as for
1313@option{--enable-languages}, and the option @code{all} will select all
1314of the languages enabled by @option{--enable-languages}. This option is
1315primarily useful for GCC development; for instance, when a development
1316version of the compiler cannot bootstrap due to compiler bugs, or when
1317one is debugging front ends other than the C front end. When this
1318option is used, one can then build the target libraries for the
1319specified languages with the stage-1 compiler by using @command{make
1320stage1-bubble all-target}, or run the testsuite on the stage-1 compiler
1321for the specified languages using @command{make stage1-start check-gcc}.
1322
cd271054
AC
1323@item --disable-libada
1324Specify that the run-time libraries and tools used by GNAT should not
1325be built. This can be useful for debugging, or for compatibility with
c2910edf 1326previous Ada build procedures, when it was required to explicitly
cd271054
AC
1327do a @samp{make -C gcc gnatlib_and_tools}.
1328
ef0087a7
KH
1329@item --disable-libssp
1330Specify that the run-time libraries for stack smashing protection
1331should not be built.
1332
4fe7a8bc
AH
1333@item --disable-libgomp
1334Specify that the run-time libraries used by GOMP should not be built.
1335
ef88b07d
JM
1336@item --with-dwarf2
1337Specify that the compiler should
eea81d3e 1338use DWARF 2 debugging information as the default.
f85b8d1a 1339
7f970b70
AM
1340@item --enable-targets=all
1341@itemx --enable-targets=@var{target_list}
1342Some GCC targets, e.g.@: powerpc64-linux, build bi-arch compilers.
1343These are compilers that are able to generate either 64-bit or 32-bit
8ab5f5c9 1344code. Typically, the corresponding 32-bit target, e.g.@:
7f970b70
AM
1345powerpc-linux for powerpc64-linux, only generates 32-bit code. This
1346option enables the 32-bit target to be a bi-arch compiler, which is
1347useful when you want a bi-arch compiler that defaults to 32-bit, and
1348you are building a bi-arch or multi-arch binutils in a combined tree.
34677bae
MK
1349On mips-linux, this will build a tri-arch compiler (ABI o32/n32/64),
1350defaulted to o32.
1351Currently, this option only affects sparc-linux, powerpc-linux, x86-linux
1352and mips-linux.
7f970b70
AM
1353
1354@item --enable-secureplt
1355This option enables @option{-msecure-plt} by default for powerpc-linux.
1356@ifnothtml
1357@xref{RS/6000 and PowerPC Options,, RS/6000 and PowerPC Options, gcc,
1358Using the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC)},
1359@end ifnothtml
1360@ifhtml
1361See ``RS/6000 and PowerPC Options'' in the main manual
1362@end ifhtml
1363
922e3e33
UB
1364@item --enable-cld
1365This option enables @option{-mcld} by default for 32-bit x86 targets.
1366@ifnothtml
1367@xref{i386 and x86-64 Options,, i386 and x86-64 Options, gcc,
1368Using the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC)},
1369@end ifnothtml
1370@ifhtml
1371See ``i386 and x86-64 Options'' in the main manual
1372@end ifhtml
1373
f85b8d1a 1374@item --enable-win32-registry
eea81d3e 1375@itemx --enable-win32-registry=@var{key}
f85b8d1a 1376@itemx --disable-win32-registry
95fef11f 1377The @option{--enable-win32-registry} option enables Microsoft Windows-hosted GCC
f85b8d1a
JM
1378to look up installations paths in the registry using the following key:
1379
1380@smallexample
eea81d3e 1381@code{HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Free Software Foundation\@var{key}}
f85b8d1a
JM
1382@end smallexample
1383
eea81d3e 1384@var{key} defaults to GCC version number, and can be overridden by the
8a36672b 1385@option{--enable-win32-registry=@var{key}} option. Vendors and distributors
f85b8d1a
JM
1386who use custom installers are encouraged to provide a different key,
1387perhaps one comprised of vendor name and GCC version number, to
767094dd 1388avoid conflict with existing installations. This feature is enabled
6cfb3f16 1389by default, and can be disabled by @option{--disable-win32-registry}
f85b8d1a
JM
1390option. This option has no effect on the other hosts.
1391
1392@item --nfp
1393Specify that the machine does not have a floating point unit. This
c9693e96
LH
1394option only applies to @samp{m68k-sun-sunos@var{n}}. On any other
1395system, @option{--nfp} has no effect.
f85b8d1a 1396
dd859b8a
KG
1397@item --enable-werror
1398@itemx --disable-werror
1399@itemx --enable-werror=yes
1400@itemx --enable-werror=no
1401When you specify this option, it controls whether certain files in the
1402compiler are built with @option{-Werror} in bootstrap stage2 and later.
1403If you don't specify it, @option{-Werror} is turned on for the main
1404development trunk. However it defaults to off for release branches and
1405final releases. The specific files which get @option{-Werror} are
1406controlled by the Makefiles.
1407
f85b8d1a
JM
1408@item --enable-checking
1409@itemx --enable-checking=@var{list}
cdce5c16 1410When you specify this option, the compiler is built to perform internal
e5080aa6 1411consistency checks of the requested complexity. This does not change the
cdce5c16
NS
1412generated code, but adds error checking within the compiler. This will
1413slow down the compiler and may only work properly if you are building
1414the compiler with GCC@. This is @samp{yes} by default when building
00f39bd5
RG
1415from SVN or snapshots, but @samp{release} for releases. The default
1416for building the stage1 compiler is @samp{yes}. More control
cdce5c16
NS
1417over the checks may be had by specifying @var{list}. The categories of
1418checks available are @samp{yes} (most common checks
1419@samp{assert,misc,tree,gc,rtlflag,runtime}), @samp{no} (no checks at
1420all), @samp{all} (all but @samp{valgrind}), @samp{release} (cheapest
1421checks @samp{assert,runtime}) or @samp{none} (same as @samp{no}).
1422Individual checks can be enabled with these flags @samp{assert},
604f825c 1423@samp{df}, @samp{fold}, @samp{gc}, @samp{gcac} @samp{misc}, @samp{rtl},
cdce5c16
NS
1424@samp{rtlflag}, @samp{runtime}, @samp{tree}, and @samp{valgrind}.
1425
1426The @samp{valgrind} check requires the external @command{valgrind}
ccf548a7 1427simulator, available from @uref{http://valgrind.org/}. The
604f825c 1428@samp{df}, @samp{rtl}, @samp{gcac} and @samp{valgrind} checks are very expensive.
cdce5c16
NS
1429To disable all checking, @samp{--disable-checking} or
1430@samp{--enable-checking=none} must be explicitly requested. Disabling
1431assertions will make the compiler and runtime slightly faster but
1432increase the risk of undetected internal errors causing wrong code to be
1433generated.
f85b8d1a 1434
00f39bd5 1435@item --disable-stage1-checking
1588fb31 1436@itemx --enable-stage1-checking
00f39bd5
RG
1437@itemx --enable-stage1-checking=@var{list}
1438If no @option{--enable-checking} option is specified the stage1
1439compiler will be built with @samp{yes} checking enabled, otherwise
1440the stage1 checking flags are the same as specified by
1441@option{--enable-checking}. To build the stage1 compiler with
1442different checking options use @option{--enable-stage1-checking}.
1443The list of checking options is the same as for @option{--enable-checking}.
1444If your system is too slow or too small to bootstrap a released compiler
1445with checking for stage1 enabled, you can use @samp{--disable-stage1-checking}
1446to disable checking for the stage1 compiler.
1447
22aa533e 1448@item --enable-coverage
31775d31 1449@itemx --enable-coverage=@var{level}
22aa533e 1450With this option, the compiler is built to collect self coverage
8a36672b
JM
1451information, every time it is run. This is for internal development
1452purposes, and only works when the compiler is being built with gcc. The
22aa533e 1453@var{level} argument controls whether the compiler is built optimized or
8a36672b 1454not, values are @samp{opt} and @samp{noopt}. For coverage analysis you
22aa533e 1455want to disable optimization, for performance analysis you want to
8a36672b 1456enable optimization. When coverage is enabled, the default level is
22aa533e
NS
1457without optimization.
1458
439a7e54 1459@item --enable-gather-detailed-mem-stats
95ea367d 1460When this option is specified more detailed information on memory
439a7e54 1461allocation is gathered. This information is printed when using
daf2f129 1462@option{-fmem-report}.
439a7e54 1463
5dd90688
RG
1464@item --with-gc
1465@itemx --with-gc=@var{choice}
1466With this option you can specify the garbage collector implementation
1467used during the compilation process. @var{choice} can be one of
1468@samp{page} and @samp{zone}, where @samp{page} is the default.
1469
f85b8d1a
JM
1470@item --enable-nls
1471@itemx --disable-nls
6cfb3f16 1472The @option{--enable-nls} option enables Native Language Support (NLS),
f85b8d1a 1473which lets GCC output diagnostics in languages other than American
767094dd 1474English. Native Language Support is enabled by default if not doing a
161d7b59 1475canadian cross build. The @option{--disable-nls} option disables NLS@.
f85b8d1a
JM
1476
1477@item --with-included-gettext
c771326b 1478If NLS is enabled, the @option{--with-included-gettext} option causes the build
021c4bfd 1479procedure to prefer its copy of GNU @command{gettext}.
f85b8d1a
JM
1480
1481@item --with-catgets
1482If NLS is enabled, and if the host lacks @code{gettext} but has the
1483inferior @code{catgets} interface, the GCC build procedure normally
1484ignores @code{catgets} and instead uses GCC's copy of the GNU
6cfb3f16 1485@code{gettext} library. The @option{--with-catgets} option causes the
f85b8d1a 1486build procedure to use the host's @code{catgets} in this situation.
80f9249a 1487
5304400d
CR
1488@item --with-libiconv-prefix=@var{dir}
1489Search for libiconv header files in @file{@var{dir}/include} and
1490libiconv library files in @file{@var{dir}/lib}.
1491
9340544b
ZW
1492@item --enable-obsolete
1493Enable configuration for an obsoleted system. If you attempt to
1494configure GCC for a system (build, host, or target) which has been
1495obsoleted, and you do not specify this flag, configure will halt with an
1496error message.
1497
1498All support for systems which have been obsoleted in one release of GCC
1499is removed entirely in the next major release, unless someone steps
1500forward to maintain the port.
486aa804
BE
1501
1502@item --enable-decimal-float
79b87c74
MM
1503@itemx --enable-decimal-float=yes
1504@itemx --enable-decimal-float=no
1505@itemx --enable-decimal-float=bid
1506@itemx --enable-decimal-float=dpd
486aa804 1507@itemx --disable-decimal-float
79b87c74 1508Enable (or disable) support for the C decimal floating point extension
7292b8e4
BE
1509that is in the IEEE 754-2008 standard. This is enabled by default only
1510on PowerPC, i386, and x86_64 GNU/Linux systems. Other systems may also
1511support it, but require the user to specifically enable it. You can
1512optionally control which decimal floating point format is used (either
1513@samp{bid} or @samp{dpd}). The @samp{bid} (binary integer decimal)
1514format is default on i386 and x86_64 systems, and the @samp{dpd}
1515(densely packed decimal) format is default on PowerPC systems.
486aa804 1516
ab22c1fa
CF
1517@item --enable-fixed-point
1518@itemx --disable-fixed-point
1519Enable (or disable) support for C fixed-point arithmetic.
1520This option is enabled by default for some targets (such as MIPS) which
1521have hardware-support for fixed-point operations. On other targets, you
1522may enable this option manually.
1523
ed965309
JJ
1524@item --with-long-double-128
1525Specify if @code{long double} type should be 128-bit by default on selected
1526GNU/Linux architectures. If using @code{--without-long-double-128},
1527@code{long double} will be by default 64-bit, the same as @code{double} type.
1528When neither of these configure options are used, the default will be
1529128-bit @code{long double} when built against GNU C Library 2.4 and later,
153064-bit @code{long double} otherwise.
1531
8a877c9c
KG
1532@item --with-gmp=@var{pathname}
1533@itemx --with-gmp-include=@var{pathname}
1534@itemx --with-gmp-lib=@var{pathname}
1535@itemx --with-mpfr=@var{pathname}
1536@itemx --with-mpfr-include=@var{pathname}
1537@itemx --with-mpfr-lib=@var{pathname}
f9bab007
KG
1538@itemx --with-mpc=@var{pathname}
1539@itemx --with-mpc-include=@var{pathname}
1540@itemx --with-mpc-lib=@var{pathname}
1541If you do not have GMP (the GNU Multiple Precision library), the MPFR
1542library and/or the MPC library installed in a standard location and
1543you want to build GCC, you can explicitly specify the directory where
1544they are installed (@samp{--with-gmp=@var{gmpinstalldir}},
1545@samp{--with-mpfr=@var{mpfrinstalldir}},
1546@samp{--with-mpc=@var{mpcinstalldir}}). The
8a877c9c
KG
1547@option{--with-gmp=@var{gmpinstalldir}} option is shorthand for
1548@option{--with-gmp-lib=@var{gmpinstalldir}/lib} and
1549@option{--with-gmp-include=@var{gmpinstalldir}/include}. Likewise the
1550@option{--with-mpfr=@var{mpfrinstalldir}} option is shorthand for
1551@option{--with-mpfr-lib=@var{mpfrinstalldir}/lib} and
f9bab007
KG
1552@option{--with-mpfr-include=@var{mpfrinstalldir}/include}, also the
1553@option{--with-mpc=@var{mpcinstalldir}} option is shorthand for
1554@option{--with-mpc-lib=@var{mpcinstalldir}/lib} and
1555@option{--with-mpc-include=@var{mpcinstalldir}/include}. If these
3aea2d1c
SP
1556shorthand assumptions are not correct, you can use the explicit
1557include and lib options directly.
1558
1559@item --with-ppl=@var{pathname}
1560@itemx --with-ppl-include=@var{pathname}
1561@itemx --with-ppl-lib=@var{pathname}
1562@itemx --with-cloog=@var{pathname}
1563@itemx --with-cloog-include=@var{pathname}
1564@itemx --with-cloog-lib=@var{pathname}
1565If you do not have PPL (the Parma Polyhedra Library) and the CLooG
1566libraries installed in a standard location and you want to build GCC,
1567you can explicitly specify the directory where they are installed
1568(@samp{--with-ppl=@var{pplinstalldir}},
1569@samp{--with-cloog=@var{clooginstalldir}}). The
1570@option{--with-ppl=@var{pplinstalldir}} option is shorthand for
1571@option{--with-ppl-lib=@var{pplinstalldir}/lib} and
1572@option{--with-ppl-include=@var{pplinstalldir}/include}. Likewise the
1573@option{--with-cloog=@var{clooginstalldir}} option is shorthand for
1574@option{--with-cloog-lib=@var{clooginstalldir}/lib} and
1575@option{--with-cloog-include=@var{clooginstalldir}/include}. If these
8a877c9c
KG
1576shorthand assumptions are not correct, you can use the explicit
1577include and lib options directly.
1578
f38095f3
JM
1579@item --with-host-libstdcxx=@var{linker-args}
1580If you are linking with a static copy of PPL, you can use this option
1581to specify how the linker should find the standard C++ library used
1582internally by PPL. Typical values of @var{linker-args} might be
1583@samp{-lstdc++} or @samp{-Wl,-Bstatic,-lstdc++,-Bdynamic -lm}. If you are
1584linking with a shared copy of PPL, you probably do not need this
1585option; shared library dependencies will cause the linker to search
1586for the standard C++ library automatically.
1587
00020c16
ILT
1588@item --with-stage1-ldflags=@var{flags}
1589This option may be used to set linker flags to be used when linking
1590stage 1 of GCC. These are also used when linking GCC if configured with
1591@option{--disable-bootstrap}. By default no special flags are used.
1592
1593@item --with-stage1-libs=@var{libs}
1594This option may be used to set libraries to be used when linking stage 1
1595of GCC. These are also used when linking GCC if configured with
1596@option{--disable-bootstrap}. The default is the argument to
1597@option{--with-host-libstdcxx}, if specified.
1598
1599@item --with-boot-ldflags=@var{flags}
1600This option may be used to set linker flags to be used when linking
1601stage 2 and later when bootstrapping GCC. By default no special flags
1602are used.
1603
1604@item --with-boot-libs=@var{libs}
1605This option may be used to set libraries to be used when linking stage 2
1606and later when bootstrapping GCC. The default is the argument to
1607@option{--with-host-libstdcxx}, if specified.
1608
c8aea42c
PB
1609@item --with-debug-prefix-map=@var{map}
1610Convert source directory names using @option{-fdebug-prefix-map} when
1611building runtime libraries. @samp{@var{map}} is a space-separated
1612list of maps of the form @samp{@var{old}=@var{new}}.
1613
3b0249cb
ILT
1614@item --enable-linker-build-id
1615Tells GCC to pass @option{--build-id} option to the linker for all final
1616links (links performed without the @option{-r} or @option{--relocatable}
1617option), if the linker supports it. If you specify
1618@option{--enable-linker-build-id}, but your linker does not
1619support @option{--build-id} option, a warning is issued and the
1620@option{--enable-linker-build-id} option is ignored. The default is off.
1621
e31bcd1b
JM
1622@item --enable-gnu-unique-object
1623@itemx --disable-gnu-unique-object
1624Tells GCC to use the gnu_unique_object relocation for C++ template
1625static data members and inline function local statics. Enabled by
1626default for a native toolchain with an assembler that accepts it and
1627GLIBC 2.11 or above, otherwise disabled.
1628
ef88b07d 1629@end table
f42974dc 1630
c1c3bb0c
ME
1631@subheading Cross-Compiler-Specific Options
1632The following options only apply to building cross compilers.
0b70519f 1633
ef88b07d 1634@table @code
4977bab6
ZW
1635@item --with-sysroot
1636@itemx --with-sysroot=@var{dir}
1637Tells GCC to consider @var{dir} as the root of a tree that contains a
1638(subset of) the root filesystem of the target operating system.
1639Target system headers, libraries and run-time object files will be
0b70519f
RW
1640searched in there. More specifically, this acts as if
1641@option{--sysroot=@var{dir}} was added to the default options of the built
1642compiler. The specified directory is not copied into the
4977bab6
ZW
1643install tree, unlike the options @option{--with-headers} and
1644@option{--with-libs} that this option obsoletes. The default value,
1645in case @option{--with-sysroot} is not given an argument, is
047d636f
DJ
1646@option{$@{gcc_tooldir@}/sys-root}. If the specified directory is a
1647subdirectory of @option{$@{exec_prefix@}}, then it will be found relative to
1648the GCC binaries if the installation tree is moved.
4977bab6 1649
0b70519f
RW
1650This option affects the system root for the compiler used to build
1651target libraries (which runs on the build system) and the compiler newly
1652installed with @code{make install}; it does not affect the compiler which is
1653used to build GCC itself.
1654
160633c6
MM
1655@item --with-build-sysroot
1656@itemx --with-build-sysroot=@var{dir}
1657Tells GCC to consider @var{dir} as the system root (see
526635cb 1658@option{--with-sysroot}) while building target libraries, instead of
160633c6
MM
1659the directory specified with @option{--with-sysroot}. This option is
1660only useful when you are already using @option{--with-sysroot}. You
526635cb 1661can use @option{--with-build-sysroot} when you are configuring with
160633c6 1662@option{--prefix} set to a directory that is different from the one in
526635cb
MM
1663which you are installing GCC and your target libraries.
1664
1665This option affects the system root for the compiler used to build
1666target libraries (which runs on the build system); it does not affect
1667the compiler which is used to build GCC itself.
160633c6 1668
65a824f6
JT
1669@item --with-headers
1670@itemx --with-headers=@var{dir}
4977bab6 1671Deprecated in favor of @option{--with-sysroot}.
65a824f6
JT
1672Specifies that target headers are available when building a cross compiler.
1673The @var{dir} argument specifies a directory which has the target include
1674files. These include files will be copied into the @file{gcc} install
1675directory. @emph{This option with the @var{dir} argument is required} when
1676building a cross compiler, if @file{@var{prefix}/@var{target}/sys-include}
1677doesn't pre-exist. If @file{@var{prefix}/@var{target}/sys-include} does
1678pre-exist, the @var{dir} argument may be omitted. @command{fixincludes}
8a36672b 1679will be run on these files to make them compatible with GCC@.
264d65c1
AP
1680
1681@item --without-headers
1682Tells GCC not use any target headers from a libc when building a cross
2dd76960 1683compiler. When crossing to GNU/Linux, you need the headers so GCC
264d65c1 1684can build the exception handling for libgcc.
264d65c1 1685
65a824f6 1686@item --with-libs
0b70519f 1687@itemx --with-libs="@var{dir1} @var{dir2} @dots{} @var{dirN}"
4977bab6 1688Deprecated in favor of @option{--with-sysroot}.
38209993
LG
1689Specifies a list of directories which contain the target runtime
1690libraries. These libraries will be copied into the @file{gcc} install
65a824f6
JT
1691directory. If the directory list is omitted, this option has no
1692effect.
cc11cc9b 1693
ef88b07d 1694@item --with-newlib
eea81d3e 1695Specifies that @samp{newlib} is
38209993 1696being used as the target C library. This causes @code{__eprintf} to be
eea81d3e
RO
1697omitted from @file{libgcc.a} on the assumption that it will be provided by
1698@samp{newlib}.
cc11cc9b
PB
1699
1700@item --with-build-time-tools=@var{dir}
1701Specifies where to find the set of target tools (assembler, linker, etc.)
1702that will be used while building GCC itself. This option can be useful
1703if the directory layouts are different between the system you are building
1704GCC on, and the system where you will deploy it.
1705
e4ae5e77 1706For example, on an @samp{ia64-hp-hpux} system, you may have the GNU
cc11cc9b
PB
1707assembler and linker in @file{/usr/bin}, and the native tools in a
1708different path, and build a toolchain that expects to find the
1709native tools in @file{/usr/bin}.
1710
1711When you use this option, you should ensure that @var{dir} includes
1712@command{ar}, @command{as}, @command{ld}, @command{nm},
1713@command{ranlib} and @command{strip} if necessary, and possibly
1714@command{objdump}. Otherwise, GCC may use an inconsistent set of
1715tools.
ef88b07d 1716@end table
f9047ed3 1717
c1c3bb0c
ME
1718@subheading Java-Specific Options
1719
1720The following option applies to the build of the Java front end.
1721
1722@table @code
1723@item --disable-libgcj
1724Specify that the run-time libraries
1725used by GCJ should not be built. This is useful in case you intend
1726to use GCJ with some other run-time, or you're going to install it
1727separately, or it just happens not to build on your particular
1728machine. In general, if the Java front end is enabled, the GCJ
1729libraries will be enabled too, unless they're known to not work on
1730the target platform. If GCJ is enabled but @samp{libgcj} isn't built, you
1731may need to port it; in this case, before modifying the top-level
1732@file{configure.in} so that @samp{libgcj} is enabled by default on this platform,
1733you may use @option{--enable-libgcj} to override the default.
1734
1735@end table
1736
1737The following options apply to building @samp{libgcj}.
1738
1739@subsubheading General Options
1740
1741@table @code
69403237
TT
1742@item --enable-java-maintainer-mode
1743By default the @samp{libjava} build will not attempt to compile the
1744@file{.java} source files to @file{.class}. Instead, it will use the
1745@file{.class} files from the source tree. If you use this option you
1746must have executables named @command{ecj1} and @command{gjavah} in your path
1747for use by the build. You must use this option if you intend to
1748modify any @file{.java} files in @file{libjava}.
1749
1750@item --with-java-home=@var{dirname}
1751This @samp{libjava} option overrides the default value of the
1752@samp{java.home} system property. It is also used to set
1753@samp{sun.boot.class.path} to @file{@var{dirname}/lib/rt.jar}. By
1754default @samp{java.home} is set to @file{@var{prefix}} and
1755@samp{sun.boot.class.path} to
1756@file{@var{datadir}/java/libgcj-@var{version}.jar}.
1757
1758@item --with-ecj-jar=@var{filename}
1759This option can be used to specify the location of an external jar
1760file containing the Eclipse Java compiler. A specially modified
1761version of this compiler is used by @command{gcj} to parse
1762@file{.java} source files. If this option is given, the
1763@samp{libjava} build will create and install an @file{ecj1} executable
1764which uses this jar file at runtime.
1765
1766If this option is not given, but an @file{ecj.jar} file is found in
1767the topmost source tree at configure time, then the @samp{libgcj}
1768build will create and install @file{ecj1}, and will also install the
1769discovered @file{ecj.jar} into a suitable place in the install tree.
1770
1771If @file{ecj1} is not installed, then the user will have to supply one
1772on his path in order for @command{gcj} to properly parse @file{.java}
1773source files. A suitable jar is available from
1774@uref{ftp://sourceware.org/pub/java/}.
1775
c1c3bb0c
ME
1776@item --disable-getenv-properties
1777Don't set system properties from @env{GCJ_PROPERTIES}.
1778
1779@item --enable-hash-synchronization
8a36672b 1780Use a global hash table for monitor locks. Ordinarily,
c1c3bb0c 1781@samp{libgcj}'s @samp{configure} script automatically makes
8a36672b 1782the correct choice for this option for your platform. Only use
c1c3bb0c
ME
1783this if you know you need the library to be configured differently.
1784
1785@item --enable-interpreter
8a36672b
JM
1786Enable the Java interpreter. The interpreter is automatically
1787enabled by default on all platforms that support it. This option
c1c3bb0c
ME
1788is really only useful if you want to disable the interpreter
1789(using @option{--disable-interpreter}).
1790
1791@item --disable-java-net
8a36672b 1792Disable java.net. This disables the native part of java.net only,
c1c3bb0c
ME
1793using non-functional stubs for native method implementations.
1794
1795@item --disable-jvmpi
1796Disable JVMPI support.
1797
a507baad
DD
1798@item --disable-libgcj-bc
1799Disable BC ABI compilation of certain parts of libgcj. By default,
1800some portions of libgcj are compiled with @option{-findirect-dispatch}
a26c7632
DD
1801and @option{-fno-indirect-classes}, allowing them to be overridden at
1802run-time.
a507baad
DD
1803
1804If @option{--disable-libgcj-bc} is specified, libgcj is built without
a26c7632
DD
1805these options. This allows the compile-time linker to resolve
1806dependencies when statically linking to libgcj. However it makes it
1807impossible to override the affected portions of libgcj at run-time.
a507baad 1808
c07cd2c7
DD
1809@item --enable-reduced-reflection
1810Build most of libgcj with @option{-freduced-reflection}. This reduces
1811the size of libgcj at the expense of not being able to do accurate
1812reflection on the classes it contains. This option is safe if you
1813know that code using libgcj will never use reflection on the standard
1814runtime classes in libgcj (including using serialization, RMI or CORBA).
1815
c1c3bb0c
ME
1816@item --with-ecos
1817Enable runtime eCos target support.
1818
1819@item --without-libffi
8a36672b 1820Don't use @samp{libffi}. This will disable the interpreter and JNI
c1c3bb0c
ME
1821support as well, as these require @samp{libffi} to work.
1822
1823@item --enable-libgcj-debug
1824Enable runtime debugging code.
1825
1826@item --enable-libgcj-multifile
1827If specified, causes all @file{.java} source files to be
1828compiled into @file{.class} files in one invocation of
8a36672b
JM
1829@samp{gcj}. This can speed up build time, but is more
1830resource-intensive. If this option is unspecified or
c1c3bb0c
ME
1831disabled, @samp{gcj} is invoked once for each @file{.java}
1832file to compile into a @file{.class} file.
1833
1834@item --with-libiconv-prefix=DIR
1835Search for libiconv in @file{DIR/include} and @file{DIR/lib}.
1836
1837@item --enable-sjlj-exceptions
4f6c2131
EB
1838Force use of the @code{setjmp}/@code{longjmp}-based scheme for exceptions.
1839@samp{configure} ordinarily picks the correct value based on the platform.
1840Only use this option if you are sure you need a different setting.
c1c3bb0c
ME
1841
1842@item --with-system-zlib
1843Use installed @samp{zlib} rather than that included with GCC@.
1844
1845@item --with-win32-nlsapi=ansi, unicows or unicode
1846Indicates how MinGW @samp{libgcj} translates between UNICODE
8a36672b 1847characters and the Win32 API@.
c9db365d
JS
1848
1849@item --enable-java-home
1850If enabled, this creates a JPackage compatible SDK environment during install.
1851Note that if --enable-java-home is used, --with-arch-directory=ARCH must also
1852be specified.
1853
1854@item --with-arch-directory=ARCH
1855Specifies the name to use for the @file{jre/lib/ARCH} directory in the SDK
1856environment created when --enable-java-home is passed. Typical names for this
1857directory include i386, amd64, ia64, etc.
1858
1859@item --with-os-directory=DIR
1860Specifies the OS directory for the SDK include directory. This is set to auto
1861detect, and is typically 'linux'.
1862
1863@item --with-origin-name=NAME
1864Specifies the JPackage origin name. This defaults to the 'gcj' in
1865java-1.5.0-gcj.
1866
1867@item --with-arch-suffix=SUFFIX
1868Specifies the suffix for the sdk directory. Defaults to the empty string.
1869Examples include '.x86_64' in 'java-1.5.0-gcj-1.5.0.0.x86_64'.
1870
1871@item --with-jvm-root-dir=DIR
1872Specifies where to install the SDK. Default is $(prefix)/lib/jvm.
1873
1874@item --with-jvm-jar-dir=DIR
1875Specifies where to install jars. Default is $(prefix)/lib/jvm-exports.
1876
1877@item --with-python-dir=DIR
1878Specifies where to install the Python modules used for aot-compile. DIR should
1879not include the prefix used in installation. For example, if the Python modules
1880are to be installed in /usr/lib/python2.5/site-packages, then
1881--with-python-dir=/lib/python2.5/site-packages should be passed. If this is
1882not specified, then the Python modules are installed in $(prefix)/share/python.
1883
1884@item --enable-aot-compile-rpm
1885Adds aot-compile-rpm to the list of installed scripts.
1886
34677bae
MK
1887@item --enable-browser-plugin
1888Build the gcjwebplugin web browser plugin.
1889
c1c3bb0c
ME
1890@table @code
1891@item ansi
1892Use the single-byte @code{char} and the Win32 A functions natively,
8a36672b 1893translating to and from UNICODE when using these functions. If
c1c3bb0c
ME
1894unspecified, this is the default.
1895
1896@item unicows
8a36672b 1897Use the @code{WCHAR} and Win32 W functions natively. Adds
c1c3bb0c
ME
1898@code{-lunicows} to @file{libgcj.spec} to link with @samp{libunicows}.
1899@file{unicows.dll} needs to be deployed on Microsoft Windows 9X machines
8a36672b 1900running built executables. @file{libunicows.a}, an open-source
c1c3bb0c
ME
1901import library around Microsoft's @code{unicows.dll}, is obtained from
1902@uref{http://libunicows.sourceforge.net/}, which also gives details
1903on getting @file{unicows.dll} from Microsoft.
1904
1905@item unicode
8a36672b
JM
1906Use the @code{WCHAR} and Win32 W functions natively. Does @emph{not}
1907add @code{-lunicows} to @file{libgcj.spec}. The built executables will
c1c3bb0c
ME
1908only run on Microsoft Windows NT and above.
1909@end table
d7f09764
DN
1910
1911@item --enable-lto
1912Enable support for link-time optimization (LTO). This is enabled by
1913default if a working libelf implementation is found (see
1914@option{--with-libelf}).
1915
1916@item --with-libelf=@var{pathname}
1917@itemx --with-libelf-include=@var{pathname}
1918@itemx --with-libelf-lib=@var{pathname}
1919If you do not have libelf installed in a standard location and you
1920want to enable support for link-time optimization (LTO), you can
1921explicitly specify the directory where libelf is installed
1922(@samp{--with-libelf=@var{libelfinstalldir}}). The
1923@option{--with-libelf=@var{libelfinstalldir}} option is shorthand for
1924@option{--with-libelf-include=@var{libelfinstalldir}/include}
1925@option{--with-libelf-lib=@var{libelfinstalldir}/lib}.
1926
1927@item --enable-gold
1928Enable support for using @command{gold} as the linker. If gold support is
1929enabled together with @option{--enable-lto}, an additional directory
1930@file{lto-plugin} will be built. The code in this directory is a
1931plugin for gold that allows the link-time optimizer to extract object
1932files with LTO information out of library archives. See
1933@option{-flto} and @option{-fwhopr} for details.
c1c3bb0c
ME
1934@end table
1935
1936@subsubheading AWT-Specific Options
1937
1938@table @code
1939@item --with-x
1940Use the X Window System.
1941
1942@item --enable-java-awt=PEER(S)
1943Specifies the AWT peer library or libraries to build alongside
8a36672b
JM
1944@samp{libgcj}. If this option is unspecified or disabled, AWT
1945will be non-functional. Current valid values are @option{gtk} and
1946@option{xlib}. Multiple libraries should be separated by a
431ae0bf 1947comma (i.e.@: @option{--enable-java-awt=gtk,xlib}).
c1c3bb0c
ME
1948
1949@item --enable-gtk-cairo
8a36672b 1950Build the cairo Graphics2D implementation on GTK@.
c1c3bb0c
ME
1951
1952@item --enable-java-gc=TYPE
8a36672b 1953Choose garbage collector. Defaults to @option{boehm} if unspecified.
c1c3bb0c
ME
1954
1955@item --disable-gtktest
1956Do not try to compile and run a test GTK+ program.
1957
1958@item --disable-glibtest
1959Do not try to compile and run a test GLIB program.
1960
1961@item --with-libart-prefix=PFX
1962Prefix where libart is installed (optional).
1963
1964@item --with-libart-exec-prefix=PFX
1965Exec prefix where libart is installed (optional).
1966
1967@item --disable-libarttest
1968Do not try to compile and run a test libart program.
1969
1970@end table
f42974dc
DW
1971
1972@html
b8db17af 1973<hr />
f42974dc
DW
1974<p>
1975@end html
1976@ifhtml
1977@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
1978@end ifhtml
1979@end ifset
1980
1981@c ***Building****************************************************************
6cfb3f16 1982@ifnothtml
f42974dc
DW
1983@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1984@node Building, Testing, Configuration, Installing GCC
6cfb3f16 1985@end ifnothtml
f42974dc 1986@ifset buildhtml
f42974dc
DW
1987@ifnothtml
1988@chapter Building
1989@end ifnothtml
1990@cindex Installing GCC: Building
1991
1992Now that GCC is configured, you are ready to build the compiler and
1993runtime libraries.
1994
b8df899a 1995Some commands executed when making the compiler may fail (return a
7ba4ca63 1996nonzero status) and be ignored by @command{make}. These failures, which
b8df899a
JM
1997are often due to files that were not found, are expected, and can safely
1998be ignored.
1999
2000It is normal to have compiler warnings when compiling certain files.
2001Unless you are a GCC developer, you can generally ignore these warnings
dd859b8a
KG
2002unless they cause compilation to fail. Developers should attempt to fix
2003any warnings encountered, however they can temporarily continue past
2004warnings-as-errors by specifying the configure flag
2005@option{--disable-werror}.
b8df899a
JM
2006
2007On certain old systems, defining certain environment variables such as
6cfb3f16 2008@env{CC} can interfere with the functioning of @command{make}.
b8df899a
JM
2009
2010If you encounter seemingly strange errors when trying to build the
2011compiler in a directory other than the source directory, it could be
2012because you have previously configured the compiler in the source
2013directory. Make sure you have done all the necessary preparations.
2014
2015If you build GCC on a BSD system using a directory stored in an old System
4c64396e 2016V file system, problems may occur in running @command{fixincludes} if the
b8df899a
JM
2017System V file system doesn't support symbolic links. These problems
2018result in a failure to fix the declaration of @code{size_t} in
2019@file{sys/types.h}. If you find that @code{size_t} is a signed type and
2020that type mismatches occur, this could be the cause.
2021
161d7b59 2022The solution is not to use such a directory for building GCC@.
f42974dc 2023
01d419ae 2024Similarly, when building from SVN or snapshots, or if you modify
e8645a40
TT
2025@file{*.l} files, you need the Flex lexical analyzer generator
2026installed. If you do not modify @file{*.l} files, releases contain
2027the Flex-generated files and you do not need Flex installed to build
2028them. There is still one Flex-based lexical analyzer (part of the
2029build machinery, not of GCC itself) that is used even if you only
2030build the C front end.
f85b8d1a 2031
80521187 2032When building from SVN or snapshots, or if you modify Texinfo
7326a39e 2033documentation, you need version 4.7 or later of Texinfo installed if you
f85b8d1a
JM
2034want Info documentation to be regenerated. Releases contain Info
2035documentation pre-built for the unmodified documentation in the release.
2036
f42974dc
DW
2037@section Building a native compiler
2038
f5c3bb4b
PB
2039For a native build, the default configuration is to perform
2040a 3-stage bootstrap of the compiler when @samp{make} is invoked.
2041This will build the entire GCC system and ensure that it compiles
2042itself correctly. It can be disabled with the @option{--disable-bootstrap}
2043parameter to @samp{configure}, but bootstrapping is suggested because
2044the compiler will be tested more completely and could also have
2045better performance.
2046
2047The bootstrapping process will complete the following steps:
f42974dc
DW
2048
2049@itemize @bullet
2050@item
80521187 2051Build tools necessary to build the compiler.
f42974dc
DW
2052
2053@item
cc11cc9b
PB
2054Perform a 3-stage bootstrap of the compiler. This includes building
2055three times the target tools for use by the compiler such as binutils
2056(bfd, binutils, gas, gprof, ld, and opcodes) if they have been
2057individually linked or moved into the top level GCC source tree before
2058configuring.
f42974dc
DW
2059
2060@item
2061Perform a comparison test of the stage2 and stage3 compilers.
2062
2063@item
2064Build runtime libraries using the stage3 compiler from the previous step.
f9047ed3 2065
f42974dc
DW
2066@end itemize
2067
38209993 2068If you are short on disk space you might consider @samp{make
cc11cc9b
PB
2069bootstrap-lean} instead. The sequence of compilation is the
2070same described above, but object files from the stage1 and
f42974dc
DW
2071stage2 of the 3-stage bootstrap of the compiler are deleted as
2072soon as they are no longer needed.
2073
1c8bd6a3
PB
2074If you wish to use non-default GCC flags when compiling the stage2
2075and stage3 compilers, set @code{BOOT_CFLAGS} on the command line when
2076doing @samp{make}. For example, if you want to save additional space
2077during the bootstrap and in the final installation as well, you can
2078build the compiler binaries without debugging information as in the
2079following example. This will save roughly 40% of disk space both for
2080the bootstrap and the final installation. (Libraries will still contain
2081debugging information.)
f42974dc 2082
3ab51846 2083@smallexample
1c8bd6a3 2084 make BOOT_CFLAGS='-O' bootstrap
3ab51846 2085@end smallexample
8c085f6f 2086
1c8bd6a3
PB
2087You can place non-default optimization flags into @code{BOOT_CFLAGS}; they
2088are less well tested here than the default of @samp{-g -O2}, but should
2089still work. In a few cases, you may find that you need to specify special
2090flags such as @option{-msoft-float} here to complete the bootstrap; or,
2091if the native compiler miscompiles the stage1 compiler, you may need
2092to work around this, by choosing @code{BOOT_CFLAGS} to avoid the parts
2093of the stage1 compiler that were miscompiled, or by using @samp{make
f85b8d1a
JM
2094bootstrap4} to increase the number of stages of bootstrap.
2095
1c8bd6a3
PB
2096@code{BOOT_CFLAGS} does not apply to bootstrapped target libraries.
2097Since these are always compiled with the compiler currently being
2098bootstrapped, you can use @code{CFLAGS_FOR_TARGET} to modify their
2099compilation flags, as for non-bootstrapped target libraries.
2100Again, if the native compiler miscompiles the stage1 compiler, you may
2101need to work around this by avoiding non-working parts of the stage1
4a4a4e99 2102compiler. Use @code{STAGE1_TFLAGS} to this end.
c872077c 2103
6cfb3f16 2104If you used the flag @option{--enable-languages=@dots{}} to restrict
f42974dc 2105the compilers to be built, only those you've actually enabled will be
767094dd 2106built. This will of course only build those runtime libraries, for
f42974dc 2107which the particular compiler has been built. Please note,
cc11cc9b 2108that re-defining @env{LANGUAGES} when calling @samp{make}
ef88b07d 2109@strong{does not} work anymore!
f42974dc 2110
f85b8d1a 2111If the comparison of stage2 and stage3 fails, this normally indicates
eea81d3e 2112that the stage2 compiler has compiled GCC incorrectly, and is therefore
f85b8d1a
JM
2113a potentially serious bug which you should investigate and report. (On
2114a few systems, meaningful comparison of object files is impossible; they
2115always appear ``different''. If you encounter this problem, you will
2116need to disable comparison in the @file{Makefile}.)
f42974dc 2117
cc11cc9b
PB
2118If you do not want to bootstrap your compiler, you can configure with
2119@option{--disable-bootstrap}. In particular cases, you may want to
2120bootstrap your compiler even if the target system is not the same as
2121the one you are building on: for example, you could build a
2122@code{powerpc-unknown-linux-gnu} toolchain on a
2123@code{powerpc64-unknown-linux-gnu} host. In this case, pass
2124@option{--enable-bootstrap} to the configure script.
2125
e12c4094
AO
2126@code{BUILD_CONFIG} can be used to bring in additional customization
2127to the build. It can be set to a whitespace-separated list of names.
2128For each such @code{NAME}, top-level @file{config/@code{NAME}.mk} will
2129be included by the top-level @file{Makefile}, bringing in any settings
2130it contains. The default @code{BUILD_CONFIG} can be set using the
2131configure option @option{--with-build-config=@code{NAME}...}. Some
2132examples of supported build configurations are:
4a4a4e99
AO
2133
2134@table @asis
2135@item @samp{bootstrap-O1}
2136Removes any @option{-O}-started option from @code{BOOT_CFLAGS}, and adds
2137@option{-O1} to it. @samp{BUILD_CONFIG=bootstrap-O1} is equivalent to
2138@samp{BOOT_CFLAGS='-g -O1'}.
2139
2140@item @samp{bootstrap-O3}
2141Analogous to @code{bootstrap-O1}.
2142
2143@item @samp{bootstrap-debug}
b5b8b0ac 2144Verifies that the compiler generates the same executable code, whether
e12c4094
AO
2145or not it is asked to emit debug information. To this end, this
2146option builds stage2 host programs without debug information, and uses
b5b8b0ac
AO
2147@file{contrib/compare-debug} to compare them with the stripped stage3
2148object files. If @code{BOOT_CFLAGS} is overridden so as to not enable
2149debug information, stage2 will have it, and stage3 won't. This option
e12c4094
AO
2150is enabled by default when GCC bootstrapping is enabled, if
2151@code{strip} can turn object files compiled with and without debug
2152info into identical object files. In addition to better test
2153coverage, this option makes default bootstraps faster and leaner.
b5b8b0ac
AO
2154
2155@item @samp{bootstrap-debug-big}
e12c4094
AO
2156Rather than comparing stripped object files, as in
2157@code{bootstrap-debug}, this option saves internal compiler dumps
2158during stage2 and stage3 and compares them as well, which helps catch
2159additional potential problems, but at a great cost in terms of disk
2160space. It can be specified in addition to @samp{bootstrap-debug}.
b5b8b0ac
AO
2161
2162@item @samp{bootstrap-debug-lean}
2163This option saves disk space compared with @code{bootstrap-debug-big},
2164but at the expense of some recompilation. Instead of saving the dumps
2165of stage2 and stage3 until the final compare, it uses
2166@option{-fcompare-debug} to generate, compare and remove the dumps
2167during stage3, repeating the compilation that already took place in
2168stage2, whose dumps were not saved.
2169
2170@item @samp{bootstrap-debug-lib}
2171This option tests executable code invariance over debug information
2172generation on target libraries, just like @code{bootstrap-debug-lean}
2173tests it on host programs. It builds stage3 libraries with
2174@option{-fcompare-debug}, and it can be used along with any of the
2175@code{bootstrap-debug} options above.
2176
2177There aren't @code{-lean} or @code{-big} counterparts to this option
2178because most libraries are only build in stage3, so bootstrap compares
2179would not get significant coverage. Moreover, the few libraries built
2180in stage2 are used in stage3 host programs, so we wouldn't want to
2181compile stage2 libraries with different options for comparison purposes.
2182
2183@item @samp{bootstrap-debug-ckovw}
2184Arranges for error messages to be issued if the compiler built on any
2185stage is run without the option @option{-fcompare-debug}. This is
2186useful to verify the full @option{-fcompare-debug} testing coverage. It
2187must be used along with @code{bootstrap-debug-lean} and
2188@code{bootstrap-debug-lib}.
2189
2190@item @samp{bootstrap-time}
2191Arranges for the run time of each program started by the GCC driver,
2192built in any stage, to be logged to @file{time.log}, in the top level of
2193the build tree.
4a4a4e99
AO
2194
2195@end table
cc11cc9b 2196
f42974dc
DW
2197@section Building a cross compiler
2198
f42974dc
DW
2199When building a cross compiler, it is not generally possible to do a
22003-stage bootstrap of the compiler. This makes for an interesting problem
161d7b59 2201as parts of GCC can only be built with GCC@.
f42974dc 2202
0b70519f 2203To build a cross compiler, we recommend first building and installing a
f42974dc 2204native compiler. You can then use the native GCC compiler to build the
635771af
JM
2205cross compiler. The installed native compiler needs to be GCC version
22062.95 or later.
f42974dc 2207
c076e75f
DD
2208If the cross compiler is to be built with support for the Java
2209programming language and the ability to compile .java source files is
2210desired, the installed native compiler used to build the cross
2211compiler needs to be the same GCC version as the cross compiler. In
2212addition the cross compiler needs to be configured with
2213@option{--with-ecj-jar=@dots{}}.
2214
f42974dc 2215Assuming you have already installed a native copy of GCC and configured
6cfb3f16 2216your cross compiler, issue the command @command{make}, which performs the
f42974dc
DW
2217following steps:
2218
2219@itemize @bullet
2220@item
80521187 2221Build host tools necessary to build the compiler.
f42974dc
DW
2222
2223@item
2224Build target tools for use by the compiler such as binutils (bfd,
2225binutils, gas, gprof, ld, and opcodes)
2226if they have been individually linked or moved into the top level GCC source
2227tree before configuring.
2228
2229@item
2230Build the compiler (single stage only).
2231
2232@item
2233Build runtime libraries using the compiler from the previous step.
2234@end itemize
2235
2236Note that if an error occurs in any step the make process will exit.
2237
01e97976
JM
2238If you are not building GNU binutils in the same source tree as GCC,
2239you will need a cross-assembler and cross-linker installed before
2240configuring GCC@. Put them in the directory
2241@file{@var{prefix}/@var{target}/bin}. Here is a table of the tools
2242you should put in this directory:
2243
2244@table @file
2245@item as
2246This should be the cross-assembler.
2247
2248@item ld
2249This should be the cross-linker.
2250
2251@item ar
2252This should be the cross-archiver: a program which can manipulate
2253archive files (linker libraries) in the target machine's format.
2254
2255@item ranlib
2256This should be a program to construct a symbol table in an archive file.
2257@end table
2258
2259The installation of GCC will find these programs in that directory,
2260and copy or link them to the proper place to for the cross-compiler to
2261find them when run later.
2262
2263The easiest way to provide these files is to build the Binutils package.
2264Configure it with the same @option{--host} and @option{--target}
2265options that you use for configuring GCC, then build and install
2266them. They install their executables automatically into the proper
2267directory. Alas, they do not support all the targets that GCC
2268supports.
2269
2270If you are not building a C library in the same source tree as GCC,
2271you should also provide the target libraries and headers before
2272configuring GCC, specifying the directories with
2273@option{--with-sysroot} or @option{--with-headers} and
2274@option{--with-libs}. Many targets also require ``start files'' such
2275as @file{crt0.o} and
2276@file{crtn.o} which are linked into each executable. There may be several
2277alternatives for @file{crt0.o}, for use with profiling or other
2278compilation options. Check your target's definition of
2279@code{STARTFILE_SPEC} to find out what start files it uses.
2280
f42974dc
DW
2281@section Building in parallel
2282
0b70519f 2283GNU Make 3.80 and above, which is necessary to build GCC, support
d7f755c3
PB
2284building in parallel. To activate this, you can use @samp{make -j 2}
2285instead of @samp{make}. You can also specify a bigger number, and
cc11cc9b
PB
2286in most cases using a value greater than the number of processors in
2287your machine will result in fewer and shorter I/O latency hits, thus
2288improving overall throughput; this is especially true for slow drives
2289and network filesystems.
f42974dc 2290
e23381df
GB
2291@section Building the Ada compiler
2292
2293In order to build GNAT, the Ada compiler, you need a working GNAT
2c2b1710 2294compiler (GCC version 3.4 or later).
cc11cc9b
PB
2295This includes GNAT tools such as @command{gnatmake} and
2296@command{gnatlink}, since the Ada front end is written in Ada and
2297uses some GNAT-specific extensions.
2298
2299In order to build a cross compiler, it is suggested to install
2300the new compiler as native first, and then use it to build the cross
2301compiler.
e23381df 2302
38e23049
JM
2303@command{configure} does not test whether the GNAT installation works
2304and has a sufficiently recent version; if too old a GNAT version is
2305installed, the build will fail unless @option{--enable-languages} is
2306used to disable building the Ada front end.
e23381df 2307
e397a9f1
ST
2308@env{ADA_INCLUDE_PATH} and @env{ADA_OBJECT_PATH} environment variables
2309must not be set when building the Ada compiler, the Ada tools, or the
2310Ada runtime libraries. You can check that your build environment is clean
2311by verifying that @samp{gnatls -v} lists only one explicit path in each
2312section.
2313
8f231b5d
JH
2314@section Building with profile feedback
2315
2316It is possible to use profile feedback to optimize the compiler itself. This
2317should result in a faster compiler binary. Experiments done on x86 using gcc
23183.3 showed approximately 7 percent speedup on compiling C programs. To
cc11cc9b 2319bootstrap the compiler with profile feedback, use @code{make profiledbootstrap}.
8f231b5d
JH
2320
2321When @samp{make profiledbootstrap} is run, it will first build a @code{stage1}
2322compiler. This compiler is used to build a @code{stageprofile} compiler
2323instrumented to collect execution counts of instruction and branch
2324probabilities. Then runtime libraries are compiled with profile collected.
2325Finally a @code{stagefeedback} compiler is built using the information collected.
2326
cc11cc9b 2327Unlike standard bootstrap, several additional restrictions apply. The
8f231b5d
JH
2328compiler used to build @code{stage1} needs to support a 64-bit integral type.
2329It is recommended to only use GCC for this. Also parallel make is currently
2330not supported since collisions in profile collecting may occur.
2331
f42974dc 2332@html
b8db17af 2333<hr />
f42974dc
DW
2334<p>
2335@end html
2336@ifhtml
2337@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
2338@end ifhtml
2339@end ifset
2340
2341@c ***Testing*****************************************************************
6cfb3f16 2342@ifnothtml
f42974dc
DW
2343@comment node-name, next, previous, up
2344@node Testing, Final install, Building, Installing GCC
6cfb3f16 2345@end ifnothtml
f42974dc 2346@ifset testhtml
f42974dc
DW
2347@ifnothtml
2348@chapter Installing GCC: Testing
2349@end ifnothtml
2350@cindex Testing
2351@cindex Installing GCC: Testing
2352@cindex Testsuite
2353
f97903cc
JJ
2354Before you install GCC, we encourage you to run the testsuites and to
2355compare your results with results from a similar configuration that have
2356been submitted to the
2357@uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-testresults/,,gcc-testresults mailing list}.
05253aed
JJ
2358Some of these archived results are linked from the build status lists
2359at @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/buildstat.html}, although not everyone who
2360reports a successful build runs the testsuites and submits the results.
f97903cc
JJ
2361This step is optional and may require you to download additional software,
2362but it can give you confidence in your new GCC installation or point out
8a36672b 2363problems before you install and start using your new GCC@.
f42974dc 2364
f9047ed3 2365First, you must have @uref{download.html,,downloaded the testsuites}.
f97903cc
JJ
2366These are part of the full distribution, but if you downloaded the
2367``core'' compiler plus any front ends, you must download the testsuites
2368separately.
f42974dc 2369
f97903cc 2370Second, you must have the testing tools installed. This includes
80521187
GP
2371@uref{http://www.gnu.org/software/dejagnu/,,DejaGnu}, Tcl, and Expect;
2372the DejaGnu site has links to these.
f42974dc 2373
8cacda7c
GP
2374If the directories where @command{runtest} and @command{expect} were
2375installed are not in the @env{PATH}, you may need to set the following
2376environment variables appropriately, as in the following example (which
2377assumes that DejaGnu has been installed under @file{/usr/local}):
f42974dc 2378
3ab51846 2379@smallexample
f42974dc
DW
2380 TCL_LIBRARY = /usr/local/share/tcl8.0
2381 DEJAGNULIBS = /usr/local/share/dejagnu
3ab51846 2382@end smallexample
f42974dc 2383
8cacda7c 2384(On systems such as Cygwin, these paths are required to be actual
f42974dc 2385paths, not mounts or links; presumably this is due to some lack of
8cacda7c 2386portability in the DejaGnu code.)
ecb7d6b3 2387
f42974dc
DW
2388
2389Finally, you can run the testsuite (which may take a long time):
3ab51846 2390@smallexample
ef88b07d 2391 cd @var{objdir}; make -k check
3ab51846 2392@end smallexample
f42974dc 2393
794aca5d
WB
2394This will test various components of GCC, such as compiler
2395front ends and runtime libraries. While running the testsuite, DejaGnu
2396might emit some harmless messages resembling
daf2f129 2397@samp{WARNING: Couldn't find the global config file.} or
794aca5d 2398@samp{WARNING: Couldn't find tool init file} that can be ignored.
06809951 2399
82161911
DD
2400If you are testing a cross-compiler, you may want to run the testsuite
2401on a simulator as described at @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/simtest-howto.html}.
2402
962e6e00 2403@section How can you run the testsuite on selected tests?
f42974dc 2404
794aca5d
WB
2405In order to run sets of tests selectively, there are targets
2406@samp{make check-gcc} and @samp{make check-g++}
2407in the @file{gcc} subdirectory of the object directory. You can also
2408just run @samp{make check} in a subdirectory of the object directory.
2409
2410
2411A more selective way to just run all @command{gcc} execute tests in the
2412testsuite is to use
f42974dc 2413
3ab51846 2414@smallexample
6cfb3f16 2415 make check-gcc RUNTESTFLAGS="execute.exp @var{other-options}"
3ab51846 2416@end smallexample
f42974dc 2417
794aca5d
WB
2418Likewise, in order to run only the @command{g++} ``old-deja'' tests in
2419the testsuite with filenames matching @samp{9805*}, you would use
f42974dc 2420
3ab51846 2421@smallexample
6cfb3f16 2422 make check-g++ RUNTESTFLAGS="old-deja.exp=9805* @var{other-options}"
3ab51846 2423@end smallexample
f42974dc 2424
6cfb3f16
JM
2425The @file{*.exp} files are located in the testsuite directories of the GCC
2426source, the most important ones being @file{compile.exp},
2427@file{execute.exp}, @file{dg.exp} and @file{old-deja.exp}.
2428To get a list of the possible @file{*.exp} files, pipe the
38209993 2429output of @samp{make check} into a file and look at the
6cfb3f16 2430@samp{Running @dots{} .exp} lines.
f42974dc 2431
e08737dc
PE
2432@section Passing options and running multiple testsuites
2433
2434You can pass multiple options to the testsuite using the
2435@samp{--target_board} option of DejaGNU, either passed as part of
2436@samp{RUNTESTFLAGS}, or directly to @command{runtest} if you prefer to
2437work outside the makefiles. For example,
2438
3ab51846 2439@smallexample
311c6da4 2440 make check-g++ RUNTESTFLAGS="--target_board=unix/-O3/-fmerge-constants"
3ab51846 2441@end smallexample
e08737dc
PE
2442
2443will run the standard @command{g++} testsuites (``unix'' is the target name
2444for a standard native testsuite situation), passing
311c6da4 2445@samp{-O3 -fmerge-constants} to the compiler on every test, i.e.,
e08737dc
PE
2446slashes separate options.
2447
2448You can run the testsuites multiple times using combinations of options
2449with a syntax similar to the brace expansion of popular shells:
2450
3ab51846 2451@smallexample
4c754988 2452 @dots{}"--target_board=arm-sim\@{-mhard-float,-msoft-float\@}\@{-O1,-O2,-O3,\@}"
3ab51846 2453@end smallexample
e08737dc
PE
2454
2455(Note the empty option caused by the trailing comma in the final group.)
2456The following will run each testsuite eight times using the @samp{arm-sim}
2457target, as if you had specified all possible combinations yourself:
2458
3ab51846 2459@smallexample
e08737dc
PE
2460 --target_board=arm-sim/-mhard-float/-O1
2461 --target_board=arm-sim/-mhard-float/-O2
2462 --target_board=arm-sim/-mhard-float/-O3
2463 --target_board=arm-sim/-mhard-float
2464 --target_board=arm-sim/-msoft-float/-O1
2465 --target_board=arm-sim/-msoft-float/-O2
2466 --target_board=arm-sim/-msoft-float/-O3
2467 --target_board=arm-sim/-msoft-float
3ab51846 2468@end smallexample
e08737dc
PE
2469
2470They can be combined as many times as you wish, in arbitrary ways. This
2471list:
2472
3ab51846 2473@smallexample
4c754988 2474 @dots{}"--target_board=unix/-Wextra\@{-O3,-fno-strength\@}\@{-fomit-frame,\@}"
3ab51846 2475@end smallexample
e08737dc
PE
2476
2477will generate four combinations, all involving @samp{-Wextra}.
2478
2479The disadvantage to this method is that the testsuites are run in serial,
2480which is a waste on multiprocessor systems. For users with GNU Make and
2481a shell which performs brace expansion, you can run the testsuites in
2482parallel by having the shell perform the combinations and @command{make}
2483do the parallel runs. Instead of using @samp{--target_board}, use a
2484special makefile target:
2485
3ab51846 2486@smallexample
e08737dc 2487 make -j@var{N} check-@var{testsuite}//@var{test-target}/@var{option1}/@var{option2}/@dots{}
3ab51846 2488@end smallexample
e08737dc
PE
2489
2490For example,
2491
3ab51846 2492@smallexample
e08737dc 2493 make -j3 check-gcc//sh-hms-sim/@{-m1,-m2,-m3,-m3e,-m4@}/@{,-nofpu@}
3ab51846 2494@end smallexample
e08737dc
PE
2495
2496will run three concurrent ``make-gcc'' testsuites, eventually testing all
2497ten combinations as described above. Note that this is currently only
2498supported in the @file{gcc} subdirectory. (To see how this works, try
2499typing @command{echo} before the example given here.)
2500
2501
2502@section Additional testing for Java Class Libraries
2503
688d8b84
RM
2504The Java runtime tests can be executed via @samp{make check}
2505in the @file{@var{target}/libjava/testsuite} directory in
2506the build tree.
f702e700 2507
4eb3e795 2508The @uref{http://sourceware.org/mauve/,,Mauve Project} provides
f702e700
JJ
2509a suite of tests for the Java Class Libraries. This suite can be run
2510as part of libgcj testing by placing the Mauve tree within the libjava
2511testsuite at @file{libjava/testsuite/libjava.mauve/mauve}, or by
2512specifying the location of that tree when invoking @samp{make}, as in
2513@samp{make MAUVEDIR=~/mauve check}.
2514
f42974dc
DW
2515@section How to interpret test results
2516
794aca5d 2517The result of running the testsuite are various @file{*.sum} and @file{*.log}
767094dd 2518files in the testsuite subdirectories. The @file{*.log} files contain a
f42974dc 2519detailed log of the compiler invocations and the corresponding
daf2f129
JM
2520results, the @file{*.sum} files summarize the results. These summaries
2521contain status codes for all tests:
f42974dc
DW
2522
2523@itemize @bullet
2524@item
2525PASS: the test passed as expected
2526@item
2527XPASS: the test unexpectedly passed
2528@item
2529FAIL: the test unexpectedly failed
2530@item
2531XFAIL: the test failed as expected
2532@item
2533UNSUPPORTED: the test is not supported on this platform
2534@item
2535ERROR: the testsuite detected an error
2536@item
2537WARNING: the testsuite detected a possible problem
2538@end itemize
2539
38209993 2540It is normal for some tests to report unexpected failures. At the
962e6e00
JM
2541current time the testing harness does not allow fine grained control
2542over whether or not a test is expected to fail. This problem should
2543be fixed in future releases.
f42974dc
DW
2544
2545
2546@section Submitting test results
2547
2548If you want to report the results to the GCC project, use the
767094dd 2549@file{contrib/test_summary} shell script. Start it in the @var{objdir} with
f42974dc 2550
3ab51846 2551@smallexample
6cfb3f16
JM
2552 @var{srcdir}/contrib/test_summary -p your_commentary.txt \
2553 -m gcc-testresults@@gcc.gnu.org |sh
3ab51846 2554@end smallexample
f42974dc 2555
6cfb3f16 2556This script uses the @command{Mail} program to send the results, so
767094dd 2557make sure it is in your @env{PATH}. The file @file{your_commentary.txt} is
f42974dc 2558prepended to the testsuite summary and should contain any special
767094dd 2559remarks you have on your results or your build environment. Please
f42974dc 2560do not edit the testsuite result block or the subject line, as these
05c425a9 2561messages may be automatically processed.
f42974dc 2562
aed5964b 2563@html
b8db17af 2564<hr />
aed5964b
JM
2565<p>
2566@end html
2567@ifhtml
2568@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
2569@end ifhtml
f42974dc
DW
2570@end ifset
2571
2572@c ***Final install***********************************************************
6cfb3f16 2573@ifnothtml
f42974dc
DW
2574@comment node-name, next, previous, up
2575@node Final install, , Testing, Installing GCC
6cfb3f16 2576@end ifnothtml
f42974dc 2577@ifset finalinstallhtml
f42974dc
DW
2578@ifnothtml
2579@chapter Installing GCC: Final installation
2580@end ifnothtml
2581
eea81d3e 2582Now that GCC has been built (and optionally tested), you can install it with
3ab51846 2583@smallexample
eea81d3e 2584cd @var{objdir}; make install
3ab51846 2585@end smallexample
f42974dc 2586
06809951 2587We strongly recommend to install into a target directory where there is
4b322f43
JB
2588no previous version of GCC present. Also, the GNAT runtime should not
2589be stripped, as this would break certain features of the debugger that
2590depend on this debugging information (catching Ada exceptions for
2591instance).
06809951 2592
f42974dc 2593That step completes the installation of GCC; user level binaries can
8e5f33ff
GK
2594be found in @file{@var{prefix}/bin} where @var{prefix} is the value
2595you specified with the @option{--prefix} to configure (or
2596@file{/usr/local} by default). (If you specified @option{--bindir},
2597that directory will be used instead; otherwise, if you specified
2598@option{--exec-prefix}, @file{@var{exec-prefix}/bin} will be used.)
2599Headers for the C++ and Java libraries are installed in
2600@file{@var{prefix}/include}; libraries in @file{@var{libdir}}
2601(normally @file{@var{prefix}/lib}); internal parts of the compiler in
2602@file{@var{libdir}/gcc} and @file{@var{libexecdir}/gcc}; documentation
2603in info format in @file{@var{infodir}} (normally
2604@file{@var{prefix}/info}).
f42974dc 2605
53b50ac1
CC
2606When installing cross-compilers, GCC's executables
2607are not only installed into @file{@var{bindir}}, that
2608is, @file{@var{exec-prefix}/bin}, but additionally into
2609@file{@var{exec-prefix}/@var{target-alias}/bin}, if that directory
2610exists. Typically, such @dfn{tooldirs} hold target-specific
2611binutils, including assembler and linker.
2612
2613Installation into a temporary staging area or into a @command{chroot}
2614jail can be achieved with the command
2615
3ab51846 2616@smallexample
53b50ac1 2617make DESTDIR=@var{path-to-rootdir} install
3ab51846 2618@end smallexample
53b50ac1
CC
2619
2620@noindent where @var{path-to-rootdir} is the absolute path of
2621a directory relative to which all installation paths will be
2622interpreted. Note that the directory specified by @code{DESTDIR}
2623need not exist yet; it will be created if necessary.
2624
2625There is a subtle point with tooldirs and @code{DESTDIR}:
2626If you relocate a cross-compiler installation with
2627e.g.@: @samp{DESTDIR=@var{rootdir}}, then the directory
2628@file{@var{rootdir}/@var{exec-prefix}/@var{target-alias}/bin} will
2629be filled with duplicated GCC executables only if it already exists,
2630it will not be created otherwise. This is regarded as a feature,
2631not as a bug, because it gives slightly more control to the packagers
2632using the @code{DESTDIR} feature.
2633
cc11cc9b 2634If you are bootstrapping a released version of GCC then please
f97a5bda
JJ
2635quickly review the build status page for your release, available from
2636@uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/buildstat.html}.
c5997381
JJ
2637If your system is not listed for the version of GCC that you built,
2638send a note to
eea81d3e 2639@email{gcc@@gcc.gnu.org} indicating
8a36672b 2640that you successfully built and installed GCC@.
c5997381 2641Include the following information:
f42974dc 2642
c5997381
JJ
2643@itemize @bullet
2644@item
962e6e00 2645Output from running @file{@var{srcdir}/config.guess}. Do not send
c5997381
JJ
2646that file itself, just the one-line output from running it.
2647
2648@item
2dd76960 2649The output of @samp{gcc -v} for your newly installed @command{gcc}.
c5997381
JJ
2650This tells us which version of GCC you built and the options you passed to
2651configure.
2652
2b46bc67
JJ
2653@item
2654Whether you enabled all languages or a subset of them. If you used a
2655full distribution then this information is part of the configure
2656options in the output of @samp{gcc -v}, but if you downloaded the
2657``core'' compiler plus additional front ends then it isn't apparent
2658which ones you built unless you tell us about it.
2659
c5997381
JJ
2660@item
2661If the build was for GNU/Linux, also include:
2662@itemize @bullet
2663@item
2664The distribution name and version (e.g., Red Hat 7.1 or Debian 2.2.3);
2665this information should be available from @file{/etc/issue}.
2666
2667@item
2668The version of the Linux kernel, available from @samp{uname --version}
2669or @samp{uname -a}.
2670
2671@item
2672The version of glibc you used; for RPM-based systems like Red Hat,
b9da07da
JJ
2673Mandrake, and SuSE type @samp{rpm -q glibc} to get the glibc version,
2674and on systems like Debian and Progeny use @samp{dpkg -l libc6}.
c5997381
JJ
2675@end itemize
2676For other systems, you can include similar information if you think it is
2677relevant.
2678
2679@item
2680Any other information that you think would be useful to people building
2681GCC on the same configuration. The new entry in the build status list
2682will include a link to the archived copy of your message.
2683@end itemize
c009f01f
JJ
2684
2685We'd also like to know if the
2686@ifnothtml
2687@ref{Specific, host/target specific installation notes}
2688@end ifnothtml
2689@ifhtml
2690@uref{specific.html,,host/target specific installation notes}
2691@end ifhtml
2692didn't include your host/target information or if that information is
2693incomplete or out of date. Send a note to
962e6e00 2694@email{gcc@@gcc.gnu.org} detailing how the information should be changed.
f42974dc 2695
962e6e00 2696If you find a bug, please report it following the
c08766bc 2697@uref{../bugs/,,bug reporting guidelines}.
f42974dc 2698
ab130aa5 2699If you want to print the GCC manuals, do @samp{cd @var{objdir}; make
7326a39e 2700dvi}. You will need to have @command{texi2dvi} (version at least 4.7)
ab130aa5
JM
2701and @TeX{} installed. This creates a number of @file{.dvi} files in
2702subdirectories of @file{@var{objdir}}; these may be converted for
cc5c2741
BM
2703printing with programs such as @command{dvips}. Alternately, by using
2704@samp{make pdf} in place of @samp{make dvi}, you can create documentation
2705in the form of @file{.pdf} files; this requires @command{texi2pdf}, which
2706is included with Texinfo version 4.8 and later. You can also
c4331d93 2707@uref{http://shop.fsf.org/,,buy printed manuals from the
ab130aa5 2708Free Software Foundation}, though such manuals may not be for the most
161d7b59 2709recent version of GCC@.
ab130aa5 2710
9d65c5cb 2711If you would like to generate online HTML documentation, do @samp{cd
f995c51f
JW
2712@var{objdir}; make html} and HTML will be generated for the gcc manuals in
2713@file{@var{objdir}/gcc/HTML}.
9d65c5cb 2714
f42974dc 2715@html
b8db17af 2716<hr />
f42974dc
DW
2717<p>
2718@end html
2719@ifhtml
2720@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
2721@end ifhtml
2722@end ifset
2723
2724@c ***Binaries****************************************************************
6cfb3f16 2725@ifnothtml
f42974dc
DW
2726@comment node-name, next, previous, up
2727@node Binaries, Specific, Installing GCC, Top
6cfb3f16 2728@end ifnothtml
f42974dc 2729@ifset binarieshtml
f42974dc
DW
2730@ifnothtml
2731@chapter Installing GCC: Binaries
2732@end ifnothtml
2733@cindex Binaries
2734@cindex Installing GCC: Binaries
2735
161d7b59 2736We are often asked about pre-compiled versions of GCC@. While we cannot
f42974dc
DW
2737provide these for all platforms, below you'll find links to binaries for
2738various platforms where creating them by yourself is not easy due to various
2739reasons.
2740
2741Please note that we did not create these binaries, nor do we
2742support them. If you have any problems installing them, please
2743contact their makers.
2744
2745@itemize
2746@item
df002c7d
DE
2747AIX:
2748@itemize
2749@item
ff4c5e7b 2750@uref{http://www.bullfreeware.com,,Bull's Freeware and Shareware Archive for AIX};
df002c7d
DE
2751
2752@item
f3e240e2 2753@uref{http://pware.hvcc.edu,,Hudson Valley Community College Open Source Software for IBM System p};
75dd1ae2
DE
2754
2755@item
8ff51917 2756@uref{http://www.perzl.org/aix/,,AIX 5L and 6 Open Source Packages}.
df002c7d 2757@end itemize
f42974dc
DW
2758
2759@item
8d5362b7
GP
2760DOS---@uref{http://www.delorie.com/djgpp/,,DJGPP}.
2761
2762@item
71c6b994
KH
2763Renesas H8/300[HS]---@uref{http://h8300-hms.sourceforge.net/,,GNU
2764Development Tools for the Renesas H8/300[HS] Series}.
f42974dc 2765
f404402c
MW
2766@item
2767HP-UX:
2768@itemize
f42974dc 2769@item
1d7887ca 2770@uref{http://hpux.cs.utah.edu/,,HP-UX Porting Center};
f42974dc 2771
f404402c
MW
2772@item
2773@uref{ftp://sunsite.informatik.rwth-aachen.de/pub/packages/gcc_hpux/,,Binaries for HP-UX 11.00 at Aachen University of Technology}.
2774@end itemize
2775
3e35d143
SC
2776@item
2777Motorola 68HC11/68HC12---@uref{http://www.gnu-m68hc11.org,,GNU
2778Development Tools for the Motorola 68HC11/68HC12}.
2779
f42974dc 2780@item
38209993 2781@uref{http://www.sco.com/skunkware/devtools/index.html#gcc,,SCO
8d5362b7 2782OpenServer/Unixware}.
f42974dc 2783
8d5362b7
GP
2784@item
2785Solaris 2 (SPARC, Intel)---@uref{http://www.sunfreeware.com/,,Sunfreeware}.
f42974dc
DW
2786
2787@item
8d5362b7 2788SGI---@uref{http://freeware.sgi.com/,,SGI Freeware}.
f42974dc
DW
2789
2790@item
05c425a9 2791Microsoft Windows:
f42974dc
DW
2792@itemize
2793@item
4eb3e795 2794The @uref{http://sourceware.org/cygwin/,,Cygwin} project;
f42974dc 2795@item
cc92b8ab 2796The @uref{http://www.mingw.org/,,MinGW} project.
f42974dc
DW
2797@end itemize
2798
2799@item
616de62f
GP
2800@uref{ftp://ftp.thewrittenword.com/packages/by-name/,,The
2801Written Word} offers binaries for
75dd1ae2 2802AIX 4.3.3, 5.1 and 5.2,
616de62f 2803IRIX 6.5,
75dd1ae2 2804Tru64 UNIX 4.0D and 5.1,
616de62f
GP
2805GNU/Linux (i386),
2806HP-UX 10.20, 11.00, and 11.11, and
75dd1ae2 2807Solaris/SPARC 2.5.1, 2.6, 7, 8, 9 and 10.
6512c54a
GP
2808
2809@item
2810@uref{http://www.openpkg.org/,,OpenPKG} offers binaries for quite a
2811number of platforms.
eae50c87
PB
2812
2813@item
2814The @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/GFortranBinaries,,GFortran Wiki} has
92922512 2815links to GNU Fortran binaries for several platforms.
f42974dc
DW
2816@end itemize
2817
f42974dc 2818@html
b8db17af 2819<hr />
f42974dc
DW
2820<p>
2821@end html
2822@ifhtml
2823@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
2824@end ifhtml
2825@end ifset
2826
2827@c ***Specific****************************************************************
6cfb3f16 2828@ifnothtml
f42974dc 2829@comment node-name, next, previous, up
73e2155a 2830@node Specific, Old, Binaries, Top
6cfb3f16 2831@end ifnothtml
f42974dc 2832@ifset specifichtml
f42974dc
DW
2833@ifnothtml
2834@chapter Host/target specific installation notes for GCC
2835@end ifnothtml
2836@cindex Specific
2837@cindex Specific installation notes
2838@cindex Target specific installation
2839@cindex Host specific installation
2840@cindex Target specific installation notes
2841
2842Please read this document carefully @emph{before} installing the
2843GNU Compiler Collection on your machine.
2844
c9936427
DD
2845Note that this list of install notes is @emph{not} a list of supported
2846hosts or targets. Not all supported hosts and targets are listed
2847here, only the ones that require host-specific or target-specific
2848information are.
2849
ef88b07d 2850@ifhtml
f42974dc
DW
2851@itemize
2852@item
5a4c9b10 2853@uref{#alpha-x-x,,alpha*-*-*}
f42974dc 2854@item
5a4c9b10 2855@uref{#alpha-dec-osf,,alpha*-dec-osf*}
f42974dc 2856@item
5a4c9b10 2857@uref{#arc-x-elf,,arc-*-elf}
b8df899a 2858@item
5a4c9b10 2859@uref{#arm-x-elf,,arm-*-elf}
b8df899a 2860@item
f42974dc
DW
2861@uref{#avr,,avr}
2862@item
0d4a78eb
BS
2863@uref{#bfin,,Blackfin}
2864@item
f42974dc
DW
2865@uref{#dos,,DOS}
2866@item
5a4c9b10 2867@uref{#x-x-freebsd,,*-*-freebsd*}
021c4bfd 2868@item
f42974dc
DW
2869@uref{#h8300-hms,,h8300-hms}
2870@item
5a4c9b10 2871@uref{#hppa-hp-hpux,,hppa*-hp-hpux*}
f42974dc 2872@item
5a4c9b10 2873@uref{#hppa-hp-hpux10,,hppa*-hp-hpux10}
f42974dc 2874@item
5a4c9b10 2875@uref{#hppa-hp-hpux11,,hppa*-hp-hpux11}
f42974dc 2876@item
5a4c9b10 2877@uref{#x-x-linux-gnu,,*-*-linux-gnu}
f42974dc 2878@item
5a4c9b10 2879@uref{#ix86-x-linux,,i?86-*-linux*}
f42974dc 2880@item
d8fcd085 2881@uref{#ix86-x-solaris210,,i?86-*-solaris2.10}
8f47c084 2882@item
5a4c9b10 2883@uref{#ia64-x-linux,,ia64-*-linux}
b8df899a 2884@item
5a4c9b10 2885@uref{#ia64-x-hpux,,ia64-*-hpux*}
b499d9ab 2886@item
5a4c9b10 2887@uref{#x-ibm-aix,,*-ibm-aix*}
959a73a4 2888@item
5a4c9b10 2889@uref{#iq2000-x-elf,,iq2000-*-elf}
e3223ea2 2890@item
aa4945c1
JB
2891@uref{#lm32-x-elf,,lm32-*-elf}
2892@item
2893@uref{#lm32-x-uclinux,,lm32-*-uclinux}
2894@item
38b2d076
DD
2895@uref{#m32c-x-elf,,m32c-*-elf}
2896@item
5a4c9b10 2897@uref{#m32r-x-elf,,m32r-*-elf}
b8df899a 2898@item
b8df899a
JM
2899@uref{#m6811-elf,,m6811-elf}
2900@item
2901@uref{#m6812-elf,,m6812-elf}
2902@item
183dc04b
RS
2903@uref{#m68k-x-x,,m68k-*-*}
2904@item
4529dbf1
RS
2905@uref{#m68k-uclinux,,m68k-uclinux}
2906@item
e2491744
DD
2907@uref{#mep-x-elf,,mep-*-elf}
2908@item
5a4c9b10 2909@uref{#mips-x-x,,mips-*-*}
b8df899a 2910@item
b953cc4b 2911@uref{#mips-sgi-irix5,,mips-sgi-irix5}
f42974dc 2912@item
b953cc4b 2913@uref{#mips-sgi-irix6,,mips-sgi-irix6}
f42974dc 2914@item
cd985f66 2915@uref{#powerpc-x-x,,powerpc*-*-*}
4f2b1139 2916@item
5a4c9b10 2917@uref{#powerpc-x-darwin,,powerpc-*-darwin*}
b8df899a 2918@item
cd985f66 2919@uref{#powerpc-x-elf,,powerpc-*-elf}
f42974dc 2920@item
5a4c9b10 2921@uref{#powerpc-x-linux-gnu,,powerpc*-*-linux-gnu*}
edf1b3f3 2922@item
5a4c9b10 2923@uref{#powerpc-x-netbsd,,powerpc-*-netbsd*}
b8df899a 2924@item
5a4c9b10 2925@uref{#powerpc-x-eabisim,,powerpc-*-eabisim}
b8df899a 2926@item
5a4c9b10 2927@uref{#powerpc-x-eabi,,powerpc-*-eabi}
b8df899a 2928@item
cd985f66 2929@uref{#powerpcle-x-elf,,powerpcle-*-elf}
b8df899a 2930@item
5a4c9b10 2931@uref{#powerpcle-x-eabisim,,powerpcle-*-eabisim}
b8df899a 2932@item
5a4c9b10 2933@uref{#powerpcle-x-eabi,,powerpcle-*-eabi}
b8df899a 2934@item
5a4c9b10 2935@uref{#s390-x-linux,,s390-*-linux*}
91abf72d 2936@item
5a4c9b10 2937@uref{#s390x-x-linux,,s390x-*-linux*}
91abf72d 2938@item
5a4c9b10 2939@uref{#s390x-ibm-tpf,,s390x-ibm-tpf*}
8bf06993 2940@item
5a4c9b10 2941@uref{#x-x-solaris2,,*-*-solaris2*}
f42974dc 2942@item
5a4c9b10 2943@uref{#sparc-sun-solaris2,,sparc-sun-solaris2*}
f42974dc 2944@item
d8fcd085 2945@uref{#sparc-sun-solaris27,,sparc-sun-solaris2.7}
f42974dc 2946@item
5a4c9b10 2947@uref{#sparc-x-linux,,sparc-*-linux*}
c6fa9728 2948@item
5a4c9b10 2949@uref{#sparc64-x-solaris2,,sparc64-*-solaris2*}
f42974dc 2950@item
5a4c9b10 2951@uref{#sparcv9-x-solaris2,,sparcv9-*-solaris2*}
e403b4bc 2952@item
5a4c9b10 2953@uref{#x-x-vxworks,,*-*-vxworks*}
4977bab6 2954@item
d8fcd085 2955@uref{#x86-64-x-x,,x86_64-*-*, amd64-*-*}
7e081a0c 2956@item
6d656178 2957@uref{#xtensa-x-elf,,xtensa*-*-elf}
fd29f6ea 2958@item
6d656178 2959@uref{#xtensa-x-linux,,xtensa*-*-linux*}
fd29f6ea 2960@item
f42974dc
DW
2961@uref{#windows,,Microsoft Windows}
2962@item
aad416fb
AL
2963@uref{#x-x-cygwin,,*-*-cygwin}
2964@item
2965@uref{#x-x-interix,,*-*-interix}
2966@item
53e350d3 2967@uref{#x-x-mingw32,,*-*-mingw32}
aad416fb 2968@item
f42974dc
DW
2969@uref{#os2,,OS/2}
2970@item
2971@uref{#older,,Older systems}
2972@end itemize
2973
2974@itemize
2975@item
d8fcd085 2976@uref{#elf,,all ELF targets} (SVR4, Solaris 2, etc.)
f42974dc 2977@end itemize
ef88b07d 2978@end ifhtml
f42974dc
DW
2979
2980
2981@html
2982<!-- -------- host/target specific issues start here ---------------- -->
b8db17af 2983<hr />
f42974dc 2984@end html
5a4c9b10 2985@heading @anchor{alpha-x-x}alpha*-*-*
333e14b0
LR
2986
2987This section contains general configuration information for all
2988alpha-based platforms using ELF (in particular, ignore this section for
161d7b59 2989DEC OSF/1, Digital UNIX and Tru64 UNIX)@. In addition to reading this
f2541106 2990section, please read all other sections that match your target.
333e14b0 2991
021c4bfd
RO
2992We require binutils 2.11.2 or newer.
2993Previous binutils releases had a number of problems with DWARF 2
333e14b0
LR
2994debugging information, not the least of which is incorrect linking of
2995shared libraries.
2996
b8df899a 2997@html
b8db17af 2998<hr />
b8df899a 2999@end html
5a4c9b10 3000@heading @anchor{alpha-dec-osf}alpha*-dec-osf*
b8df899a 3001Systems using processors that implement the DEC Alpha architecture and
f2541106
RO
3002are running the DEC/Compaq Unix (DEC OSF/1, Digital UNIX, or Compaq
3003Tru64 UNIX) operating system, for example the DEC Alpha AXP systems.
3004
c7bdf0a6
ZW
3005As of GCC 3.2, versions before @code{alpha*-dec-osf4} are no longer
3006supported. (These are the versions which identify themselves as DEC
3007OSF/1.)
9340544b 3008
6e92b3a1
RB
3009In Digital Unix V4.0, virtual memory exhausted bootstrap failures
3010may be fixed by configuring with @option{--with-gc=simple},
3011reconfiguring Kernel Virtual Memory and Swap parameters
3012per the @command{/usr/sbin/sys_check} Tuning Suggestions,
3013or applying the patch in
3014@uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/2002-08/msg00822.html}.
3015
f2541106
RO
3016In Tru64 UNIX V5.1, Compaq introduced a new assembler that does not
3017currently (2001-06-13) work with @command{mips-tfile}. As a workaround,
3018we need to use the old assembler, invoked via the barely documented
3019@option{-oldas} option. To bootstrap GCC, you either need to use the
3020Compaq C Compiler:
3021
3ab51846 3022@smallexample
eea81d3e 3023 % CC=cc @var{srcdir}/configure [@var{options}] [@var{target}]
3ab51846 3024@end smallexample
f2541106
RO
3025
3026or you can use a copy of GCC 2.95.3 or higher built on Tru64 UNIX V4.0:
3027
3ab51846 3028@smallexample
eea81d3e 3029 % CC=gcc -Wa,-oldas @var{srcdir}/configure [@var{options}] [@var{target}]
3ab51846 3030@end smallexample
b8df899a 3031
b953cc4b
RO
3032As of GNU binutils 2.11.2, neither GNU @command{as} nor GNU @command{ld}
3033are supported on Tru64 UNIX, so you must not configure GCC with
3034@option{--with-gnu-as} or @option{--with-gnu-ld}.
3035
f0523f02 3036GCC writes a @samp{.verstamp} directive to the assembler output file
b8df899a
JM
3037unless it is built as a cross-compiler. It gets the version to use from
3038the system header file @file{/usr/include/stamp.h}. If you install a
3039new version of DEC Unix, you should rebuild GCC to pick up the new version
3040stamp.
3041
7ba4ca63 3042@samp{make compare} may fail on old versions of DEC Unix unless you add
1c8bd6a3
PB
3043@option{-save-temps} to @code{BOOT_CFLAGS}. On these systems, the name
3044of the assembler input file is stored in the object file, and that makes
b8df899a 3045comparison fail if it differs between the @code{stage1} and
6cfb3f16 3046@code{stage2} compilations. The option @option{-save-temps} forces a
b8df899a 3047fixed name to be used for the assembler input file, instead of a
6cfb3f16 3048randomly chosen name in @file{/tmp}. Do not add @option{-save-temps}
b8df899a 3049unless the comparisons fail without that option. If you add
6cfb3f16 3050@option{-save-temps}, you will have to manually delete the @samp{.i} and
b8df899a
JM
3051@samp{.s} files after each series of compilations.
3052
f0523f02 3053GCC now supports both the native (ECOFF) debugging format used by DBX
161d7b59 3054and GDB and an encapsulated STABS format for use only with GDB@. See the
6cfb3f16 3055discussion of the @option{--with-stabs} option of @file{configure} above
b8df899a
JM
3056for more information on these formats and how to select them.
3057
3058There is a bug in DEC's assembler that produces incorrect line numbers
3059for ECOFF format when the @samp{.align} directive is used. To work
f0523f02 3060around this problem, GCC will not emit such alignment directives
b8df899a
JM
3061while writing ECOFF format debugging information even if optimization is
3062being performed. Unfortunately, this has the very undesirable
6cfb3f16
JM
3063side-effect that code addresses when @option{-O} is specified are
3064different depending on whether or not @option{-g} is also specified.
b8df899a 3065
6cfb3f16 3066To avoid this behavior, specify @option{-gstabs+} and use GDB instead of
161d7b59 3067DBX@. DEC is now aware of this problem with the assembler and hopes to
b8df899a
JM
3068provide a fix shortly.
3069
b8df899a 3070@html
b8db17af 3071<hr />
b8df899a 3072@end html
5a4c9b10 3073@heading @anchor{arc-x-elf}arc-*-elf
b8df899a
JM
3074Argonaut ARC processor.
3075This configuration is intended for embedded systems.
3076
3077@html
b8db17af 3078<hr />
b8df899a 3079@end html
5a4c9b10 3080@heading @anchor{arm-x-elf}arm-*-elf
34e8290f
NC
3081ARM-family processors. Subtargets that use the ELF object format
3082require GNU binutils 2.13 or newer. Such subtargets include:
cd985f66
JM
3083@code{arm-*-freebsd}, @code{arm-*-netbsdelf}, @code{arm-*-*linux}
3084and @code{arm-*-rtems}.
34e8290f 3085
f42974dc 3086@html
b8db17af 3087<hr />
f42974dc 3088@end html
ef88b07d 3089@heading @anchor{avr}avr
f42974dc 3090
b8df899a 3091ATMEL AVR-family micro controllers. These are used in embedded
ca52d046
GP
3092applications. There are no standard Unix configurations.
3093@ifnothtml
7f970b70 3094@xref{AVR Options,, AVR Options, gcc, Using the GNU Compiler
ca52d046
GP
3095Collection (GCC)},
3096@end ifnothtml
98999d8b 3097@ifhtml
ca52d046 3098See ``AVR Options'' in the main manual
98999d8b 3099@end ifhtml
ca52d046 3100for the list of supported MCU types.
b8df899a 3101
161d7b59 3102Use @samp{configure --target=avr --enable-languages="c"} to configure GCC@.
f42974dc
DW
3103
3104Further installation notes and other useful information about AVR tools
3105can also be obtained from:
3106
3107@itemize @bullet
3108@item
1d7887ca 3109@uref{http://www.nongnu.org/avr/,,http://www.nongnu.org/avr/}
de7999ba 3110@item
d1a86812 3111@uref{http://www.amelek.gda.pl/avr/,,http://www.amelek.gda.pl/avr/}
f42974dc
DW
3112@end itemize
3113
de7999ba 3114We @emph{strongly} recommend using binutils 2.13 or newer.
f42974dc
DW
3115
3116The following error:
3ab51846 3117@smallexample
f42974dc 3118 Error: register required
3ab51846 3119@end smallexample
f42974dc
DW
3120
3121indicates that you should upgrade to a newer version of the binutils.
3122
0d4a78eb
BS
3123@html
3124<hr />
3125@end html
3126@heading @anchor{bfin}Blackfin
3127
3128The Blackfin processor, an Analog Devices DSP.
3129@ifnothtml
7f970b70
AM
3130@xref{Blackfin Options,, Blackfin Options, gcc, Using the GNU Compiler
3131Collection (GCC)},
0d4a78eb
BS
3132@end ifnothtml
3133@ifhtml
3134See ``Blackfin Options'' in the main manual
3135@end ifhtml
3136
3137More information, and a version of binutils with support for this processor,
3138is available at @uref{http://blackfin.uclinux.org}
3139
0b85d816 3140@html
b8db17af 3141<hr />
0b85d816
HPN
3142@end html
3143@heading @anchor{cris}CRIS
3144
3145CRIS is the CPU architecture in Axis Communications ETRAX system-on-a-chip
3146series. These are used in embedded applications.
3147
3148@ifnothtml
7f970b70 3149@xref{CRIS Options,, CRIS Options, gcc, Using the GNU Compiler
0b85d816
HPN
3150Collection (GCC)},
3151@end ifnothtml
3152@ifhtml
3153See ``CRIS Options'' in the main manual
3154@end ifhtml
3155for a list of CRIS-specific options.
3156
3157There are a few different CRIS targets:
3158@table @code
0b85d816
HPN
3159@item cris-axis-elf
3160Mainly for monolithic embedded systems. Includes a multilib for the
3161@samp{v10} core used in @samp{ETRAX 100 LX}.
3162@item cris-axis-linux-gnu
3163A GNU/Linux port for the CRIS architecture, currently targeting
3164@samp{ETRAX 100 LX} by default.
3165@end table
3166
cd985f66 3167For @code{cris-axis-elf} you need binutils 2.11
0b85d816
HPN
3168or newer. For @code{cris-axis-linux-gnu} you need binutils 2.12 or newer.
3169
3170Pre-packaged tools can be obtained from
3171@uref{ftp://ftp.axis.com/pub/axis/tools/cris/compiler-kit/}. More
3172information about this platform is available at
3173@uref{http://developer.axis.com/}.
3174
53054e77
PW
3175@html
3176<hr />
3177@end html
3178@heading @anchor{crx}CRX
3179
3180The CRX CompactRISC architecture is a low-power 32-bit architecture with
3181fast context switching and architectural extensibility features.
3182
3183@ifnothtml
3184@xref{CRX Options,, CRX Options, gcc, Using and Porting the GNU Compiler
3185Collection (GCC)},
3186@end ifnothtml
3187
3188@ifhtml
3189See ``CRX Options'' in the main manual for a list of CRX-specific options.
3190@end ifhtml
3191
3192Use @samp{configure --target=crx-elf --enable-languages=c,c++} to configure
3193GCC@ for building a CRX cross-compiler. The option @samp{--target=crx-elf}
3194is also used to build the @samp{newlib} C library for CRX.
3195
3196It is also possible to build libstdc++-v3 for the CRX architecture. This
a4d05547 3197needs to be done in a separate step with the following configure settings:
53054e77
PW
3198@samp{gcc/libstdc++-v3/configure --host=crx-elf --with-newlib
3199--enable-sjlj-exceptions --enable-cxx-flags='-fexceptions -frtti'}
3200
f42974dc 3201@html
b8db17af 3202<hr />
f42974dc 3203@end html
ef88b07d 3204@heading @anchor{dos}DOS
f42974dc 3205
962e6e00 3206Please have a look at the @uref{binaries.html,,binaries page}.
f42974dc 3207
f0523f02 3208You cannot install GCC by itself on MSDOS; it will not compile under
f85b8d1a
JM
3209any MSDOS compiler except itself. You need to get the complete
3210compilation package DJGPP, which includes binaries as well as sources,
3211and includes all the necessary compilation tools and libraries.
3212
021c4bfd 3213@html
b8db17af 3214<hr />
021c4bfd 3215@end html
5a4c9b10 3216@heading @anchor{x-x-freebsd}*-*-freebsd*
021c4bfd 3217
02c8b4f8
LR
3218Support for FreeBSD 1 was discontinued in GCC 3.2. Support for
3219FreeBSD 2 (and any mutant a.out variants of FreeBSD 3) was
3220discontinued in GCC 4.0.
3221
f2431d5d 3222In GCC 4.5, we enabled the use of @code{dl_iterate_phdr} inside boehm-gc on
27ed7478
LR
3223FreeBSD 7 or later. In order to better match the configuration of the
3224FreeBSD system compiler: We also enabled the check to see if libc
3225provides SSP support (which it does on FreeBSD 7), the use of
f2431d5d
LR
3226@code{dl_iterate_phdr} inside @file{libgcc_s.so.1} (on FreeBSD 7 or later)
3227and the use of @code{__cxa_atexit} by default (on FreeBSD 6 or later).
27ed7478 3228
02c8b4f8
LR
3229We support FreeBSD using the ELF file format with DWARF 2 debugging
3230for all CPU architectures. You may use @option{-gstabs} instead of
3231@option{-g}, if you really want the old debugging format. There are
021c4bfd 3232no known issues with mixing object files and libraries with different
02c8b4f8
LR
3233debugging formats. Otherwise, this release of GCC should now match
3234more of the configuration used in the stock FreeBSD configuration of
3235GCC@. In particular, @option{--enable-threads} is now configured by
3236default. However, as a general user, do not attempt to replace the
3237system compiler with this release. Known to bootstrap and check with
3238good results on FreeBSD 7.2-STABLE@. In the past, known to bootstrap
3239and check with good results on FreeBSD 3.0, 3.4, 4.0, 4.2, 4.3, 4.4,
32404.5, 4.8, 4.9 and 5-CURRENT@.
3241
3242The version of binutils installed in @file{/usr/bin} probably works
3243with this release of GCC@. Bootstrapping against the latest GNU
f2431d5d 3244binutils and/or the version found in @file{/usr/ports/devel/binutils} has
02c8b4f8
LR
3245been known to enable additional features and improve overall testsuite
3246results. However, it is currently known that boehm-gc (which itself
3247is required for java) may not configure properly on FreeBSD prior to
3248the FreeBSD 7.0 release with GNU binutils after 2.16.1.
bc3a44db 3249
f42974dc 3250@html
b8db17af 3251<hr />
f42974dc 3252@end html
ef88b07d 3253@heading @anchor{h8300-hms}h8300-hms
71c6b994 3254Renesas H8/300 series of processors.
f42974dc 3255
962e6e00 3256Please have a look at the @uref{binaries.html,,binaries page}.
f42974dc 3257
b8df899a
JM
3258The calling convention and structure layout has changed in release 2.6.
3259All code must be recompiled. The calling convention now passes the
3260first three arguments in function calls in registers. Structures are no
3261longer a multiple of 2 bytes.
3262
f42974dc 3263@html
b8db17af 3264<hr />
f42974dc 3265@end html
5a4c9b10 3266@heading @anchor{hppa-hp-hpux}hppa*-hp-hpux*
6a1dbbaf 3267Support for HP-UX version 9 and older was discontinued in GCC 3.4.
f42974dc 3268
be7659ba
JDA
3269We require using gas/binutils on all hppa platforms. Version 2.19 or
3270later is recommended.
f42974dc 3271
be7659ba 3272It may be helpful to configure GCC with the
38209993 3273@uref{./configure.html#with-gnu-as,,@option{--with-gnu-as}} and
8a36672b 3274@option{--with-as=@dots{}} options to ensure that GCC can find GAS@.
f42974dc 3275
be7659ba
JDA
3276The HP assembler should not be used with GCC. It is rarely tested and may
3277not work. It shouldn't be used with any languages other than C due to its
3278many limitations.
3279
3280Specifically, @option{-g} does not work (HP-UX uses a peculiar debugging
3281format which GCC does not know about). It also inserts timestamps
3282into each object file it creates, causing the 3-stage comparison test to
3283fail during a bootstrap. You should be able to continue by saying
3284@samp{make all-host all-target} after getting the failure from @samp{make}.
3285
3286Various GCC features are not supported. For example, it does not support weak
3287symbols or alias definitions. As a result, explicit template instantiations
3288are required when using C++. This makes it difficult if not impossible to
3289build many C++ applications.
f42974dc 3290
d5355cb2
JDA
3291There are two default scheduling models for instructions. These are
3292PROCESSOR_7100LC and PROCESSOR_8000. They are selected from the pa-risc
3293architecture specified for the target machine when configuring.
3294PROCESSOR_8000 is the default. PROCESSOR_7100LC is selected when
3295the target is a @samp{hppa1*} machine.
806bf413
JDA
3296
3297The PROCESSOR_8000 model is not well suited to older processors. Thus,
3298it is important to completely specify the machine architecture when
3299configuring if you want a model other than PROCESSOR_8000. The macro
3300TARGET_SCHED_DEFAULT can be defined in BOOT_CFLAGS if a different
3301default scheduling model is desired.
3302
25f710ba 3303As of GCC 4.0, GCC uses the UNIX 95 namespace for HP-UX 10.10
d711cf67
JDA
3304through 11.00, and the UNIX 98 namespace for HP-UX 11.11 and later.
3305This namespace change might cause problems when bootstrapping with
3306an earlier version of GCC or the HP compiler as essentially the same
3307namespace is required for an entire build. This problem can be avoided
3308in a number of ways. With HP cc, @env{UNIX_STD} can be set to @samp{95}
3309or @samp{98}. Another way is to add an appropriate set of predefines
3310to @env{CC}. The description for the @option{munix=} option contains
3311a list of the predefines used with each standard.
3312
021c4bfd 3313More specific information to @samp{hppa*-hp-hpux*} targets follows.
f42974dc 3314
f42974dc 3315@html
b8db17af 3316<hr />
f42974dc 3317@end html
5a4c9b10 3318@heading @anchor{hppa-hp-hpux10}hppa*-hp-hpux10
f42974dc 3319
f9047ed3 3320For hpux10.20, we @emph{highly} recommend you pick up the latest sed patch
161d7b59 3321@code{PHCO_19798} from HP@. HP has two sites which provide patches free of
f42974dc
DW
3322charge:
3323
3324@itemize @bullet
3325@item
3326@html
f401d0f5 3327<a href="http://us.itrc.hp.com/service/home/home.do">US, Canada, Asia-Pacific, and
f42974dc
DW
3328Latin-America</a>
3329@end html
3330@ifnothtml
f401d0f5
JDA
3331@uref{http://us.itrc.hp.com/service/home/home.do,,} US, Canada, Asia-Pacific,
3332and Latin-America.
f42974dc
DW
3333@end ifnothtml
3334@item
f401d0f5 3335@uref{http://europe.itrc.hp.com/service/home/home.do,,} Europe.
f42974dc
DW
3336@end itemize
3337
25f710ba 3338The C++ ABI has changed incompatibly in GCC 4.0. COMDAT subspaces are
9a55eab3
JDA
3339used for one-only code and data. This resolves many of the previous
3340problems in using C++ on this target. However, the ABI is not compatible
3341with the one implemented under HP-UX 11 using secondary definitions.
f42974dc
DW
3342
3343@html
b8db17af 3344<hr />
f42974dc 3345@end html
5a4c9b10 3346@heading @anchor{hppa-hp-hpux11}hppa*-hp-hpux11
f42974dc 3347
c5124497
JDA
3348GCC 3.0 and up support HP-UX 11. GCC 2.95.x is not supported and cannot
3349be used to compile GCC 3.0 and up.
f269f54f 3350
be7659ba
JDA
3351The libffi and libjava libraries haven't been ported to 64-bit HP-UX@
3352and don't build.
3353
c5124497 3354Refer to @uref{binaries.html,,binaries} for information about obtaining
8a36672b
JM
3355precompiled GCC binaries for HP-UX@. Precompiled binaries must be obtained
3356to build the Ada language as it can't be bootstrapped using C@. Ada is
be7659ba 3357only available for the 32-bit PA-RISC runtime.
f401d0f5 3358
02809848
PB
3359Starting with GCC 3.4 an ISO C compiler is required to bootstrap. The
3360bundled compiler supports only traditional C; you will need either HP's
3361unbundled compiler, or a binary distribution of GCC@.
3362
c5124497
JDA
3363It is possible to build GCC 3.3 starting with the bundled HP compiler,
3364but the process requires several steps. GCC 3.3 can then be used to
3365build later versions. The fastjar program contains ISO C code and
3366can't be built with the HP bundled compiler. This problem can be
3367avoided by not building the Java language. For example, use the
3368@option{--enable-languages="c,c++,f77,objc"} option in your configure
3369command.
08b3d104 3370
c5124497
JDA
3371There are several possible approaches to building the distribution.
3372Binutils can be built first using the HP tools. Then, the GCC
3373distribution can be built. The second approach is to build GCC
8a36672b 3374first using the HP tools, then build binutils, then rebuild GCC@.
c5124497
JDA
3375There have been problems with various binary distributions, so it
3376is best not to start from a binary distribution.
3377
3378On 64-bit capable systems, there are two distinct targets. Different
3379installation prefixes must be used if both are to be installed on
3380the same system. The @samp{hppa[1-2]*-hp-hpux11*} target generates code
3381for the 32-bit PA-RISC runtime architecture and uses the HP linker.
3382The @samp{hppa64-hp-hpux11*} target generates 64-bit code for the
be7659ba 3383PA-RISC 2.0 architecture.
c5124497
JDA
3384
3385The script config.guess now selects the target type based on the compiler
3386detected during configuration. You must define @env{PATH} or @env{CC} so
3387that configure finds an appropriate compiler for the initial bootstrap.
3388When @env{CC} is used, the definition should contain the options that are
3389needed whenever @env{CC} is used.
3390
3391Specifically, options that determine the runtime architecture must be
3392in @env{CC} to correctly select the target for the build. It is also
f0eb93a8 3393convenient to place many other compiler options in @env{CC}. For example,
c5124497
JDA
3394@env{CC="cc -Ac +DA2.0W -Wp,-H16376 -D_CLASSIC_TYPES -D_HPUX_SOURCE"}
3395can be used to bootstrap the GCC 3.3 branch with the HP compiler in
339664-bit K&R/bundled mode. The @option{+DA2.0W} option will result in
3397the automatic selection of the @samp{hppa64-hp-hpux11*} target. The
3398macro definition table of cpp needs to be increased for a successful
3399build with the HP compiler. _CLASSIC_TYPES and _HPUX_SOURCE need to
3400be defined when building with the bundled compiler, or when using the
3401@option{-Ac} option. These defines aren't necessary with @option{-Ae}.
8c085f6f 3402
c5124497
JDA
3403It is best to explicitly configure the @samp{hppa64-hp-hpux11*} target
3404with the @option{--with-ld=@dots{}} option. This overrides the standard
3405search for ld. The two linkers supported on this target require different
3406commands. The default linker is determined during configuration. As a
3407result, it's not possible to switch linkers in the middle of a GCC build.
d1facce0
RW
3408This has been reported to sometimes occur in unified builds of binutils
3409and GCC@.
c5124497 3410
c5124497
JDA
3411A recent linker patch must be installed for the correct operation of
3412GCC 3.3 and later. @code{PHSS_26559} and @code{PHSS_24304} are the
3413oldest linker patches that are known to work. They are for HP-UX
341411.00 and 11.11, respectively. @code{PHSS_24303}, the companion to
3415@code{PHSS_24304}, might be usable but it hasn't been tested. These
3416patches have been superseded. Consult the HP patch database to obtain
3417the currently recommended linker patch for your system.
3418
3419The patches are necessary for the support of weak symbols on the
342032-bit port, and for the running of initializers and finalizers. Weak
3421symbols are implemented using SOM secondary definition symbols. Prior
3422to HP-UX 11, there are bugs in the linker support for secondary symbols.
3423The patches correct a problem of linker core dumps creating shared
3424libraries containing secondary symbols, as well as various other
3425linking issues involving secondary symbols.
3426
3427GCC 3.3 uses the ELF DT_INIT_ARRAY and DT_FINI_ARRAY capabilities to
3428run initializers and finalizers on the 64-bit port. The 32-bit port
3429uses the linker @option{+init} and @option{+fini} options for the same
3430purpose. The patches correct various problems with the +init/+fini
3431options, including program core dumps. Binutils 2.14 corrects a
3432problem on the 64-bit port resulting from HP's non-standard use of
3433the .init and .fini sections for array initializers and finalizers.
f401d0f5 3434
be7659ba
JDA
3435Although the HP and GNU linkers are both supported for the
3436@samp{hppa64-hp-hpux11*} target, it is strongly recommended that the
3437HP linker be used for link editing on this target.
3438
3439At this time, the GNU linker does not support the creation of long
3440branch stubs. As a result, it can't successfully link binaries
3441containing branch offsets larger than 8 megabytes. In addition,
3442there are problems linking shared libraries, linking executables
3443with @option{-static}, and with dwarf2 unwind and exception support.
3444It also doesn't provide stubs for internal calls to global functions
3445in shared libraries, so these calls can't be overloaded.
3446
3447The HP dynamic loader does not support GNU symbol versioning, so symbol
3448versioning is not supported. It may be necessary to disable symbol
3449versioning with @option{--disable-symvers} when using GNU ld.
3450
3451POSIX threads are the default. The optional DCE thread library is not
3452supported, so @option{--enable-threads=dce} does not work.
08b3d104 3453
f42974dc 3454@html
b8db17af 3455<hr />
f42974dc 3456@end html
5a4c9b10 3457@heading @anchor{x-x-linux-gnu}*-*-linux-gnu
f42974dc 3458
b818de22 3459Versions of libstdc++-v3 starting with 3.2.1 require bug fixes present
9e80ada7
PE
3460in glibc 2.2.5 and later. More information is available in the
3461libstdc++-v3 documentation.
3462
f42974dc 3463@html
b8db17af 3464<hr />
f42974dc 3465@end html
5a4c9b10 3466@heading @anchor{ix86-x-linux}i?86-*-linux*
f42974dc 3467
1ea6f4c8
DH
3468As of GCC 3.3, binutils 2.13.1 or later is required for this platform.
3469See @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10877,,bug 10877} for more information.
f42974dc
DW
3470
3471If you receive Signal 11 errors when building on GNU/Linux, then it is
3472possible you have a hardware problem. Further information on this can be
3473found on @uref{http://www.bitwizard.nl/sig11/,,www.bitwizard.nl}.
3474
8f47c084
JM
3475@html
3476<hr />
3477@end html
d8fcd085 3478@heading @anchor{ix86-x-solaris210}i?86-*-solaris2.10
8f47c084
JM
3479Use this for Solaris 10 or later on x86 and x86-64 systems. This
3480configuration is supported by GCC 4.0 and later versions only.
3481
3482It is recommended that you configure GCC to use the GNU assembler in
3483@file{/usr/sfw/bin/gas} but the Sun linker, using the options
3484@option{--with-gnu-as --with-as=/usr/sfw/bin/gas --without-gnu-ld
3485--with-ld=/usr/ccs/bin/ld}.
3486
b499d9ab 3487@html
b8db17af 3488<hr />
b499d9ab 3489@end html
5a4c9b10 3490@heading @anchor{ia64-x-linux}ia64-*-linux
b499d9ab
JJ
3491IA-64 processor (also known as IPF, or Itanium Processor Family)
3492running GNU/Linux.
3493
443728bb
L
3494If you are using the installed system libunwind library with
3495@option{--with-system-libunwind}, then you must use libunwind 0.98 or
3496later.
bcd11e5e 3497
b499d9ab
JJ
3498None of the following versions of GCC has an ABI that is compatible
3499with any of the other versions in this list, with the exception that
3500Red Hat 2.96 and Trillian 000171 are compatible with each other:
41ca24de 35013.1, 3.0.2, 3.0.1, 3.0, Red Hat 2.96, and Trillian 000717.
b499d9ab 3502This primarily affects C++ programs and programs that create shared libraries.
41ca24de
DH
3503GCC 3.1 or later is recommended for compiling linux, the kernel.
3504As of version 3.1 GCC is believed to be fully ABI compliant, and hence no
3505more major ABI changes are expected.
b499d9ab 3506
959a73a4
DH
3507@html
3508<hr />
3509@end html
5a4c9b10 3510@heading @anchor{ia64-x-hpux}ia64-*-hpux*
8a36672b
JM
3511Building GCC on this target requires the GNU Assembler. The bundled HP
3512assembler will not work. To prevent GCC from using the wrong assembler,
959a73a4
DH
3513the option @option{--with-gnu-as} may be necessary.
3514
8a36672b 3515The GCC libunwind library has not been ported to HPUX@. This means that for
959a73a4 3516GCC versions 3.2.3 and earlier, @option{--enable-libunwind-exceptions}
8a36672b 3517is required to build GCC@. For GCC 3.3 and later, this is the default.
443728bb
L
3518For gcc 3.4.3 and later, @option{--enable-libunwind-exceptions} is
3519removed and the system libunwind library will always be used.
959a73a4 3520
f42974dc 3521@html
b8db17af 3522<hr />
f42974dc
DW
3523<!-- rs6000-ibm-aix*, powerpc-ibm-aix* -->
3524@end html
5a4c9b10 3525@heading @anchor{x-ibm-aix}*-ibm-aix*
6a1dbbaf 3526Support for AIX version 3 and older was discontinued in GCC 3.4.
52c0e446 3527Support for AIX version 4.2 and older was discontinued in GCC 4.5.
f42974dc 3528
7cc654b8
DE
3529``out of memory'' bootstrap failures may indicate a problem with
3530process resource limits (ulimit). Hard limits are configured in the
71fc0c16 3531@file{/etc/security/limits} system configuration file.
7cc654b8 3532
c58c92f5
DE
3533GCC can bootstrap with recent versions of IBM XLC, but bootstrapping
3534with an earlier release of GCC is recommended. Bootstrapping with XLC
3535requires a larger data segment, which can be enabled through the
3536@var{LDR_CNTRL} environment variable, e.g.,
3537
3538@smallexample
3539 % LDR_CNTRL=MAXDATA=0x50000000
3540 % export LDR_CNTRL
3541@end smallexample
3542
3543One can start with a pre-compiled version of GCC to build from
3544sources. One may delete GCC's ``fixed'' header files when starting
3545with a version of GCC built for an earlier release of AIX.
3546
e8d8a034
DE
3547To speed up the configuration phases of bootstrapping and installing GCC,
3548one may use GNU Bash instead of AIX @command{/bin/sh}, e.g.,
3549
3550@smallexample
3551 % CONFIG_SHELL=/opt/freeware/bin/bash
3552 % export CONFIG_SHELL
3553@end smallexample
3554
cc11cc9b
PB
3555and then proceed as described in @uref{build.html,,the build
3556instructions}, where we strongly recommend specifying an absolute path
e8d8a034
DE
3557to invoke @var{srcdir}/configure.
3558
d3a95f27
DE
3559Because GCC on AIX is built as a 32-bit executable by default,
3560(although it can generate 64-bit programs) the GMP and MPFR libraries
3561required by gfortran must be 32-bit libraries. Building GMP and MPFR
3562as static archive libraries works better than shared libraries.
3563
6cfb3f16 3564Errors involving @code{alloca} when building GCC generally are due
021c4bfd 3565to an incorrect definition of @code{CC} in the Makefile or mixing files
161d7b59 3566compiled with the native C compiler and GCC@. During the stage1 phase of
6cfb3f16
JM
3567the build, the native AIX compiler @strong{must} be invoked as @command{cc}
3568(not @command{xlc}). Once @command{configure} has been informed of
3569@command{xlc}, one needs to use @samp{make distclean} to remove the
38209993 3570configure cache files and ensure that @env{CC} environment variable
f42974dc
DW
3571does not provide a definition that will confuse @command{configure}.
3572If this error occurs during stage2 or later, then the problem most likely
3573is the version of Make (see above).
3574
f0483418 3575The native @command{as} and @command{ld} are recommended for bootstrapping
c58c92f5
DE
3576on AIX@. The GNU Assembler, GNU Linker, and GNU Binutils version 2.20
3577is required to bootstrap on AIX 5@. The native AIX tools do
3578interoperate with GCC@.
df002c7d 3579
04d2be8e 3580Building @file{libstdc++.a} requires a fix for an AIX Assembler bug
bb674cef
DE
3581APAR IY26685 (AIX 4.3) or APAR IY25528 (AIX 5.1). It also requires a
3582fix for another AIX Assembler bug and a co-dependent AIX Archiver fix
e4ae5e77 3583referenced as APAR IY53606 (AIX 5.2) or as APAR IY54774 (AIX 5.1)
2705baf5 3584
bb674cef 3585@samp{libstdc++} in GCC 3.4 increments the major version number of the
fdf68669 3586shared object and GCC installation places the @file{libstdc++.a}
bb674cef
DE
3587shared library in a common location which will overwrite the and GCC
35883.3 version of the shared library. Applications either need to be
3589re-linked against the new shared library or the GCC 3.1 and GCC 3.3
3590versions of the @samp{libstdc++} shared object needs to be available
3591to the AIX runtime loader. The GCC 3.1 @samp{libstdc++.so.4}, if
3592present, and GCC 3.3 @samp{libstdc++.so.5} shared objects can be
3593installed for runtime dynamic loading using the following steps to set
3594the @samp{F_LOADONLY} flag in the shared object for @emph{each}
fdf68669
DE
3595multilib @file{libstdc++.a} installed:
3596
bb674cef
DE
3597Extract the shared objects from the currently installed
3598@file{libstdc++.a} archive:
3ab51846 3599@smallexample
bb674cef 3600 % ar -x libstdc++.a libstdc++.so.4 libstdc++.so.5
3ab51846 3601@end smallexample
fdf68669
DE
3602
3603Enable the @samp{F_LOADONLY} flag so that the shared object will be
3604available for runtime dynamic loading, but not linking:
3ab51846 3605@smallexample
bb674cef 3606 % strip -e libstdc++.so.4 libstdc++.so.5
3ab51846 3607@end smallexample
fdf68669 3608
bb674cef 3609Archive the runtime-only shared object in the GCC 3.4
fdf68669 3610@file{libstdc++.a} archive:
3ab51846 3611@smallexample
bb674cef 3612 % ar -q libstdc++.a libstdc++.so.4 libstdc++.so.5
3ab51846 3613@end smallexample
fdf68669 3614
df002c7d
DE
3615Linking executables and shared libraries may produce warnings of
3616duplicate symbols. The assembly files generated by GCC for AIX always
3617have included multiple symbol definitions for certain global variable
3618and function declarations in the original program. The warnings should
3619not prevent the linker from producing a correct library or runnable
3620executable.
3621
6cfb3f16 3622AIX 4.3 utilizes a ``large format'' archive to support both 32-bit and
df002c7d
DE
362364-bit object modules. The routines provided in AIX 4.3.0 and AIX 4.3.1
3624to parse archive libraries did not handle the new format correctly.
3625These routines are used by GCC and result in error messages during
6cfb3f16 3626linking such as ``not a COFF file''. The version of the routines shipped
df002c7d
DE
3627with AIX 4.3.1 should work for a 32-bit environment. The @option{-g}
3628option of the archive command may be used to create archives of 32-bit
6cfb3f16 3629objects using the original ``small format''. A correct version of the
d5d8d540 3630routines is shipped with AIX 4.3.2 and above.
df002c7d 3631
f42974dc
DW
3632Some versions of the AIX binder (linker) can fail with a relocation
3633overflow severe error when the @option{-bbigtoc} option is used to link
161d7b59 3634GCC-produced object files into an executable that overflows the TOC@. A fix
f42974dc
DW
3635for APAR IX75823 (OVERFLOW DURING LINK WHEN USING GCC AND -BBIGTOC) is
3636available from IBM Customer Support and from its
d5d8d540 3637@uref{http://techsupport.services.ibm.com/,,techsupport.services.ibm.com}
f42974dc
DW
3638website as PTF U455193.
3639
df002c7d 3640The AIX 4.3.2.1 linker (bos.rte.bind_cmds Level 4.3.2.1) will dump core
161d7b59 3641with a segmentation fault when invoked by any version of GCC@. A fix for
df002c7d 3642APAR IX87327 is available from IBM Customer Support and from its
d5d8d540 3643@uref{http://techsupport.services.ibm.com/,,techsupport.services.ibm.com}
df002c7d 3644website as PTF U461879. This fix is incorporated in AIX 4.3.3 and above.
f42974dc
DW
3645
3646The initial assembler shipped with AIX 4.3.0 generates incorrect object
3647files. A fix for APAR IX74254 (64BIT DISASSEMBLED OUTPUT FROM COMPILER FAILS
3648TO ASSEMBLE/BIND) is available from IBM Customer Support and from its
d5d8d540 3649@uref{http://techsupport.services.ibm.com/,,techsupport.services.ibm.com}
f42974dc
DW
3650website as PTF U453956. This fix is incorporated in AIX 4.3.1 and above.
3651
161d7b59 3652AIX provides National Language Support (NLS)@. Compilers and assemblers
df002c7d 3653use NLS to support locale-specific representations of various data
6cfb3f16 3654formats including floating-point numbers (e.g., @samp{.} vs @samp{,} for
df002c7d
DE
3655separating decimal fractions). There have been problems reported where
3656GCC does not produce the same floating-point formats that the assembler
c771326b 3657expects. If one encounters this problem, set the @env{LANG}
6cfb3f16 3658environment variable to @samp{C} or @samp{En_US}.
f42974dc 3659
d5d8d540
DE
3660A default can be specified with the @option{-mcpu=@var{cpu_type}}
3661switch and using the configure option @option{--with-cpu-@var{cpu_type}}.
f42974dc 3662
6b3d1e47
SC
3663@html
3664<hr />
3665@end html
5a4c9b10 3666@heading @anchor{iq2000-x-elf}iq2000-*-elf
6b3d1e47
SC
3667Vitesse IQ2000 processors. These are used in embedded
3668applications. There are no standard Unix configurations.
3669
aa4945c1
JB
3670@html
3671<hr />
3672@end html
3673@heading @anchor{lm32-x-elf}lm32-*-elf
3674Lattice Mico32 processor.
3675This configuration is intended for embedded systems.
3676
3677@html
3678<hr />
3679@end html
3680@heading @anchor{lm32-x-uclinux}lm32-*-uclinux
3681Lattice Mico32 processor.
3682This configuration is intended for embedded systems running uClinux.
3683
38b2d076
DD
3684@html
3685<hr />
3686@end html
3687@heading @anchor{m32c-x-elf}m32c-*-elf
3688Renesas M32C processor.
3689This configuration is intended for embedded systems.
3690
b8df899a 3691@html
b8db17af 3692<hr />
b8df899a 3693@end html
5a4c9b10 3694@heading @anchor{m32r-x-elf}m32r-*-elf
25f47a4c 3695Renesas M32R processor.
b8df899a
JM
3696This configuration is intended for embedded systems.
3697
b8df899a 3698@html
b8db17af 3699<hr />
b8df899a
JM
3700@end html
3701@heading @anchor{m6811-elf}m6811-elf
3702Motorola 68HC11 family micro controllers. These are used in embedded
3703applications. There are no standard Unix configurations.
3704
3705@html
b8db17af 3706<hr />
b8df899a
JM
3707@end html
3708@heading @anchor{m6812-elf}m6812-elf
3709Motorola 68HC12 family micro controllers. These are used in embedded
3710applications. There are no standard Unix configurations.
3711
b8df899a 3712@html
b8db17af 3713<hr />
b8df899a 3714@end html
183dc04b 3715@heading @anchor{m68k-x-x}m68k-*-*
52c0e446 3716By default,
368b55f6
NS
3717@samp{m68k-*-elf*}, @samp{m68k-*-rtems}, @samp{m68k-*-uclinux} and
3718@samp{m68k-*-linux}
10e96df4
NS
3719build libraries for both M680x0 and ColdFire processors. If you only
3720need the M680x0 libraries, you can omit the ColdFire ones by passing
3721@option{--with-arch=m68k} to @command{configure}. Alternatively, you
3722can omit the M680x0 libraries by passing @option{--with-arch=cf} to
368b55f6
NS
3723@command{configure}. These targets default to 5206 or 5475 code as
3724appropriate for the target system when
10e96df4
NS
3725configured with @option{--with-arch=cf} and 68020 code otherwise.
3726
368b55f6 3727The @samp{m68k-*-netbsd} and
10e96df4
NS
3728@samp{m68k-*-openbsd} targets also support the @option{--with-arch}
3729option. They will generate ColdFire CFV4e code when configured with
3730@option{--with-arch=cf} and 68020 code otherwise.
3731
3732You can override the default processors listed above by configuring
3733with @option{--with-cpu=@var{target}}. This @var{target} can either
3734be a @option{-mcpu} argument or one of the following values:
3735@samp{m68000}, @samp{m68010}, @samp{m68020}, @samp{m68030},
900ec02d 3736@samp{m68040}, @samp{m68060}, @samp{m68020-40} and @samp{m68020-60}.
59fbf3cb 3737
4529dbf1
RS
3738@html
3739<hr />
3740@end html
3741@heading @anchor{m68k-x-uclinux}m68k-*-uclinux
3742GCC 4.3 changed the uClinux configuration so that it uses the
3743@samp{m68k-linux-gnu} ABI rather than the @samp{m68k-elf} ABI.
3744It also added improved support for C++ and flat shared libraries,
3745both of which were ABI changes. However, you can still use the
3746original ABI by configuring for @samp{m68k-uclinuxoldabi} or
3747@samp{m68k-@var{vendor}-uclinuxoldabi}.
3748
e2491744
DD
3749
3750@html
3751<hr />
3752@end html
3753@heading @anchor{mep-x-elf}mep-*-elf
5a99fe3e 3754Toshiba Media embedded Processor.
e2491744
DD
3755This configuration is intended for embedded systems.
3756
b8df899a 3757@html
b8db17af 3758<hr />
b8df899a 3759@end html
5a4c9b10 3760@heading @anchor{mips-x-x}mips-*-*
b8df899a
JM
3761If on a MIPS system you get an error message saying ``does not have gp
3762sections for all it's [sic] sectons [sic]'', don't worry about it. This
3763happens whenever you use GAS with the MIPS linker, but there is not
3764really anything wrong, and it is okay to use the output file. You can
3765stop such warnings by installing the GNU linker.
3766
3767It would be nice to extend GAS to produce the gp tables, but they are
3768optional, and there should not be a warning about their absence.
3769
26979a17
PE
3770The libstdc++ atomic locking routines for MIPS targets requires MIPS II
3771and later. A patch went in just after the GCC 3.3 release to
3772make @samp{mips*-*-*} use the generic implementation instead. You can also
3773configure for @samp{mipsel-elf} as a workaround. The
3774@samp{mips*-*-linux*} target continues to use the MIPS II routines. More
3775work on this is expected in future releases.
3776
66471b47
DD
3777@c If you make --with-llsc the default for another target, please also
3778@c update the description of the --with-llsc option.
3779
3780The built-in @code{__sync_*} functions are available on MIPS II and
3781later systems and others that support the @samp{ll}, @samp{sc} and
3782@samp{sync} instructions. This can be overridden by passing
3783@option{--with-llsc} or @option{--without-llsc} when configuring GCC.
3784Since the Linux kernel emulates these instructions if they are
3785missing, the default for @samp{mips*-*-linux*} targets is
3786@option{--with-llsc}. The @option{--with-llsc} and
3787@option{--without-llsc} configure options may be overridden at compile
3788time by passing the @option{-mllsc} or @option{-mno-llsc} options to
3789the compiler.
3790
9f0df97a
DD
3791MIPS systems check for division by zero (unless
3792@option{-mno-check-zero-division} is passed to the compiler) by
3793generating either a conditional trap or a break instruction. Using
3794trap results in smaller code, but is only supported on MIPS II and
3795later. Also, some versions of the Linux kernel have a bug that
8a36672b 3796prevents trap from generating the proper signal (@code{SIGFPE}). To enable
9f0df97a 3797the use of break, use the @option{--with-divide=breaks}
8a36672b 3798@command{configure} option when configuring GCC@. The default is to
9f0df97a
DD
3799use traps on systems that support them.
3800
a4d05547 3801Cross-compilers for the MIPS as target using the MIPS assembler
01e97976
JM
3802currently do not work, because the auxiliary programs
3803@file{mips-tdump.c} and @file{mips-tfile.c} can't be compiled on
0ee2ea09 3804anything but a MIPS@. It does work to cross compile for a MIPS
01e97976
JM
3805if you use the GNU assembler and linker.
3806
3eb3cf05
DD
3807The assembler from GNU binutils 2.17 and earlier has a bug in the way
3808it sorts relocations for REL targets (o32, o64, EABI). This can cause
3809bad code to be generated for simple C++ programs. Also the linker
3810from GNU binutils versions prior to 2.17 has a bug which causes the
3811runtime linker stubs in very large programs, like @file{libgcj.so}, to
4e2e9e9b
DD
3812be incorrectly generated. GNU Binutils 2.18 and later (and snapshots
3813made after Nov. 9, 2006) should be free from both of these problems.
549fb079 3814
5fb57097
EB
3815@html
3816<hr />
3817@end html
b953cc4b
RO
3818@heading @anchor{mips-sgi-irix5}mips-sgi-irix5
3819
7e270317
RO
3820In order to compile GCC on an SGI running IRIX 5, the @samp{compiler_dev.hdr}
3821subsystem must be installed from the IDO CD-ROM supplied by SGI@.
3822It is also available for download from
8df5a2b4 3823@uref{ftp://ftp.sgi.com/sgi/IRIX5.3/iris-development-option-5.3.tardist}.
f42974dc 3824
213ba345
RO
3825If you use the MIPS C compiler to bootstrap, it may be necessary
3826to increase its table size for switch statements with the
3827@option{-Wf,-XNg1500} option. If you use the @option{-O2}
3828optimization option, you also need to use @option{-Olimit 3000}.
f42974dc 3829
7e270317 3830To enable debugging under IRIX 5, you must use GNU binutils 2.15 or
82563d35
RS
3831later, and use the @option{--with-gnu-ld} @command{configure} option
3832when configuring GCC@. You need to use GNU @command{ar} and @command{nm},
3833also distributed with GNU binutils.
f42974dc 3834
c5e1045b
RS
3835Some users have reported that @command{/bin/sh} will hang during bootstrap.
3836This problem can be avoided by running the commands:
3837
3838@smallexample
3839 % CONFIG_SHELL=/bin/ksh
3840 % export CONFIG_SHELL
3841@end smallexample
3842
0b70519f 3843@noindent
c5e1045b
RS
3844before starting the build.
3845
f42974dc 3846@html
b8db17af 3847<hr />
f42974dc 3848@end html
b953cc4b 3849@heading @anchor{mips-sgi-irix6}mips-sgi-irix6
f42974dc 3850
7e270317 3851If you are using SGI's MIPSpro @command{cc} as your bootstrap compiler, you must
f42974dc
DW
3852ensure that the N32 ABI is in use. To test this, compile a simple C
3853file with @command{cc} and then run @command{file} on the
3854resulting object file. The output should look like:
3855
3ab51846 3856@smallexample
213ba345 3857test.o: ELF N32 MSB @dots{}
3ab51846 3858@end smallexample
f42974dc 3859
0b70519f 3860@noindent
f42974dc 3861If you see:
213ba345 3862
3ab51846 3863@smallexample
213ba345 3864test.o: ELF 32-bit MSB @dots{}
3ab51846 3865@end smallexample
213ba345 3866
0b70519f 3867@noindent
213ba345
RO
3868or
3869
3ab51846 3870@smallexample
213ba345 3871test.o: ELF 64-bit MSB @dots{}
3ab51846 3872@end smallexample
f42974dc 3873
0b70519f 3874@noindent
213ba345 3875then your version of @command{cc} uses the O32 or N64 ABI by default. You
38209993 3876should set the environment variable @env{CC} to @samp{cc -n32}
82563d35 3877before configuring GCC@.
f42974dc 3878
0fca60ab 3879If you want the resulting @command{gcc} to run on old 32-bit systems
7e270317 3880with the MIPS R4400 CPU, you need to ensure that only code for the @samp{mips3}
0fca60ab
RO
3881instruction set architecture (ISA) is generated. While GCC 3.x does
3882this correctly, both GCC 2.95 and SGI's MIPSpro @command{cc} may change
3883the ISA depending on the machine where GCC is built. Using one of them
7e270317
RO
3884as the bootstrap compiler may result in @samp{mips4} code, which won't run at
3885all on @samp{mips3}-only systems. For the test program above, you should see:
0fca60ab 3886
3ab51846 3887@smallexample
0fca60ab 3888test.o: ELF N32 MSB mips-3 @dots{}
3ab51846 3889@end smallexample
0fca60ab 3890
0b70519f 3891@noindent
0fca60ab
RO
3892If you get:
3893
3ab51846 3894@smallexample
0fca60ab 3895test.o: ELF N32 MSB mips-4 @dots{}
3ab51846 3896@end smallexample
0fca60ab 3897
0b70519f 3898@noindent
0fca60ab
RO
3899instead, you should set the environment variable @env{CC} to @samp{cc
3900-n32 -mips3} or @samp{gcc -mips3} respectively before configuring GCC@.
3901
82563d35
RS
3902MIPSpro C 7.4 may cause bootstrap failures, due to a bug when inlining
3903@code{memcmp}. Either add @code{-U__INLINE_INTRINSICS} to the @env{CC}
3904environment variable as a workaround or upgrade to MIPSpro C 7.4.1m.
3905
7e270317
RO
3906GCC on IRIX 6 is usually built to support the N32, O32 and N64 ABIs. If
3907you build GCC on a system that doesn't have the N64 libraries installed
3908or cannot run 64-bit binaries,
213ba345 3909you need to configure with @option{--disable-multilib} so GCC doesn't
7e270317
RO
3910try to use them. This will disable building the O32 libraries, too.
3911Look for @file{/usr/lib64/libc.so.1} to see if you
213ba345
RO
3912have the 64-bit libraries installed.
3913
7e270317
RO
3914To enable debugging for the O32 ABI, you must use GNU @command{as} from
3915GNU binutils 2.15 or later. You may also use GNU @command{ld}, but
3916this is not required and currently causes some problems with Ada.
f42974dc 3917
40f5cc95 3918The @option{--enable-libgcj}
b953cc4b 3919option is disabled by default: IRIX 6 uses a very low default limit
7e270317 3920(20480) for the command line length. Although @command{libtool} contains a
b953cc4b
RO
3921workaround for this problem, at least the N64 @samp{libgcj} is known not
3922to build despite this, running into an internal error of the native
3923@command{ld}. A sure fix is to increase this limit (@samp{ncargs}) to
3924its maximum of 262144 bytes. If you have root access, you can use the
3925@command{systune} command to do this.
3926
93e89068
PC
3927@code{wchar_t} support in @samp{libstdc++} is not available for old
3928IRIX 6.5.x releases, @math{x < 19}. The problem cannot be autodetected
3929and in order to build GCC for such targets you need to configure with
3930@option{--disable-wchar_t}.
3931
7e270317 3932See @uref{http://freeware.sgi.com/} for more
3aa8219e 3933information about using GCC on IRIX platforms.
f42974dc 3934
cceb575c
AG
3935@html
3936<hr />
3937@end html
3938@heading @anchor{moxie-x-elf}moxie-*-elf
3939The moxie processor. See @uref{http://moxielogic.org/} for more
3940information about this processor.
3941
b8df899a 3942@html
b8db17af 3943<hr />
b8df899a 3944@end html
5a4c9b10 3945@heading @anchor{powerpc-x-x}powerpc-*-*
b8df899a 3946
6cfb3f16
JM
3947You can specify a default version for the @option{-mcpu=@var{cpu_type}}
3948switch by using the configure option @option{--with-cpu-@var{cpu_type}}.
b8df899a 3949
1590a115
NF
3950You will need
3951@uref{ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/devel/binutils,,binutils 2.15}
3952or newer for a working GCC@.
3953
4f2b1139 3954@html
b8db17af 3955<hr />
4f2b1139 3956@end html
5a4c9b10 3957@heading @anchor{powerpc-x-darwin}powerpc-*-darwin*
4f2b1139
SS
3958PowerPC running Darwin (Mac OS X kernel).
3959
4f2b1139
SS
3960Pre-installed versions of Mac OS X may not include any developer tools,
3961meaning that you will not be able to build GCC from source. Tool
3962binaries are available at
beb5f807 3963@uref{http://developer.apple.com/darwin/projects/compiler/} (free
4f2b1139
SS
3964registration required).
3965
80c85ca2
MS
3966This version of GCC requires at least cctools-590.36. The
3967cctools-590.36 package referenced from
3968@uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/2006-03/msg00507.html} will not work
3969on systems older than 10.3.9 (aka darwin7.9.0).
4f2b1139 3970
021c4bfd 3971@html
b8db17af 3972<hr />
021c4bfd 3973@end html
cd985f66 3974@heading @anchor{powerpc-x-elf}powerpc-*-elf
021c4bfd
RO
3975PowerPC system in big endian mode, running System V.4.
3976
f42974dc 3977@html
b8db17af 3978<hr />
f42974dc 3979@end html
5a4c9b10 3980@heading @anchor{powerpc-x-linux-gnu}powerpc*-*-linux-gnu*
f42974dc 3981
1590a115 3982PowerPC system in big endian mode running Linux.
f42974dc 3983
edf1b3f3 3984@html
b8db17af 3985<hr />
edf1b3f3 3986@end html
5a4c9b10 3987@heading @anchor{powerpc-x-netbsd}powerpc-*-netbsd*
f0947430 3988PowerPC system in big endian mode running NetBSD@.
edf1b3f3 3989
b8df899a 3990@html
b8db17af 3991<hr />
b8df899a 3992@end html
5a4c9b10 3993@heading @anchor{powerpc-x-eabisim}powerpc-*-eabisim
b8df899a
JM
3994Embedded PowerPC system in big endian mode for use in running under the
3995PSIM simulator.
3996
b8df899a 3997@html
b8db17af 3998<hr />
b8df899a 3999@end html
5a4c9b10 4000@heading @anchor{powerpc-x-eabi}powerpc-*-eabi
b8df899a
JM
4001Embedded PowerPC system in big endian mode.
4002
b8df899a 4003@html
b8db17af 4004<hr />
b8df899a 4005@end html
cd985f66 4006@heading @anchor{powerpcle-x-elf}powerpcle-*-elf
b8df899a
JM
4007PowerPC system in little endian mode, running System V.4.
4008
b8df899a 4009@html
b8db17af 4010<hr />
b8df899a 4011@end html
5a4c9b10 4012@heading @anchor{powerpcle-x-eabisim}powerpcle-*-eabisim
b8df899a
JM
4013Embedded PowerPC system in little endian mode for use in running under
4014the PSIM simulator.
4015
4016@html
b8db17af 4017<hr />
b8df899a 4018@end html
5a4c9b10 4019@heading @anchor{powerpcle-x-eabi}powerpcle-*-eabi
b8df899a
JM
4020Embedded PowerPC system in little endian mode.
4021
65a324b4
NC
4022@html
4023<hr />
4024@end html
4025@heading @anchor{rx-x-elf}rx-*-elf
4026The Renesas RX processor. See
4027@uref{http://eu.renesas.com/fmwk.jsp?cnt=rx600_series_landing.jsp&fp=/products/mpumcu/rx_family/rx600_series}
4028for more information about this processor.
4029
91abf72d 4030@html
b8db17af 4031<hr />
91abf72d 4032@end html
5a4c9b10 4033@heading @anchor{s390-x-linux}s390-*-linux*
95fef11f 4034S/390 system running GNU/Linux for S/390@.
91abf72d
HP
4035
4036@html
b8db17af 4037<hr />
91abf72d 4038@end html
5a4c9b10 4039@heading @anchor{s390x-x-linux}s390x-*-linux*
95fef11f 4040zSeries system (64-bit) running GNU/Linux for zSeries@.
91abf72d 4041
8bf06993
UW
4042@html
4043<hr />
4044@end html
5a4c9b10 4045@heading @anchor{s390x-ibm-tpf}s390x-ibm-tpf*
8a36672b 4046zSeries system (64-bit) running TPF@. This platform is
8bf06993
UW
4047supported as cross-compilation target only.
4048
f42974dc 4049@html
b8db17af 4050<hr />
f42974dc 4051@end html
250d5688 4052@c Please use Solaris 2 to refer to all release of Solaris, starting
1460af95 4053@c with 2.0 until 2.6, 7, 8, etc. Solaris 1 was a marketing name for
250d5688
RO
4054@c SunOS 4 releases which we don't use to avoid confusion. Solaris
4055@c alone is too unspecific and must be avoided.
5a4c9b10 4056@heading @anchor{x-x-solaris2}*-*-solaris2*
f42974dc 4057
250d5688 4058Sun does not ship a C compiler with Solaris 2. To bootstrap and install
962e6e00 4059GCC you first have to install a pre-built compiler, see the
dbd210ef 4060@uref{binaries.html,,binaries page} for details.
f42974dc 4061
250d5688 4062The Solaris 2 @command{/bin/sh} will often fail to configure
92441f83 4063@file{libstdc++-v3}, @file{boehm-gc} or @file{libjava}. We therefore
1da1ce3f 4064recommend using the following initial sequence of commands
bc890961
EB
4065
4066@smallexample
4067 % CONFIG_SHELL=/bin/ksh
4068 % export CONFIG_SHELL
bc890961
EB
4069@end smallexample
4070
1da1ce3f 4071and proceed as described in @uref{configure.html,,the configure instructions}.
37de1373
GP
4072In addition we strongly recommend specifying an absolute path to invoke
4073@var{srcdir}/configure.
e6855a2d 4074
b8df899a 4075Solaris 2 comes with a number of optional OS packages. Some of these
92441f83 4076are needed to use GCC fully, namely @code{SUNWarc},
dbd210ef
KC
4077@code{SUNWbtool}, @code{SUNWesu}, @code{SUNWhea}, @code{SUNWlibm},
4078@code{SUNWsprot}, and @code{SUNWtoo}. If you did not install all
250d5688 4079optional packages when installing Solaris 2, you will need to verify that
b8df899a
JM
4080the packages that GCC needs are installed.
4081
4082To check whether an optional package is installed, use
dbd210ef 4083the @command{pkginfo} command. To add an optional package, use the
250d5688 4084@command{pkgadd} command. For further details, see the Solaris 2
b8df899a
JM
4085documentation.
4086
250d5688 4087Trying to use the linker and other tools in
b8df899a
JM
4088@file{/usr/ucb} to install GCC has been observed to cause trouble.
4089For example, the linker may hang indefinitely. The fix is to remove
250d5688 4090@file{/usr/ucb} from your @env{PATH}.
f42974dc 4091
bc890961
EB
4092The build process works more smoothly with the legacy Sun tools so, if you
4093have @file{/usr/xpg4/bin} in your @env{PATH}, we recommend that you place
4094@file{/usr/bin} before @file{/usr/xpg4/bin} for the duration of the build.
4095
2bd58b1b
EB
4096We recommend the use of GNU binutils 2.14 or later, or the vendor tools
4097(Sun @command{as}, Sun @command{ld}). Note that your mileage may vary
4098if you use a combination of the GNU tools and the Sun tools: while the
4099combination GNU @command{as} + Sun @command{ld} should reasonably work,
51e9a60c
EB
4100the reverse combination Sun @command{as} + GNU @command{ld} is known to
4101cause memory corruption at runtime in some cases for C++ programs.
4102
4103The stock GNU binutils 2.15 release is broken on this platform because of a
4104single bug. It has been fixed on the 2.15 branch in the CVS repository.
4105You can obtain a working version by checking out the binutils-2_15-branch
4106from the CVS repository or applying the patch
4eb3e795 4107@uref{http://sourceware.org/ml/binutils-cvs/2004-09/msg00036.html} to the
51e9a60c 4108release.
f42974dc 4109
2bd58b1b
EB
4110We recommend the use of GNU binutils 2.16 or later in conjunction with GCC
41114.x, or the vendor tools (Sun @command{as}, Sun @command{ld}). However,
4112for Solaris 10 and above, an additional patch is required in order for the
4113GNU linker to be able to cope with a new flavor of shared libraries. You
ff8f80f2
EB
4114can obtain a working version by checking out the binutils-2_16-branch from
4115the CVS repository or applying the patch
2c00bd42
EB
4116@uref{http://sourceware.org/ml/binutils-cvs/2005-07/msg00122.html} to the
4117release.
4118
250d5688 4119Sun bug 4296832 turns up when compiling X11 headers with GCC 2.95 or
2bd58b1b
EB
4120newer: @command{g++} will complain that types are missing. These headers
4121assume that omitting the type means @code{int}; this assumption worked for
4122C89 but is wrong for C++, and is now wrong for C99 also.
250d5688 4123
13ba36b4 4124@command{g++} accepts such (invalid) constructs with the option
2bd58b1b
EB
4125@option{-fpermissive}; it will assume that any missing type is @code{int}
4126(as defined by C89).
250d5688 4127
2bd58b1b 4128There are patches for Solaris 7 (108376-21 or newer for SPARC,
250d5688
RO
4129108377-20 for Intel), and Solaris 8 (108652-24 or newer for SPARC,
4130108653-22 for Intel) that fix this bug.
f42974dc 4131
c7525a64
KG
4132Sun bug 4927647 sometimes causes random spurious testsuite failures
4133related to missing diagnostic output. This bug doesn't affect GCC
4134itself, rather it is a kernel bug triggered by the @command{expect}
4135program which is used only by the GCC testsuite driver. When the bug
4136causes the @command{expect} program to miss anticipated output, extra
4137testsuite failures appear.
4138
4139There are patches for Solaris 8 (117350-12 or newer for SPARC,
4140117351-12 or newer for Intel) and Solaris 9 (117171-11 or newer for
4141SPARC, 117172-11 or newer for Intel) that address this problem.
4142
dbd210ef 4143@html
b8db17af 4144<hr />
dbd210ef 4145@end html
5a4c9b10 4146@heading @anchor{sparc-sun-solaris2}sparc-sun-solaris2*
dbd210ef 4147
2bd58b1b 4148When GCC is configured to use binutils 2.14 or later the binaries
1405141b
DN
4149produced are smaller than the ones produced using Sun's native tools;
4150this difference is quite significant for binaries containing debugging
4151information.
4152
03b272d2 4153Starting with Solaris 7, the operating system is capable of executing
975c6e4e
RO
415464-bit SPARC V9 binaries. GCC 3.1 and later properly supports
4155this; the @option{-m64} option enables 64-bit code generation.
4156However, if all you want is code tuned for the UltraSPARC CPU, you
4157should try the @option{-mtune=ultrasparc} option instead, which produces
4158code that, unlike full 64-bit code, can still run on non-UltraSPARC
edf1c8df 4159machines.
03b272d2 4160
975c6e4e 4161When configuring on a Solaris 7 or later system that is running a kernel
8947df0c
RH
4162that supports only 32-bit binaries, one must configure with
4163@option{--disable-multilib}, since we will not be able to build the
416464-bit target libraries.
3fc602a0 4165
ae81c844
EB
4166GCC 3.3 and GCC 3.4 trigger code generation bugs in earlier versions of
4167the GNU compiler (especially GCC 3.0.x versions), which lead to the
4168miscompilation of the stage1 compiler and the subsequent failure of the
4169bootstrap process. A workaround is to use GCC 3.2.3 as an intermediary
431ae0bf 4170stage, i.e.@: to bootstrap that compiler with the base compiler and then
ae81c844
EB
4171use it to bootstrap the final compiler.
4172
94b18ec1
EB
4173GCC 3.4 triggers a code generation bug in versions 5.4 (Sun ONE Studio 7)
4174and 5.5 (Sun ONE Studio 8) of the Sun compiler, which causes a bootstrap
4175failure in form of a miscompilation of the stage1 compiler by the Sun
4176compiler. This is Sun bug 4974440. This is fixed with patch 112760-07.
4177
1460af95 4178GCC 3.4 changed the default debugging format from STABS to DWARF-2 for
dd48afcd
EB
417932-bit code on Solaris 7 and later. If you use the Sun assembler, this
4180change apparently runs afoul of Sun bug 4910101 (which is referenced as
e4ae5e77 4181an x86-only problem by Sun, probably because they do not use DWARF-2).
dd48afcd
EB
4182A symptom of the problem is that you cannot compile C++ programs like
4183@command{groff} 1.19.1 without getting messages similar to the following:
7c2f2b41
EB
4184
4185@smallexample
4186ld: warning: relocation error: R_SPARC_UA32: @dots{}
4187 external symbolic relocation against non-allocatable section
4188 .debug_info cannot be processed at runtime: relocation ignored.
4189@end smallexample
4190
4191To work around this problem, compile with @option{-gstabs+} instead of
4192plain @option{-g}.
1460af95 4193
b3c9881c
EB
4194When configuring the GNU Multiple Precision Library (GMP) or the MPFR
4195library on a Solaris 7 or later system, the canonical target triplet
4196must be specified as the @command{build} parameter on the configure
4197line. This triplet can be obtained by invoking ./config.guess in
4198the toplevel source directory of GCC (and not that of GMP or MPFR).
4199For example on a Solaris 7 system:
25c62e24
EB
4200
4201@smallexample
b3c9881c 4202 % ./configure --build=sparc-sun-solaris2.7 --prefix=xxx
25c62e24
EB
4203@end smallexample
4204
f42974dc 4205@html
b8db17af 4206<hr />
f42974dc 4207@end html
d8fcd085 4208@heading @anchor{sparc-sun-solaris27}sparc-sun-solaris2.7
f42974dc 4209
250d5688 4210Sun patch 107058-01 (1999-01-13) for Solaris 7/SPARC triggers a bug in
f42974dc
DW
4211the dynamic linker. This problem (Sun bug 4210064) affects GCC 2.8
4212and later, including all EGCS releases. Sun formerly recommended
4213107058-01 for all Solaris 7 users, but around 1999-09-01 it started to
4214recommend it only for people who use Sun's compilers.
f9047ed3 4215
f42974dc
DW
4216Here are some workarounds to this problem:
4217@itemize @bullet
4218@item
4219Do not install Sun patch 107058-01 until after Sun releases a
4220complete patch for bug 4210064. This is the simplest course to take,
4221unless you must also use Sun's C compiler. Unfortunately 107058-01
250d5688 4222is preinstalled on some new Solaris 7-based hosts, so you may have to
f42974dc 4223back it out.
f9047ed3 4224
f42974dc
DW
4225@item
4226Copy the original, unpatched Solaris 7
4227@command{/usr/ccs/bin/as} into
8e5f33ff 4228@command{/usr/local/libexec/gcc/sparc-sun-solaris2.7/3.4/as},
f42974dc
DW
4229adjusting the latter name to fit your local conventions and software
4230version numbers.
4231
4232@item
4233Install Sun patch 106950-03 (1999-05-25) or later. Nobody with
4234both 107058-01 and 106950-03 installed has reported the bug with GCC
4235and Sun's dynamic linker. This last course of action is riskiest,
4236for two reasons. First, you must install 106950 on all hosts that
4237run code generated by GCC; it doesn't suffice to install it only on
4238the hosts that run GCC itself. Second, Sun says that 106950-03 is
4239only a partial fix for bug 4210064, but Sun doesn't know whether the
161d7b59 4240partial fix is adequate for GCC@. Revision -08 or later should fix
1460af95 4241the bug. The current (as of 2004-05-23) revision is -24, and is included in
f282ffb3 4242the Solaris 7 Recommended Patch Cluster.
f9047ed3 4243@end itemize
f42974dc 4244
fdbf04c8
EB
4245GCC 3.3 triggers a bug in version 5.0 Alpha 03/27/98 of the Sun assembler,
4246which causes a bootstrap failure when linking the 64-bit shared version of
8a36672b 4247libgcc. A typical error message is:
fdbf04c8
EB
4248
4249@smallexample
4250ld: fatal: relocation error: R_SPARC_32: file libgcc/sparcv9/_muldi3.o:
4251 symbol <unknown>: offset 0xffffffff7ec133e7 is non-aligned.
4252@end smallexample
4253
4254This bug has been fixed in the final 5.0 version of the assembler.
f42974dc 4255
661f4f90
EB
4256A similar problem was reported for version Sun WorkShop 6 99/08/18 of the
4257Sun assembler, which causes a bootstrap failure with GCC 4.0.0:
4258
4259@smallexample
4260ld: fatal: relocation error: R_SPARC_DISP32:
4261 file .libs/libstdc++.lax/libsupc++convenience.a/vterminate.o:
4262 symbol <unknown>: offset 0xfccd33ad is non-aligned
4263@end smallexample
4264
4265This bug has been fixed in more recent revisions of the assembler.
4266
c6fa9728 4267@html
b8db17af 4268<hr />
c6fa9728 4269@end html
5a4c9b10 4270@heading @anchor{sparc-x-linux}sparc-*-linux*
c6fa9728
JS
4271
4272GCC versions 3.0 and higher require binutils 2.11.2 and glibc 2.2.4
4273or newer on this platform. All earlier binutils and glibc
4274releases mishandled unaligned relocations on @code{sparc-*-*} targets.
4275
4276
f42974dc 4277@html
b8db17af 4278<hr />
f42974dc 4279@end html
5a4c9b10 4280@heading @anchor{sparc64-x-solaris2}sparc64-*-solaris2*
e403b4bc 4281
b3c9881c
EB
4282When configuring the GNU Multiple Precision Library (GMP) or the
4283MPFR library, the canonical target triplet must be specified as
4284the @command{build} parameter on the configure line. For example
4285on a Solaris 7 system:
4286
4287@smallexample
4288 % ./configure --build=sparc64-sun-solaris2.7 --prefix=xxx
4289@end smallexample
4290
e403b4bc
CR
4291The following compiler flags must be specified in the configure
4292step in order to bootstrap this target with the Sun compiler:
4293
3ab51846 4294@smallexample
b3c9881c 4295 % CC="cc -xarch=v9 -xildoff" @var{srcdir}/configure [@var{options}] [@var{target}]
3ab51846 4296@end smallexample
e403b4bc 4297
b3c9881c
EB
4298@option{-xarch=v9} specifies the SPARC-V9 architecture to the Sun toolchain
4299and @option{-xildoff} turns off the incremental linker.
0dc7ee3c
EB
4300
4301@html
4302<hr />
4303@end html
5a4c9b10 4304@heading @anchor{sparcv9-x-solaris2}sparcv9-*-solaris2*
0dc7ee3c
EB
4305
4306This is a synonym for sparc64-*-solaris2*.
f42974dc 4307
4977bab6
ZW
4308@html
4309<hr />
4310@end html
5a4c9b10 4311@heading @anchor{x-x-vxworks}*-*-vxworks*
4977bab6 4312Support for VxWorks is in flux. At present GCC supports @emph{only} the
8a36672b 4313very recent VxWorks 5.5 (aka Tornado 2.2) release, and only on PowerPC@.
4977bab6
ZW
4314We welcome patches for other architectures supported by VxWorks 5.5.
4315Support for VxWorks AE would also be welcome; we believe this is merely
4316a matter of writing an appropriate ``configlette'' (see below). We are
4317not interested in supporting older, a.out or COFF-based, versions of
4318VxWorks in GCC 3.
4319
4320VxWorks comes with an older version of GCC installed in
4321@file{@var{$WIND_BASE}/host}; we recommend you do not overwrite it.
4322Choose an installation @var{prefix} entirely outside @var{$WIND_BASE}.
4323Before running @command{configure}, create the directories @file{@var{prefix}}
4324and @file{@var{prefix}/bin}. Link or copy the appropriate assembler,
8a36672b 4325linker, etc.@: into @file{@var{prefix}/bin}, and set your @var{PATH} to
4977bab6
ZW
4326include that directory while running both @command{configure} and
4327@command{make}.
4328
4329You must give @command{configure} the
4330@option{--with-headers=@var{$WIND_BASE}/target/h} switch so that it can
4331find the VxWorks system headers. Since VxWorks is a cross compilation
4332target only, you must also specify @option{--target=@var{target}}.
4333@command{configure} will attempt to create the directory
4334@file{@var{prefix}/@var{target}/sys-include} and copy files into it;
4335make sure the user running @command{configure} has sufficient privilege
4336to do so.
4337
4338GCC's exception handling runtime requires a special ``configlette''
4339module, @file{contrib/gthr_supp_vxw_5x.c}. Follow the instructions in
4340that file to add the module to your kernel build. (Future versions of
daf2f129 4341VxWorks will incorporate this module.)
4977bab6 4342
7e081a0c
AJ
4343@html
4344<hr />
4345@end html
d8fcd085 4346@heading @anchor{x86-64-x-x}x86_64-*-*, amd64-*-*
7e081a0c
AJ
4347
4348GCC supports the x86-64 architecture implemented by the AMD64 processor
8a36672b 4349(amd64-*-* is an alias for x86_64-*-*) on GNU/Linux, FreeBSD and NetBSD@.
7e081a0c
AJ
4350On GNU/Linux the default is a bi-arch compiler which is able to generate
4351both 64-bit x86-64 and 32-bit x86 code (via the @option{-m32} switch).
4352
fd29f6ea 4353@html
b8db17af 4354<hr />
fd29f6ea 4355@end html
6d656178 4356@heading @anchor{xtensa-x-elf}xtensa*-*-elf
fd29f6ea
BW
4357
4358This target is intended for embedded Xtensa systems using the
4359@samp{newlib} C library. It uses ELF but does not support shared
4360objects. Designed-defined instructions specified via the
4361Tensilica Instruction Extension (TIE) language are only supported
4362through inline assembly.
4363
4364The Xtensa configuration information must be specified prior to
e677f70c 4365building GCC@. The @file{include/xtensa-config.h} header
fd29f6ea
BW
4366file contains the configuration information. If you created your
4367own Xtensa configuration with the Xtensa Processor Generator, the
4368downloaded files include a customized copy of this header file,
4369which you can use to replace the default header file.
4370
4371@html
b8db17af 4372<hr />
fd29f6ea 4373@end html
6d656178 4374@heading @anchor{xtensa-x-linux}xtensa*-*-linux*
fd29f6ea
BW
4375
4376This target is for Xtensa systems running GNU/Linux. It supports ELF
4377shared objects and the GNU C library (glibc). It also generates
4378position-independent code (PIC) regardless of whether the
4379@option{-fpic} or @option{-fPIC} options are used. In other
f282ffb3 4380respects, this target is the same as the
6d656178 4381@uref{#xtensa*-*-elf,,@samp{xtensa*-*-elf}} target.
fd29f6ea 4382
f42974dc 4383@html
b8db17af 4384<hr />
f42974dc 4385@end html
aad416fb
AL
4386@heading @anchor{windows}Microsoft Windows
4387
4388@subheading Intel 16-bit versions
4389The 16-bit versions of Microsoft Windows, such as Windows 3.1, are not
4390supported.
4391
4392However, the 32-bit port has limited support for Microsoft
4393Windows 3.11 in the Win32s environment, as a target only. See below.
4394
4395@subheading Intel 32-bit versions
4396
4397The 32-bit versions of Windows, including Windows 95, Windows NT, Windows
4398XP, and Windows Vista, are supported by several different target
4399platforms. These targets differ in which Windows subsystem they target
4400and which C libraries are used.
4401
4402@itemize
4403@item Cygwin @uref{#x-x-cygwin,,*-*-cygwin}: Cygwin provides a user-space
4404Linux API emulation layer in the Win32 subsystem.
4405@item Interix @uref{#x-x-interix,,*-*-interix}: The Interix subsystem
4406provides native support for POSIX.
53e350d3 4407@item MinGW @uref{#x-x-mingw32,,*-*-mingw32}: MinGW is a native GCC port for
aad416fb
AL
4408the Win32 subsystem that provides a subset of POSIX.
4409@item MKS i386-pc-mks: NuTCracker from MKS. See
4410@uref{http://www.mkssoftware.com/} for more information.
4411@end itemize
4412
4413@subheading Intel 64-bit versions
4414
4415GCC contains support for x86-64 using the mingw-w64
4416runtime library, available from @uref{http://mingw-w64.sourceforge.net/}.
4417This library should be used with the target triple x86_64-pc-mingw32.
4418
4419Presently Windows for Itanium is not supported.
4420
4421@subheading Windows CE
4422
4423Windows CE is supported as a target only on ARM (arm-wince-pe), Hitachi
4424SuperH (sh-wince-pe), and MIPS (mips-wince-pe).
4425
4426@subheading Other Windows Platforms
4427
4428GCC no longer supports Windows NT on the Alpha or PowerPC.
4429
4430GCC no longer supports the Windows POSIX subsystem. However, it does
4431support the Interix subsystem. See above.
4432
4433Old target names including *-*-winnt and *-*-windowsnt are no longer used.
4434
4435PW32 (i386-pc-pw32) support was never completed, and the project seems to
4436be inactive. See @uref{http://pw32.sourceforge.net/} for more information.
4437
4438UWIN support has been removed due to a lack of maintenance.
4439
4440@html
4441<hr />
4442@end html
4443@heading @anchor{x-x-cygwin}*-*-cygwin
f42974dc 4444
5b65d351 4445Ports of GCC are included with the
f42974dc
DW
4446@uref{http://www.cygwin.com/,,Cygwin environment}.
4447
5b65d351
GP
4448GCC will build under Cygwin without modification; it does not build
4449with Microsoft's C++ compiler and there are no plans to make it do so.
ccc1ce6e 4450
977f7997
DK
4451The Cygwin native compiler can be configured to target any 32-bit x86
4452cpu architecture desired; the default is i686-pc-cygwin. It should be
4453used with as up-to-date a version of binutils as possible; use either
4454the latest official GNU binutils release in the Cygwin distribution,
4455or version 2.20 or above if building your own.
aad416fb
AL
4456
4457@html
4458<hr />
4459@end html
4460@heading @anchor{x-x-interix}*-*-interix
4461
4462The Interix target is used by OpenNT, Interix, Services For UNIX (SFU),
4463and Subsystem for UNIX-based Applications (SUA). Applications compiled
4464with this target run in the Interix subsystem, which is separate from
4465the Win32 subsystem. This target was last known to work in GCC 3.3.
4466
4467For more information, see @uref{http://www.interix.com/}.
4468
4469@html
4470<hr />
4471@end html
4472@heading @anchor{x-x-mingw32}*-*-mingw32
4473
4474GCC will build with and support only MinGW runtime 3.12 and later.
fa692084
JJ
4475Earlier versions of headers are incompatible with the new default semantics
4476of @code{extern inline} in @code{-std=c99} and @code{-std=gnu99} modes.
4477
f42974dc 4478@html
b8db17af 4479<hr />
f42974dc 4480@end html
ef88b07d 4481@heading @anchor{older}Older systems
f9047ed3
JM
4482
4483GCC contains support files for many older (1980s and early
44841990s) Unix variants. For the most part, support for these systems
4485has not been deliberately removed, but it has not been maintained for
c7bdf0a6 4486several years and may suffer from bitrot.
f9047ed3 4487
c7bdf0a6 4488Starting with GCC 3.1, each release has a list of ``obsoleted'' systems.
9340544b
ZW
4489Support for these systems is still present in that release, but
4490@command{configure} will fail unless the @option{--enable-obsolete}
c7bdf0a6
ZW
4491option is given. Unless a maintainer steps forward, support for these
4492systems will be removed from the next release of GCC@.
f9047ed3
JM
4493
4494Support for old systems as hosts for GCC can cause problems if the
4495workarounds for compiler, library and operating system bugs affect the
161d7b59 4496cleanliness or maintainability of the rest of GCC@. In some cases, to
f9047ed3
JM
4497bring GCC up on such a system, if still possible with current GCC, may
4498require first installing an old version of GCC which did work on that
c7bdf0a6
ZW
4499system, and using it to compile a more recent GCC, to avoid bugs in the
4500vendor compiler. Old releases of GCC 1 and GCC 2 are available in the
4501@file{old-releases} directory on the @uref{../mirrors.html,,GCC mirror
4502sites}. Header bugs may generally be avoided using
4503@command{fixincludes}, but bugs or deficiencies in libraries and the
4504operating system may still cause problems.
4505
4506Support for older systems as targets for cross-compilation is less
4507problematic than support for them as hosts for GCC; if an enthusiast
4508wishes to make such a target work again (including resurrecting any of
80521187 4509the targets that never worked with GCC 2, starting from the last
c7bdf0a6
ZW
4510version before they were removed), patches
4511@uref{../contribute.html,,following the usual requirements} would be
4512likely to be accepted, since they should not affect the support for more
4513modern targets.
f9047ed3
JM
4514
4515For some systems, old versions of GNU binutils may also be useful,
021c4bfd 4516and are available from @file{pub/binutils/old-releases} on
4eb3e795 4517@uref{http://sourceware.org/mirrors.html,,sourceware.org mirror sites}.
f9047ed3
JM
4518
4519Some of the information on specific systems above relates to
4520such older systems, but much of the information
4521about GCC on such systems (which may no longer be applicable to
f42974dc 4522current GCC) is to be found in the GCC texinfo manual.
f9047ed3 4523
f42974dc 4524@html
b8db17af 4525<hr />
f42974dc 4526@end html
d8fcd085 4527@heading @anchor{elf}all ELF targets (SVR4, Solaris 2, etc.)
f42974dc 4528
38209993
LG
4529C++ support is significantly better on ELF targets if you use the
4530@uref{./configure.html#with-gnu-ld,,GNU linker}; duplicate copies of
4531inlines, vtables and template instantiations will be discarded
4532automatically.
f42974dc
DW
4533
4534
4535@html
b8db17af 4536<hr />
f42974dc
DW
4537<p>
4538@end html
4539@ifhtml
4540@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
4541@end ifhtml
4542@end ifset
4543
73e2155a
JM
4544@c ***Old documentation******************************************************
4545@ifset oldhtml
4546@include install-old.texi
4547@html
b8db17af 4548<hr />
73e2155a
JM
4549<p>
4550@end html
4551@ifhtml
4552@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
4553@end ifhtml
4554@end ifset
4555
aed5964b
JM
4556@c ***GFDL********************************************************************
4557@ifset gfdlhtml
4558@include fdl.texi
4559@html
b8db17af 4560<hr />
aed5964b
JM
4561<p>
4562@end html
4563@ifhtml
4564@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
4565@end ifhtml
4566@end ifset
4567
f42974dc
DW
4568@c ***************************************************************************
4569@c Part 6 The End of the Document
4570@ifinfo
4571@comment node-name, next, previous, up
aed5964b 4572@node Concept Index, , GNU Free Documentation License, Top
f42974dc
DW
4573@end ifinfo
4574
4575@ifinfo
4576@unnumbered Concept Index
4577
4578@printindex cp
4579
4580@contents
4581@end ifinfo
4582@bye