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1\input texinfo.tex @c -*-texinfo-*-
2@c @ifnothtml
3@c %**start of header
4@setfilename gccinstall.info
5@settitle Installing GCC
6@setchapternewpage odd
7@c %**end of header
8@c @end ifnothtml
9
10@c Specify title for specific html page
11@ifset indexhtml
12@settitle Installing GCC
13@end ifset
14@ifset specifichtml
15@settitle Host/Target specific installation notes for GCC
16@end ifset
17@ifset prerequisiteshtml
18@settitle Prerequisites for GCC
19@end ifset
20@ifset downloadhtml
21@settitle Downloading GCC
22@end ifset
23@ifset configurehtml
24@settitle Installing GCC: Configuration
25@end ifset
26@ifset buildhtml
27@settitle Installing GCC: Building
28@end ifset
29@ifset testhtml
30@settitle Installing GCC: Testing
31@end ifset
32@ifset finalinstallhtml
33@settitle Installing GCC: Final installation
34@end ifset
35@ifset binarieshtml
36@settitle Installing GCC: Binaries
37@end ifset
38@ifset oldhtml
39@settitle Installing GCC: Old documentation
40@end ifset
41@ifset gfdlhtml
42@settitle Installing GCC: GNU Free Documentation License
43@end ifset
44
45@c Copyright (C) 1988, 1989, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998,
46@c 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
47@c *** Converted to texinfo by Dean Wakerley, dean@wakerley.com
48
49@c IMPORTANT: whenever you modify this file, run `install.texi2html' to
50@c test the generation of HTML documents for the gcc.gnu.org web pages.
51@c
52@c Do not use @footnote{} in this file as it breaks install.texi2html!
53
54@c Include everything if we're not making html
55@ifnothtml
56@set indexhtml
57@set specifichtml
58@set prerequisiteshtml
59@set downloadhtml
60@set configurehtml
61@set buildhtml
62@set testhtml
63@set finalinstallhtml
64@set binarieshtml
65@set oldhtml
66@set gfdlhtml
67@end ifnothtml
68
69@c Part 2 Summary Description and Copyright
70@copying
71Copyright @copyright{} 1988, 1989, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998,
721999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
73@sp 1
74Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
75under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or
76any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
77Invariant Sections, the Front-Cover texts being (a) (see below), and
78with the Back-Cover Texts being (b) (see below). A copy of the
79license is included in the section entitled ``@uref{./gfdl.html,,GNU
80Free Documentation License}''.
81
82(a) The FSF's Front-Cover Text is:
83
84 A GNU Manual
85
86(b) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is:
87
88 You have freedom to copy and modify this GNU Manual, like GNU
89 software. Copies published by the Free Software Foundation raise
90 funds for GNU development.
91@end copying
92@ifinfo
93@insertcopying
94@end ifinfo
95@dircategory Software development
96@direntry
97* gccinstall: (gccinstall). Installing the GNU Compiler Collection.
98@end direntry
99
100@c Part 3 Titlepage and Copyright
101@titlepage
102@sp 10
103@comment The title is printed in a large font.
104@center @titlefont{Installing GCC}
105
106@c The following two commands start the copyright page.
107@page
108@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
109@insertcopying
110@end titlepage
111
112@c Part 4 Top node and Master Menu
113@ifinfo
114@node Top, , , (dir)
115@comment node-name, next, Previous, up
116
117@menu
118* Installing GCC:: This document describes the generic installation
119 procedure for GCC as well as detailing some target
120 specific installation instructions.
121
122* Specific:: Host/target specific installation notes for GCC.
123* Binaries:: Where to get pre-compiled binaries.
124
125* Old:: Old installation documentation.
126
127* GNU Free Documentation License:: How you can copy and share this manual.
128* Concept Index:: This index has two entries.
129@end menu
130@end ifinfo
131
132@c Part 5 The Body of the Document
133@c ***Installing GCC**********************************************************
134@ifnothtml
135@comment node-name, next, previous, up
136@node Installing GCC, Binaries, , Top
137@end ifnothtml
138@ifset indexhtml
139@ifnothtml
140@chapter Installing GCC
141@end ifnothtml
142
143The latest version of this document is always available at
144@uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/install/,,http://gcc.gnu.org/install/}.
145
146This document describes the generic installation procedure for GCC as well
147as detailing some target specific installation instructions.
148
149GCC includes several components that previously were separate distributions
150with their own installation instructions. This document supersedes all
151package specific installation instructions.
152
153@emph{Before} starting the build/install procedure please check the
154@ifnothtml
155@ref{Specific, host/target specific installation notes}.
156@end ifnothtml
157@ifhtml
158@uref{specific.html,,host/target specific installation notes}.
159@end ifhtml
160We recommend you browse the entire generic installation instructions before
161you proceed.
162
163Lists of successful builds for released versions of GCC are
164available at @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/buildstat.html}.
165These lists are updated as new information becomes available.
166
167The installation procedure itself is broken into five steps.
168
169@ifinfo
170@menu
171* Prerequisites::
172* Downloading the source::
173* Configuration::
174* Building::
175* Testing:: (optional)
176* Final install::
177@end menu
178@end ifinfo
179@ifhtml
180@enumerate
181@item
182@uref{prerequisites.html,,Prerequisites}
183@item
184@uref{download.html,,Downloading the source}
185@item
186@uref{configure.html,,Configuration}
187@item
188@uref{build.html,,Building}
189@item
190@uref{test.html,,Testing} (optional)
191@item
192@uref{finalinstall.html,,Final install}
193@end enumerate
194@end ifhtml
195
196Please note that GCC does not support @samp{make uninstall} and probably
197won't do so in the near future as this would open a can of worms. Instead,
198we suggest that you install GCC into a directory of its own and simply
199remove that directory when you do not need that specific version of GCC
200any longer, and, if shared libraries are installed there as well, no
201more binaries exist that use them.
202
203@ifhtml
204There are also some @uref{old.html,,old installation instructions},
205which are mostly obsolete but still contain some information which has
206not yet been merged into the main part of this manual.
207@end ifhtml
208
209@html
210<hr />
211<p>
212@end html
213@ifhtml
214@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
215
216@insertcopying
217@end ifhtml
218@end ifset
219
220@c ***Prerequisites**************************************************
221@ifnothtml
222@comment node-name, next, previous, up
223@node Prerequisites, Downloading the source, , Installing GCC
224@end ifnothtml
225@ifset prerequisiteshtml
226@ifnothtml
227@chapter Prerequisites
228@end ifnothtml
229@cindex Prerequisites
230
231GCC requires that various tools and packages be available for use in the
232build procedure. Modifying GCC sources requires additional tools
233described below.
234
235@heading Tools/packages necessary for building GCC
236@table @asis
237@item ISO C90 compiler
238Necessary to bootstrap GCC, although versions of GCC prior
239to 3.4 also allow bootstrapping with a traditional (K&R) C compiler.
240
241To build all languages in a cross-compiler or other configuration where
2423-stage bootstrap is not performed, you need to start with an existing
243GCC binary (version 2.95 or later) because source code for language
244frontends other than C might use GCC extensions.
245
246@item GNAT
247
248In order to build the Ada compiler (GNAT) you must already have GNAT
249installed because portions of the Ada frontend are written in Ada (with
250GNAT extensions.) Refer to the Ada installation instructions for more
251specific information.
252
253@item A ``working'' POSIX compatible shell, or GNU bash
254
255Necessary when running @command{configure} because some
256@command{/bin/sh} shells have bugs and may crash when configuring the
257target libraries. In other cases, @command{/bin/sh} or @command{ksh}
258have disastrous corner-case performance problems. This
259can cause target @command{configure} runs to literally take days to
260complete in some cases.
261
262So on some platforms @command{/bin/ksh} is sufficient, on others it
263isn't. See the host/target specific instructions for your platform, or
264use @command{bash} to be sure. Then set @env{CONFIG_SHELL} in your
265environment to your ``good'' shell prior to running
266@command{configure}/@command{make}.
267
268@command{zsh} is not a fully compliant POSIX shell and will not
269work when configuring GCC@.
270
271@item GNU binutils
272
273Necessary in some circumstances, optional in others. See the
274host/target specific instructions for your platform for the exact
275requirements.
276
277@item gzip version 1.2.4 (or later) or
278@itemx bzip2 version 1.0.2 (or later)
279
280Necessary to uncompress GCC @command{tar} files when source code is
281obtained via FTP mirror sites.
282
283@item GNU make version 3.79.1 (or later)
284
285You must have GNU make installed to build GCC@.
286
287@item GNU tar version 1.14 (or later)
288
289Necessary (only on some platforms) to untar the source code. Many
290systems' @command{tar} programs will also work, only try GNU
291@command{tar} if you have problems.
292
293@item GNU Multiple Precision Library (GMP) version 4.1 (or later)
294
295Necessary to build GCC. If you do not have it installed in your
296library search path, you will have to configure with the
297@option{--with-gmp} configure option. See also
298@option{--with-gmp-lib} and @option{--with-gmp-include}.
299
300@item MPFR Library version 2.2.1 (or later)
301
302Necessary to build GCC. It can be downloaded from
303@uref{http://www.mpfr.org/}. The version of MPFR that is bundled with
304GMP 4.1.x contains numerous bugs. Although GCC may appear to function
305with the buggy versions of MPFR, there are a few bugs that will not be
306fixed when using this version. It is strongly recommended to upgrade
307to the recommended version of MPFR.
308
309The @option{--with-mpfr} configure option should be used if your MPFR
310Library is not installed in your default library search path. See
311also @option{--with-mpfr-lib} and @option{--with-mpfr-include}.
312
313@item @command{jar}, or InfoZIP (@command{zip} and @command{unzip})
314
315Necessary to build libgcj, the GCJ runtime.
316
317@end table
318
319
320@heading Tools/packages necessary for modifying GCC
321@table @asis
322@item autoconf versions 2.13 and 2.59
323@itemx GNU m4 version 1.4 (or later)
324
325Necessary when modifying @file{configure.ac}, @file{aclocal.m4}, etc.@:
326to regenerate @file{configure} and @file{config.in} files. Most
327directories require autoconf 2.59 (exactly), but the toplevel
328still requires autoconf 2.13 (exactly).
329
330@item automake version 1.9.6
331
332Necessary when modifying a @file{Makefile.am} file to regenerate its
333associated @file{Makefile.in}.
334
335Much of GCC does not use automake, so directly edit the @file{Makefile.in}
336file. Specifically this applies to the @file{gcc}, @file{intl},
337@file{libcpp}, @file{libiberty}, @file{libobjc} directories as well
338as any of their subdirectories.
339
340For directories that use automake, GCC requires the latest release in
341the 1.9.x series, which is currently 1.9.6. When regenerating a directory
342to a newer version, please update all the directories using an older 1.9.x
343to the latest released version.
344
345@item gettext version 0.14.5 (or later)
346
347Needed to regenerate @file{gcc.pot}.
348
349@item gperf version 2.7.2 (or later)
350
351Necessary when modifying @command{gperf} input files, e.g.@:
352@file{gcc/cp/cfns.gperf} to regenerate its associated header file, e.g.@:
353@file{gcc/cp/cfns.h}.
354
355@item DejaGnu 1.4.4
356@itemx Expect
357@itemx Tcl
358
359Necessary to run the GCC testsuite; see the section on testing for details.
360
361@item autogen version 5.5.4 (or later) and
362@itemx guile version 1.4.1 (or later)
363
364Necessary to regenerate @file{fixinc/fixincl.x} from
365@file{fixinc/inclhack.def} and @file{fixinc/*.tpl}.
366
367Necessary to run @samp{make check} for @file{fixinc}.
368
369Necessary to regenerate the top level @file{Makefile.in} file from
370@file{Makefile.tpl} and @file{Makefile.def}.
371
372@item GNU Bison version 1.28 (or later)
373Berkeley @command{yacc} (@command{byacc}) is also reported to work other
374than for GCJ.
375
376Necessary when modifying @file{*.y} files.
377
378Necessary to build GCC during development because the generated output
379files are not included in the SVN repository. They are included in
380releases.
381
382@item Flex version 2.5.4 (or later)
383
384Necessary when modifying @file{*.l} files.
385
386Necessary to build GCC during development because the generated output
387files are not included in the SVN repository. They are included in
388releases.
389
390@item Texinfo version 4.4 (or later)
391
392Necessary for running @command{makeinfo} when modifying @file{*.texi}
393files to test your changes.
394
395Necessary for running @command{make dvi} or @command{make pdf} to
396create printable documentation in DVI or PDF format. Texinfo version
3974.8 or later is required for @command{make pdf}.
398
399Necessary to build GCC documentation during development because the
400generated output files are not included in the SVN repository. They are
401included in releases.
402
403@item @TeX{} (any working version)
404
405Necessary for running @command{texi2dvi} and @command{texi2pdf}, which
406are used when running @command{make dvi} or @command{make pdf} to create
407DVI or PDF files, respectively.
408
409@item SVN (any version)
410@itemx SSH (any version)
411
412Necessary to access the SVN repository. Public releases and weekly
413snapshots of the development sources are also available via FTP@.
414
415@item Perl version 5.6.1 (or later)
416
417Necessary when regenerating @file{Makefile} dependencies in libiberty.
418Necessary when regenerating @file{libiberty/functions.texi}.
419Necessary when generating manpages from Texinfo manuals.
420Necessary when targetting Darwin, building libstdc++,
421and not using @option{--disable-symvers}.
422Used by various scripts to generate some files included in SVN (mainly
423Unicode-related and rarely changing) from source tables.
424
425@item GNU diffutils version 2.7 (or later)
426
427Useful when submitting patches for the GCC source code.
428
429@item patch version 2.5.4 (or later)
430
431Necessary when applying patches, created with @command{diff}, to one's
432own sources.
433
434@end table
435
436@html
437<hr />
438<p>
439@end html
440@ifhtml
441@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
442@end ifhtml
443@end ifset
444
445@c ***Downloading the source**************************************************
446@ifnothtml
447@comment node-name, next, previous, up
448@node Downloading the source, Configuration, Prerequisites, Installing GCC
449@end ifnothtml
450@ifset downloadhtml
451@ifnothtml
452@chapter Downloading GCC
453@end ifnothtml
454@cindex Downloading GCC
455@cindex Downloading the Source
456
457GCC is distributed via @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/svn.html,,SVN} and FTP
458tarballs compressed with @command{gzip} or
459@command{bzip2}. It is possible to download a full distribution or specific
460components.
461
462Please refer to the @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/releases.html,,releases web page}
463for information on how to obtain GCC@.
464
465The full distribution includes the C, C++, Objective-C, Fortran, Java,
466and Ada (in the case of GCC 3.1 and later) compilers. The full
467distribution also includes runtime libraries for C++, Objective-C,
468Fortran, and Java. In GCC 3.0 and later versions, the GNU compiler
469testsuites are also included in the full distribution.
470
471If you choose to download specific components, you must download the core
472GCC distribution plus any language specific distributions you wish to
473use. The core distribution includes the C language front end as well as the
474shared components. Each language has a tarball which includes the language
475front end as well as the language runtime (when appropriate).
476
477Unpack the core distribution as well as any language specific
478distributions in the same directory.
479
480If you also intend to build binutils (either to upgrade an existing
481installation or for use in place of the corresponding tools of your
482OS), unpack the binutils distribution either in the same directory or
483a separate one. In the latter case, add symbolic links to any
484components of the binutils you intend to build alongside the compiler
485(@file{bfd}, @file{binutils}, @file{gas}, @file{gprof}, @file{ld},
486@file{opcodes}, @dots{}) to the directory containing the GCC sources.
487
488@html
489<hr />
490<p>
491@end html
492@ifhtml
493@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
494@end ifhtml
495@end ifset
496
497@c ***Configuration***********************************************************
498@ifnothtml
499@comment node-name, next, previous, up
500@node Configuration, Building, Downloading the source, Installing GCC
501@end ifnothtml
502@ifset configurehtml
503@ifnothtml
504@chapter Installing GCC: Configuration
505@end ifnothtml
506@cindex Configuration
507@cindex Installing GCC: Configuration
508
509Like most GNU software, GCC must be configured before it can be built.
510This document describes the recommended configuration procedure
511for both native and cross targets.
512
513We use @var{srcdir} to refer to the toplevel source directory for
514GCC; we use @var{objdir} to refer to the toplevel build/object directory.
515
516If you obtained the sources via SVN, @var{srcdir} must refer to the top
517@file{gcc} directory, the one where the @file{MAINTAINERS} can be found,
518and not its @file{gcc} subdirectory, otherwise the build will fail.
519
520If either @var{srcdir} or @var{objdir} is located on an automounted NFS
521file system, the shell's built-in @command{pwd} command will return
522temporary pathnames. Using these can lead to various sorts of build
523problems. To avoid this issue, set the @env{PWDCMD} environment
524variable to an automounter-aware @command{pwd} command, e.g.,
525@command{pawd} or @samp{amq -w}, during the configuration and build
526phases.
527
528First, we @strong{highly} recommend that GCC be built into a
529separate directory than the sources which does @strong{not} reside
530within the source tree. This is how we generally build GCC; building
531where @var{srcdir} == @var{objdir} should still work, but doesn't
532get extensive testing; building where @var{objdir} is a subdirectory
533of @var{srcdir} is unsupported.
534
535If you have previously built GCC in the same directory for a
536different target machine, do @samp{make distclean} to delete all files
537that might be invalid. One of the files this deletes is @file{Makefile};
538if @samp{make distclean} complains that @file{Makefile} does not exist
539or issues a message like ``don't know how to make distclean'' it probably
540means that the directory is already suitably clean. However, with the
541recommended method of building in a separate @var{objdir}, you should
542simply use a different @var{objdir} for each target.
543
544Second, when configuring a native system, either @command{cc} or
545@command{gcc} must be in your path or you must set @env{CC} in
546your environment before running configure. Otherwise the configuration
547scripts may fail.
548
549@ignore
550Note that the bootstrap compiler and the resulting GCC must be link
551compatible, else the bootstrap will fail with linker errors about
552incompatible object file formats. Several multilibed targets are
553affected by this requirement, see
554@ifnothtml
555@ref{Specific, host/target specific installation notes}.
556@end ifnothtml
557@ifhtml
558@uref{specific.html,,host/target specific installation notes}.
559@end ifhtml
560@end ignore
561
562To configure GCC:
563
564@smallexample
565 % mkdir @var{objdir}
566 % cd @var{objdir}
567 % @var{srcdir}/configure [@var{options}] [@var{target}]
568@end smallexample
569
570
571@heading Target specification
572@itemize @bullet
573@item
574GCC has code to correctly determine the correct value for @var{target}
575for nearly all native systems. Therefore, we highly recommend you not
576provide a configure target when configuring a native compiler.
577
578@item
579@var{target} must be specified as @option{--target=@var{target}}
580when configuring a cross compiler; examples of valid targets would be
581m68k-coff, sh-elf, etc.
582
583@item
584Specifying just @var{target} instead of @option{--target=@var{target}}
585implies that the host defaults to @var{target}.
586@end itemize
587
588
589@heading Options specification
590
591Use @var{options} to override several configure time options for
592GCC@. A list of supported @var{options} follows; @samp{configure
593--help} may list other options, but those not listed below may not
594work and should not normally be used.
595
596Note that each @option{--enable} option has a corresponding
597@option{--disable} option and that each @option{--with} option has a
598corresponding @option{--without} option.
599
600@table @code
601@item --prefix=@var{dirname}
602Specify the toplevel installation
603directory. This is the recommended way to install the tools into a directory
604other than the default. The toplevel installation directory defaults to
605@file{/usr/local}.
606
607We @strong{highly} recommend against @var{dirname} being the same or a
608subdirectory of @var{objdir} or vice versa. If specifying a directory
609beneath a user's home directory tree, some shells will not expand
610@var{dirname} correctly if it contains the @samp{~} metacharacter; use
611@env{$HOME} instead.
612
613The following standard @command{autoconf} options are supported. Normally you
614should not need to use these options.
615@table @code
616@item --exec-prefix=@var{dirname}
617Specify the toplevel installation directory for architecture-dependent
618files. The default is @file{@var{prefix}}.
619
620@item --bindir=@var{dirname}
621Specify the installation directory for the executables called by users
622(such as @command{gcc} and @command{g++}). The default is
623@file{@var{exec-prefix}/bin}.
624
625@item --libdir=@var{dirname}
626Specify the installation directory for object code libraries and
627internal data files of GCC@. The default is @file{@var{exec-prefix}/lib}.
628
629@item --libexecdir=@var{dirname}
630Specify the installation directory for internal executables of GCC@.
631 The default is @file{@var{exec-prefix}/libexec}.
632
633@item --with-slibdir=@var{dirname}
634Specify the installation directory for the shared libgcc library. The
635default is @file{@var{libdir}}.
636
637@item --infodir=@var{dirname}
638Specify the installation directory for documentation in info format.
639The default is @file{@var{prefix}/info}.
640
641@item --datadir=@var{dirname}
642Specify the installation directory for some architecture-independent
643data files referenced by GCC@. The default is @file{@var{prefix}/share}.
644
645@item --mandir=@var{dirname}
646Specify the installation directory for manual pages. The default is
647@file{@var{prefix}/man}. (Note that the manual pages are only extracts from
648the full GCC manuals, which are provided in Texinfo format. The manpages
649are derived by an automatic conversion process from parts of the full
650manual.)
651
652@item --with-gxx-include-dir=@var{dirname}
653Specify
654the installation directory for G++ header files. The default is
655@file{@var{prefix}/include/c++/@var{version}}.
656
657@end table
658
659@item --program-prefix=@var{prefix}
660GCC supports some transformations of the names of its programs when
661installing them. This option prepends @var{prefix} to the names of
662programs to install in @var{bindir} (see above). For example, specifying
663@option{--program-prefix=foo-} would result in @samp{gcc}
664being installed as @file{/usr/local/bin/foo-gcc}.
665
666@item --program-suffix=@var{suffix}
667Appends @var{suffix} to the names of programs to install in @var{bindir}
668(see above). For example, specifying @option{--program-suffix=-3.1}
669would result in @samp{gcc} being installed as
670@file{/usr/local/bin/gcc-3.1}.
671
672@item --program-transform-name=@var{pattern}
673Applies the @samp{sed} script @var{pattern} to be applied to the names
674of programs to install in @var{bindir} (see above). @var{pattern} has to
675consist of one or more basic @samp{sed} editing commands, separated by
676semicolons. For example, if you want the @samp{gcc} program name to be
677transformed to the installed program @file{/usr/local/bin/myowngcc} and
678the @samp{g++} program name to be transformed to
679@file{/usr/local/bin/gspecial++} without changing other program names,
680you could use the pattern
681@option{--program-transform-name='s/^gcc$/myowngcc/; s/^g++$/gspecial++/'}
682to achieve this effect.
683
684All three options can be combined and used together, resulting in more
685complex conversion patterns. As a basic rule, @var{prefix} (and
686@var{suffix}) are prepended (appended) before further transformations
687can happen with a special transformation script @var{pattern}.
688
689As currently implemented, this option only takes effect for native
690builds; cross compiler binaries' names are not transformed even when a
691transformation is explicitly asked for by one of these options.
692
693For native builds, some of the installed programs are also installed
694with the target alias in front of their name, as in
695@samp{i686-pc-linux-gnu-gcc}. All of the above transformations happen
696before the target alias is prepended to the name---so, specifying
697@option{--program-prefix=foo-} and @option{program-suffix=-3.1}, the
698resulting binary would be installed as
699@file{/usr/local/bin/i686-pc-linux-gnu-foo-gcc-3.1}.
700
701As a last shortcoming, none of the installed Ada programs are
702transformed yet, which will be fixed in some time.
703
704@item --with-local-prefix=@var{dirname}
705Specify the
706installation directory for local include files. The default is
707@file{/usr/local}. Specify this option if you want the compiler to
708search directory @file{@var{dirname}/include} for locally installed
709header files @emph{instead} of @file{/usr/local/include}.
710
711You should specify @option{--with-local-prefix} @strong{only} if your
712site has a different convention (not @file{/usr/local}) for where to put
713site-specific files.
714
715The default value for @option{--with-local-prefix} is @file{/usr/local}
716regardless of the value of @option{--prefix}. Specifying
717@option{--prefix} has no effect on which directory GCC searches for
718local header files. This may seem counterintuitive, but actually it is
719logical.
720
721The purpose of @option{--prefix} is to specify where to @emph{install
722GCC}. The local header files in @file{/usr/local/include}---if you put
723any in that directory---are not part of GCC@. They are part of other
724programs---perhaps many others. (GCC installs its own header files in
725another directory which is based on the @option{--prefix} value.)
726
727Both the local-prefix include directory and the GCC-prefix include
728directory are part of GCC's ``system include'' directories. Although these
729two directories are not fixed, they need to be searched in the proper
730order for the correct processing of the include_next directive. The
731local-prefix include directory is searched before the GCC-prefix
732include directory. Another characteristic of system include directories
733is that pedantic warnings are turned off for headers in these directories.
734
735Some autoconf macros add @option{-I @var{directory}} options to the
736compiler command line, to ensure that directories containing installed
737packages' headers are searched. When @var{directory} is one of GCC's
738system include directories, GCC will ignore the option so that system
739directories continue to be processed in the correct order. This
740may result in a search order different from what was specified but the
741directory will still be searched.
742
743GCC automatically searches for ordinary libraries using
744@env{GCC_EXEC_PREFIX}. Thus, when the same installation prefix is
745used for both GCC and packages, GCC will automatically search for
746both headers and libraries. This provides a configuration that is
747easy to use. GCC behaves in a manner similar to that when it is
748installed as a system compiler in @file{/usr}.
749
750Sites that need to install multiple versions of GCC may not want to
751use the above simple configuration. It is possible to use the
752@option{--program-prefix}, @option{--program-suffix} and
753@option{--program-transform-name} options to install multiple versions
754into a single directory, but it may be simpler to use different prefixes
755and the @option{--with-local-prefix} option to specify the location of the
756site-specific files for each version. It will then be necessary for
757users to specify explicitly the location of local site libraries
758(e.g., with @env{LIBRARY_PATH}).
759
760The same value can be used for both @option{--with-local-prefix} and
761@option{--prefix} provided it is not @file{/usr}. This can be used
762to avoid the default search of @file{/usr/local/include}.
763
764@strong{Do not} specify @file{/usr} as the @option{--with-local-prefix}!
765The directory you use for @option{--with-local-prefix} @strong{must not}
766contain any of the system's standard header files. If it did contain
767them, certain programs would be miscompiled (including GNU Emacs, on
768certain targets), because this would override and nullify the header
769file corrections made by the @command{fixincludes} script.
770
771Indications are that people who use this option use it based on mistaken
772ideas of what it is for. People use it as if it specified where to
773install part of GCC@. Perhaps they make this assumption because
774installing GCC creates the directory.
775
776@item --enable-shared[=@var{package}[,@dots{}]]
777Build shared versions of libraries, if shared libraries are supported on
778the target platform. Unlike GCC 2.95.x and earlier, shared libraries
779are enabled by default on all platforms that support shared libraries.
780
781If a list of packages is given as an argument, build shared libraries
782only for the listed packages. For other packages, only static libraries
783will be built. Package names currently recognized in the GCC tree are
784@samp{libgcc} (also known as @samp{gcc}), @samp{libstdc++} (not
785@samp{libstdc++-v3}), @samp{libffi}, @samp{zlib}, @samp{boehm-gc},
786@samp{ada}, @samp{libada}, @samp{libjava} and @samp{libobjc}.
787Note @samp{libiberty} does not support shared libraries at all.
788
789Use @option{--disable-shared} to build only static libraries. Note that
790@option{--disable-shared} does not accept a list of package names as
791argument, only @option{--enable-shared} does.
792
793@item @anchor{with-gnu-as}--with-gnu-as
794Specify that the compiler should assume that the
795assembler it finds is the GNU assembler. However, this does not modify
796the rules to find an assembler and will result in confusion if the
797assembler found is not actually the GNU assembler. (Confusion may also
798result if the compiler finds the GNU assembler but has not been
799configured with @option{--with-gnu-as}.) If you have more than one
800assembler installed on your system, you may want to use this option in
801connection with @option{--with-as=@var{pathname}} or
802@option{--with-build-time-tools=@var{pathname}}.
803
804The following systems are the only ones where it makes a difference
805whether you use the GNU assembler. On any other system,
806@option{--with-gnu-as} has no effect.
807
808@itemize @bullet
809@item @samp{hppa1.0-@var{any}-@var{any}}
810@item @samp{hppa1.1-@var{any}-@var{any}}
811@item @samp{i386-@var{any}-sysv}
812@item @samp{m68k-bull-sysv}
813@item @samp{m68k-hp-hpux}
814@item @samp{m68000-hp-hpux}
815@item @samp{m68000-att-sysv}
816@item @samp{sparc-sun-solaris2.@var{any}}
817@item @samp{sparc64-@var{any}-solaris2.@var{any}}
818@end itemize
819
820On the systems listed above (except for the HP-PA, the SPARC, for ISC on
821the 386, if you use the GNU assembler, you should also use the GNU linker
822(and specify @option{--with-gnu-ld}).
823
824@item @anchor{with-as}--with-as=@var{pathname}
825Specify that the compiler should use the assembler pointed to by
826@var{pathname}, rather than the one found by the standard rules to find
827an assembler, which are:
828@itemize @bullet
829@item
830Unless GCC is being built with a cross compiler, check the
831@file{@var{libexec}/gcc/@var{target}/@var{version}} directory.
832@var{libexec} defaults to @file{@var{exec-prefix}/libexec};
833@var{exec-prefix} defaults to @var{prefix}, which
834defaults to @file{/usr/local} unless overridden by the
835@option{--prefix=@var{pathname}} switch described above. @var{target}
836is the target system triple, such as @samp{sparc-sun-solaris2.7}, and
837@var{version} denotes the GCC version, such as 3.0.
838
839@item
840If the target system is the same that you are building on, check
841operating system specific directories (e.g.@: @file{/usr/ccs/bin} on
842Sun Solaris 2).
843
844@item
845Check in the @env{PATH} for a tool whose name is prefixed by the
846target system triple.
847
848@item
849Check in the @env{PATH} for a tool whose name is not prefixed by the
850target system triple, if the host and target system triple are
851the same (in other words, we use a host tool if it can be used for
852the target as well).
853@end itemize
854
855You may want to use @option{--with-as} if no assembler
856is installed in the directories listed above, or if you have multiple
857assemblers installed and want to choose one that is not found by the
858above rules.
859
860@item @anchor{with-gnu-ld}--with-gnu-ld
861Same as @uref{#with-gnu-as,,@option{--with-gnu-as}}
862but for the linker.
863
864@item --with-ld=@var{pathname}
865Same as @uref{#with-as,,@option{--with-as}}
866but for the linker.
867
868@item --with-stabs
869Specify that stabs debugging
870information should be used instead of whatever format the host normally
871uses. Normally GCC uses the same debug format as the host system.
872
873On MIPS based systems and on Alphas, you must specify whether you want
874GCC to create the normal ECOFF debugging format, or to use BSD-style
875stabs passed through the ECOFF symbol table. The normal ECOFF debug
876format cannot fully handle languages other than C@. BSD stabs format can
877handle other languages, but it only works with the GNU debugger GDB@.
878
879Normally, GCC uses the ECOFF debugging format by default; if you
880prefer BSD stabs, specify @option{--with-stabs} when you configure GCC@.
881
882No matter which default you choose when you configure GCC, the user
883can use the @option{-gcoff} and @option{-gstabs+} options to specify explicitly
884the debug format for a particular compilation.
885
886@option{--with-stabs} is meaningful on the ISC system on the 386, also, if
887@option{--with-gas} is used. It selects use of stabs debugging
888information embedded in COFF output. This kind of debugging information
889supports C++ well; ordinary COFF debugging information does not.
890
891@option{--with-stabs} is also meaningful on 386 systems running SVR4. It
892selects use of stabs debugging information embedded in ELF output. The
893C++ compiler currently (2.6.0) does not support the DWARF debugging
894information normally used on 386 SVR4 platforms; stabs provide a
895workable alternative. This requires gas and gdb, as the normal SVR4
896tools can not generate or interpret stabs.
897
898@item --disable-multilib
899Specify that multiple target
900libraries to support different target variants, calling
901conventions, etc should not be built. The default is to build a
902predefined set of them.
903
904Some targets provide finer-grained control over which multilibs are built
905(e.g., @option{--disable-softfloat}):
906@table @code
907@item arc-*-elf*
908biendian.
909
910@item arm-*-*
911fpu, 26bit, underscore, interwork, biendian, nofmult.
912
913@item m68*-*-*
914softfloat, m68881, m68000, m68020.
915
916@item mips*-*-*
917single-float, biendian, softfloat.
918
919@item powerpc*-*-*, rs6000*-*-*
920aix64, pthread, softfloat, powercpu, powerpccpu, powerpcos, biendian,
921sysv, aix.
922
923@end table
924
925@item --enable-threads
926Specify that the target
927supports threads. This affects the Objective-C compiler and runtime
928library, and exception handling for other languages like C++ and Java.
929On some systems, this is the default.
930
931In general, the best (and, in many cases, the only known) threading
932model available will be configured for use. Beware that on some
933systems, GCC has not been taught what threading models are generally
934available for the system. In this case, @option{--enable-threads} is an
935alias for @option{--enable-threads=single}.
936
937@item --disable-threads
938Specify that threading support should be disabled for the system.
939This is an alias for @option{--enable-threads=single}.
940
941@item --enable-threads=@var{lib}
942Specify that
943@var{lib} is the thread support library. This affects the Objective-C
944compiler and runtime library, and exception handling for other languages
945like C++ and Java. The possibilities for @var{lib} are:
946
947@table @code
948@item aix
949AIX thread support.
950@item dce
951DCE thread support.
952@item gnat
953Ada tasking support. For non-Ada programs, this setting is equivalent
954to @samp{single}. When used in conjunction with the Ada run time, it
955causes GCC to use the same thread primitives as Ada uses. This option
956is necessary when using both Ada and the back end exception handling,
957which is the default for most Ada targets.
958@item mach
959Generic MACH thread support, known to work on NeXTSTEP@. (Please note
960that the file needed to support this configuration, @file{gthr-mach.h}, is
961missing and thus this setting will cause a known bootstrap failure.)
962@item no
963This is an alias for @samp{single}.
964@item posix
965Generic POSIX/Unix98 thread support.
966@item posix95
967Generic POSIX/Unix95 thread support.
968@item rtems
969RTEMS thread support.
970@item single
971Disable thread support, should work for all platforms.
972@item solaris
973Sun Solaris 2 thread support.
974@item vxworks
975VxWorks thread support.
976@item win32
977Microsoft Win32 API thread support.
978@item nks
979Novell Kernel Services thread support.
980@end table
981
982@item --enable-tls
983Specify that the target supports TLS (Thread Local Storage). Usually
984configure can correctly determine if TLS is supported. In cases where
985it guesses incorrectly, TLS can be explicitly enabled or disabled with
986@option{--enable-tls} or @option{--disable-tls}. This can happen if
987the assembler supports TLS but the C library does not, or if the
988assumptions made by the configure test are incorrect.
989
990@item --disable-tls
991Specify that the target does not support TLS.
992This is an alias for @option{--enable-tls=no}.
993
994@item --with-cpu=@var{cpu}
995Specify which cpu variant the compiler should generate code for by default.
996@var{cpu} will be used as the default value of the @option{-mcpu=} switch.
997This option is only supported on some targets, including ARM, i386, PowerPC,
998and SPARC@.
999
1000@item --with-schedule=@var{cpu}
1001@itemx --with-arch=@var{cpu}
1002@itemx --with-tune=@var{cpu}
1003@itemx --with-abi=@var{abi}
1004@itemx --with-fpu=@var{type}
1005@itemx --with-float=@var{type}
1006These configure options provide default values for the @option{-mschedule=},
1007@option{-march=}, @option{-mtune=}, @option{-mabi=}, and @option{-mfpu=}
1008options and for @option{-mhard-float} or @option{-msoft-float}. As with
1009@option{--with-cpu}, which switches will be accepted and acceptable values
1010of the arguments depend on the target.
1011
1012@item --with-mode=@var{mode}
1013Specify if the compiler should default to @option{-marm} or @option{-mthumb}.
1014This option is only supported on ARM targets.
1015
1016@item --with-divide=@var{type}
1017Specify how the compiler should generate code for checking for
1018division by zero. This option is only supported on the MIPS target.
1019The possibilities for @var{type} are:
1020@table @code
1021@item traps
1022Division by zero checks use conditional traps (this is the default on
1023systems that support conditional traps).
1024@item breaks
1025Division by zero checks use the break instruction.
1026@end table
1027
1028@item --enable-__cxa_atexit
1029Define if you want to use __cxa_atexit, rather than atexit, to
1030register C++ destructors for local statics and global objects.
1031This is essential for fully standards-compliant handling of
1032destructors, but requires __cxa_atexit in libc. This option is currently
1033only available on systems with GNU libc. When enabled, this will cause
1034@option{-fuse-cxa-exit} to be passed by default.
1035
1036@item --enable-target-optspace
1037Specify that target
1038libraries should be optimized for code space instead of code speed.
1039This is the default for the m32r platform.
1040
1041@item --disable-cpp
1042Specify that a user visible @command{cpp} program should not be installed.
1043
1044@item --with-cpp-install-dir=@var{dirname}
1045Specify that the user visible @command{cpp} program should be installed
1046in @file{@var{prefix}/@var{dirname}/cpp}, in addition to @var{bindir}.
1047
1048@item --enable-initfini-array
1049Force the use of sections @code{.init_array} and @code{.fini_array}
1050(instead of @code{.init} and @code{.fini}) for constructors and
1051destructors. Option @option{--disable-initfini-array} has the
1052opposite effect. If neither option is specified, the configure script
1053will try to guess whether the @code{.init_array} and
1054@code{.fini_array} sections are supported and, if they are, use them.
1055
1056@item --enable-maintainer-mode
1057The build rules that
1058regenerate the GCC master message catalog @file{gcc.pot} are normally
1059disabled. This is because it can only be rebuilt if the complete source
1060tree is present. If you have changed the sources and want to rebuild the
1061catalog, configuring with @option{--enable-maintainer-mode} will enable
1062this. Note that you need a recent version of the @code{gettext} tools
1063to do so.
1064
1065@item --disable-bootstrap
1066For a native build, the default configuration is to perform
1067a 3-stage bootstrap of the compiler when @samp{make} is invoked,
1068testing that GCC can compile itself correctly. If you want to disable
1069this process, you can configure with @option{--disable-bootstrap}.
1070
1071@item --enable-bootstrap
1072In special cases, you may want to perform a 3-stage build
1073even if the target and host triplets are different.
1074This could happen when the host can run code compiled for
1075the target (e.g.@: host is i686-linux, target is i486-linux).
1076Starting from GCC 4.2, to do this you have to configure explicitly
1077with @option{--enable-bootstrap}.
1078
1079@item --enable-generated-files-in-srcdir
1080Neither the .c and .h files that are generated from Bison and flex nor the
1081info manuals and man pages that are built from the .texi files are present
1082in the SVN development tree. When building GCC from that development tree,
1083or from one of our snapshots, those generated files are placed in your
1084build directory, which allows for the source to be in a readonly
1085directory.
1086
1087If you configure with @option{--enable-generated-files-in-srcdir} then those
1088generated files will go into the source directory. This is mainly intended
1089for generating release or prerelease tarballs of the GCC sources, since it
1090is not a requirement that the users of source releases to have flex, Bison,
1091or makeinfo.
1092
1093@item --enable-version-specific-runtime-libs
1094Specify
1095that runtime libraries should be installed in the compiler specific
1096subdirectory (@file{@var{libdir}/gcc}) rather than the usual places. In
1097addition, @samp{libstdc++}'s include files will be installed into
1098@file{@var{libdir}} unless you overruled it by using
1099@option{--with-gxx-include-dir=@var{dirname}}. Using this option is
1100particularly useful if you intend to use several versions of GCC in
1101parallel. This is currently supported by @samp{libgfortran},
1102@samp{libjava}, @samp{libmudflap}, @samp{libstdc++}, and @samp{libobjc}.
1103
1104@item --with-java-home=@var{dirname}
1105This @samp{libjava} option overrides the default value of the
1106@samp{java.home} system property. It is also used to set
1107@samp{sun.boot.class.path} to @file{@var{dirname}/lib/rt.jar}. By
1108default @samp{java.home} is set to @file{@var{prefix}} and
1109@samp{sun.boot.class.path} to
1110@file{@var{datadir}/java/libgcj-@var{version}.jar}.
1111
1112@item --enable-languages=@var{lang1},@var{lang2},@dots{}
1113Specify that only a particular subset of compilers and
1114their runtime libraries should be built. For a list of valid values for
1115@var{langN} you can issue the following command in the
1116@file{gcc} directory of your GCC source tree:@*
1117@smallexample
1118grep language= */config-lang.in
1119@end smallexample
1120Currently, you can use any of the following:
1121@code{all}, @code{ada}, @code{c}, @code{c++}, @code{fortran}, @code{java},
1122@code{objc}, @code{obj-c++}, @code{treelang}.
1123Building the Ada compiler has special requirements, see below.
1124If you do not pass this flag, or specify the option @code{all}, then all
1125default languages available in the @file{gcc} sub-tree will be configured.
1126Ada, Objective-C++, and treelang are not default languages; the rest are.
1127Re-defining @code{LANGUAGES} when calling @samp{make} @strong{does not}
1128work anymore, as those language sub-directories might not have been
1129configured!
1130
1131@item --disable-libada
1132Specify that the run-time libraries and tools used by GNAT should not
1133be built. This can be useful for debugging, or for compatibility with
1134previous Ada build procedures, when it was required to explicitly
1135do a @samp{make -C gcc gnatlib_and_tools}.
1136
1137@item --disable-libssp
1138Specify that the run-time libraries for stack smashing protection
1139should not be built.
1140
1141@item --disable-libgomp
1142Specify that the run-time libraries used by GOMP should not be built.
1143
1144@item --with-dwarf2
1145Specify that the compiler should
1146use DWARF 2 debugging information as the default.
1147
1148@item --enable-targets=all
1149@itemx --enable-targets=@var{target_list}
1150Some GCC targets, e.g.@: powerpc64-linux, build bi-arch compilers.
1151These are compilers that are able to generate either 64-bit or 32-bit
1152code. Typically, the corresponding 32-bit target, e.g.@:
1153powerpc-linux for powerpc64-linux, only generates 32-bit code. This
1154option enables the 32-bit target to be a bi-arch compiler, which is
1155useful when you want a bi-arch compiler that defaults to 32-bit, and
1156you are building a bi-arch or multi-arch binutils in a combined tree.
1157Currently, this option only affects powerpc-linux and x86-linux.
1158
1159@item --enable-secureplt
1160This option enables @option{-msecure-plt} by default for powerpc-linux.
1161@ifnothtml
1162@xref{RS/6000 and PowerPC Options,, RS/6000 and PowerPC Options, gcc,
1163Using the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC)},
1164@end ifnothtml
1165@ifhtml
1166See ``RS/6000 and PowerPC Options'' in the main manual
1167@end ifhtml
1168
1169@item --enable-win32-registry
1170@itemx --enable-win32-registry=@var{key}
1171@itemx --disable-win32-registry
1172The @option{--enable-win32-registry} option enables Microsoft Windows-hosted GCC
1173to look up installations paths in the registry using the following key:
1174
1175@smallexample
1176@code{HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Free Software Foundation\@var{key}}
1177@end smallexample
1178
1179@var{key} defaults to GCC version number, and can be overridden by the
1180@option{--enable-win32-registry=@var{key}} option. Vendors and distributors
1181who use custom installers are encouraged to provide a different key,
1182perhaps one comprised of vendor name and GCC version number, to
1183avoid conflict with existing installations. This feature is enabled
1184by default, and can be disabled by @option{--disable-win32-registry}
1185option. This option has no effect on the other hosts.
1186
1187@item --nfp
1188Specify that the machine does not have a floating point unit. This
1189option only applies to @samp{m68k-sun-sunos@var{n}}. On any other
1190system, @option{--nfp} has no effect.
1191
1192@item --enable-werror
1193@itemx --disable-werror
1194@itemx --enable-werror=yes
1195@itemx --enable-werror=no
1196When you specify this option, it controls whether certain files in the
1197compiler are built with @option{-Werror} in bootstrap stage2 and later.
1198If you don't specify it, @option{-Werror} is turned on for the main
1199development trunk. However it defaults to off for release branches and
1200final releases. The specific files which get @option{-Werror} are
1201controlled by the Makefiles.
1202
1203@item --enable-checking
1204@itemx --enable-checking=@var{list}
1205When you specify this option, the compiler is built to perform internal
1206consistency checks of the requested complexity. This does not change the
1207generated code, but adds error checking within the compiler. This will
1208slow down the compiler and may only work properly if you are building
1209the compiler with GCC@. This is @samp{yes} by default when building
1210from SVN or snapshots, but @samp{release} for releases. More control
1211over the checks may be had by specifying @var{list}. The categories of
1212checks available are @samp{yes} (most common checks
1213@samp{assert,misc,tree,gc,rtlflag,runtime}), @samp{no} (no checks at
1214all), @samp{all} (all but @samp{valgrind}), @samp{release} (cheapest
1215checks @samp{assert,runtime}) or @samp{none} (same as @samp{no}).
1216Individual checks can be enabled with these flags @samp{assert},
1217@samp{fold}, @samp{gc}, @samp{gcac} @samp{misc}, @samp{rtl},
1218@samp{rtlflag}, @samp{runtime}, @samp{tree}, and @samp{valgrind}.
1219
1220The @samp{valgrind} check requires the external @command{valgrind}
1221simulator, available from @uref{http://valgrind.org/}. The
1222@samp{rtl}, @samp{gcac} and @samp{valgrind} checks are very expensive.
1223To disable all checking, @samp{--disable-checking} or
1224@samp{--enable-checking=none} must be explicitly requested. Disabling
1225assertions will make the compiler and runtime slightly faster but
1226increase the risk of undetected internal errors causing wrong code to be
1227generated.
1228
1229@item --enable-coverage
1230@itemx --enable-coverage=@var{level}
1231With this option, the compiler is built to collect self coverage
1232information, every time it is run. This is for internal development
1233purposes, and only works when the compiler is being built with gcc. The
1234@var{level} argument controls whether the compiler is built optimized or
1235not, values are @samp{opt} and @samp{noopt}. For coverage analysis you
1236want to disable optimization, for performance analysis you want to
1237enable optimization. When coverage is enabled, the default level is
1238without optimization.
1239
1240@item --enable-gather-detailed-mem-stats
1241When this option is specified more detailed information on memory
1242allocation is gathered. This information is printed when using
1243@option{-fmem-report}.
1244
1245@item --with-gc
1246@itemx --with-gc=@var{choice}
1247With this option you can specify the garbage collector implementation
1248used during the compilation process. @var{choice} can be one of
1249@samp{page} and @samp{zone}, where @samp{page} is the default.
1250
1251@item --enable-nls
1252@itemx --disable-nls
1253The @option{--enable-nls} option enables Native Language Support (NLS),
1254which lets GCC output diagnostics in languages other than American
1255English. Native Language Support is enabled by default if not doing a
1256canadian cross build. The @option{--disable-nls} option disables NLS@.
1257
1258@item --with-included-gettext
1259If NLS is enabled, the @option{--with-included-gettext} option causes the build
1260procedure to prefer its copy of GNU @command{gettext}.
1261
1262@item --with-catgets
1263If NLS is enabled, and if the host lacks @code{gettext} but has the
1264inferior @code{catgets} interface, the GCC build procedure normally
1265ignores @code{catgets} and instead uses GCC's copy of the GNU
1266@code{gettext} library. The @option{--with-catgets} option causes the
1267build procedure to use the host's @code{catgets} in this situation.
1268
1269@item --with-libiconv-prefix=@var{dir}
1270Search for libiconv header files in @file{@var{dir}/include} and
1271libiconv library files in @file{@var{dir}/lib}.
1272
1273@item --enable-obsolete
1274Enable configuration for an obsoleted system. If you attempt to
1275configure GCC for a system (build, host, or target) which has been
1276obsoleted, and you do not specify this flag, configure will halt with an
1277error message.
1278
1279All support for systems which have been obsoleted in one release of GCC
1280is removed entirely in the next major release, unless someone steps
1281forward to maintain the port.
1282
1283@item --enable-decimal-float
1284@itemx --disable-decimal-float
1285Enable (or disable) support for the C decimal floating point
1286extension. This is enabled by default only on PowerPC GNU/Linux
1287systems. Other systems may also support it, but require the user to
1288specifically enable it.
1289
1290@item --with-long-double-128
1291Specify if @code{long double} type should be 128-bit by default on selected
1292GNU/Linux architectures. If using @code{--without-long-double-128},
1293@code{long double} will be by default 64-bit, the same as @code{double} type.
1294When neither of these configure options are used, the default will be
1295128-bit @code{long double} when built against GNU C Library 2.4 and later,
129664-bit @code{long double} otherwise.
1297
1298@item --with-gmp=@var{pathname}
1299@itemx --with-gmp-include=@var{pathname}
1300@itemx --with-gmp-lib=@var{pathname}
1301@itemx --with-mpfr=@var{pathname}
1302@itemx --with-mpfr-include=@var{pathname}
1303@itemx --with-mpfr-lib=@var{pathname}
1304If you do not have GMP (the GNU Multiple Precision library) and the
1305MPFR Libraries installed in a standard location and you want to build
1306GCC, you can explicitly specify the directory where they are installed
1307(@samp{--with-gmp=@var{gmpinstalldir}},
1308@samp{--with-mpfr=@var{mpfrinstalldir}}). The
1309@option{--with-gmp=@var{gmpinstalldir}} option is shorthand for
1310@option{--with-gmp-lib=@var{gmpinstalldir}/lib} and
1311@option{--with-gmp-include=@var{gmpinstalldir}/include}. Likewise the
1312@option{--with-mpfr=@var{mpfrinstalldir}} option is shorthand for
1313@option{--with-mpfr-lib=@var{mpfrinstalldir}/lib} and
1314@option{--with-mpfr-include=@var{mpfrinstalldir}/include}. If these
1315shorthand assumptions are not correct, you can use the explicit
1316include and lib options directly.
1317
1318@end table
1319
1320@subheading Cross-Compiler-Specific Options
1321The following options only apply to building cross compilers.
1322@table @code
1323@item --with-sysroot
1324@itemx --with-sysroot=@var{dir}
1325Tells GCC to consider @var{dir} as the root of a tree that contains a
1326(subset of) the root filesystem of the target operating system.
1327Target system headers, libraries and run-time object files will be
1328searched in there. The specified directory is not copied into the
1329install tree, unlike the options @option{--with-headers} and
1330@option{--with-libs} that this option obsoletes. The default value,
1331in case @option{--with-sysroot} is not given an argument, is
1332@option{$@{gcc_tooldir@}/sys-root}. If the specified directory is a
1333subdirectory of @option{$@{exec_prefix@}}, then it will be found relative to
1334the GCC binaries if the installation tree is moved.
1335
1336@item --with-build-sysroot
1337@itemx --with-build-sysroot=@var{dir}
1338Tells GCC to consider @var{dir} as the system root (see
1339@option{--with-sysroot}) while building target libraries, instead of
1340the directory specified with @option{--with-sysroot}. This option is
1341only useful when you are already using @option{--with-sysroot}. You
1342can use @option{--with-build-sysroot} when you are configuring with
1343@option{--prefix} set to a directory that is different from the one in
1344which you are installing GCC and your target libraries.
1345
1346This option affects the system root for the compiler used to build
1347target libraries (which runs on the build system); it does not affect
1348the compiler which is used to build GCC itself.
1349
1350@item --with-headers
1351@itemx --with-headers=@var{dir}
1352Deprecated in favor of @option{--with-sysroot}.
1353Specifies that target headers are available when building a cross compiler.
1354The @var{dir} argument specifies a directory which has the target include
1355files. These include files will be copied into the @file{gcc} install
1356directory. @emph{This option with the @var{dir} argument is required} when
1357building a cross compiler, if @file{@var{prefix}/@var{target}/sys-include}
1358doesn't pre-exist. If @file{@var{prefix}/@var{target}/sys-include} does
1359pre-exist, the @var{dir} argument may be omitted. @command{fixincludes}
1360will be run on these files to make them compatible with GCC@.
1361
1362@item --without-headers
1363Tells GCC not use any target headers from a libc when building a cross
1364compiler. When crossing to GNU/Linux, you need the headers so GCC
1365can build the exception handling for libgcc.
1366
1367@item --with-libs
1368@itemx --with-libs=``@var{dir1} @var{dir2} @dots{} @var{dirN}''
1369Deprecated in favor of @option{--with-sysroot}.
1370Specifies a list of directories which contain the target runtime
1371libraries. These libraries will be copied into the @file{gcc} install
1372directory. If the directory list is omitted, this option has no
1373effect.
1374
1375@item --with-newlib
1376Specifies that @samp{newlib} is
1377being used as the target C library. This causes @code{__eprintf} to be
1378omitted from @file{libgcc.a} on the assumption that it will be provided by
1379@samp{newlib}.
1380
1381@item --with-build-time-tools=@var{dir}
1382Specifies where to find the set of target tools (assembler, linker, etc.)
1383that will be used while building GCC itself. This option can be useful
1384if the directory layouts are different between the system you are building
1385GCC on, and the system where you will deploy it.
1386
1387For example, on a @option{ia64-hp-hpux} system, you may have the GNU
1388assembler and linker in @file{/usr/bin}, and the native tools in a
1389different path, and build a toolchain that expects to find the
1390native tools in @file{/usr/bin}.
1391
1392When you use this option, you should ensure that @var{dir} includes
1393@command{ar}, @command{as}, @command{ld}, @command{nm},
1394@command{ranlib} and @command{strip} if necessary, and possibly
1395@command{objdump}. Otherwise, GCC may use an inconsistent set of
1396tools.
1397@end table
1398
1399@subheading Java-Specific Options
1400
1401The following option applies to the build of the Java front end.
1402
1403@table @code
1404@item --disable-libgcj
1405Specify that the run-time libraries
1406used by GCJ should not be built. This is useful in case you intend
1407to use GCJ with some other run-time, or you're going to install it
1408separately, or it just happens not to build on your particular
1409machine. In general, if the Java front end is enabled, the GCJ
1410libraries will be enabled too, unless they're known to not work on
1411the target platform. If GCJ is enabled but @samp{libgcj} isn't built, you
1412may need to port it; in this case, before modifying the top-level
1413@file{configure.in} so that @samp{libgcj} is enabled by default on this platform,
1414you may use @option{--enable-libgcj} to override the default.
1415
1416@end table
1417
1418The following options apply to building @samp{libgcj}.
1419
1420@subsubheading General Options
1421
1422@table @code
1423@item --disable-getenv-properties
1424Don't set system properties from @env{GCJ_PROPERTIES}.
1425
1426@item --enable-hash-synchronization
1427Use a global hash table for monitor locks. Ordinarily,
1428@samp{libgcj}'s @samp{configure} script automatically makes
1429the correct choice for this option for your platform. Only use
1430this if you know you need the library to be configured differently.
1431
1432@item --enable-interpreter
1433Enable the Java interpreter. The interpreter is automatically
1434enabled by default on all platforms that support it. This option
1435is really only useful if you want to disable the interpreter
1436(using @option{--disable-interpreter}).
1437
1438@item --disable-java-net
1439Disable java.net. This disables the native part of java.net only,
1440using non-functional stubs for native method implementations.
1441
1442@item --disable-jvmpi
1443Disable JVMPI support.
1444
1445@item --with-ecos
1446Enable runtime eCos target support.
1447
1448@item --without-libffi
1449Don't use @samp{libffi}. This will disable the interpreter and JNI
1450support as well, as these require @samp{libffi} to work.
1451
1452@item --enable-libgcj-debug
1453Enable runtime debugging code.
1454
1455@item --enable-libgcj-multifile
1456If specified, causes all @file{.java} source files to be
1457compiled into @file{.class} files in one invocation of
1458@samp{gcj}. This can speed up build time, but is more
1459resource-intensive. If this option is unspecified or
1460disabled, @samp{gcj} is invoked once for each @file{.java}
1461file to compile into a @file{.class} file.
1462
1463@item --with-libiconv-prefix=DIR
1464Search for libiconv in @file{DIR/include} and @file{DIR/lib}.
1465
1466@item --enable-sjlj-exceptions
1467Force use of the @code{setjmp}/@code{longjmp}-based scheme for exceptions.
1468@samp{configure} ordinarily picks the correct value based on the platform.
1469Only use this option if you are sure you need a different setting.
1470
1471@item --with-system-zlib
1472Use installed @samp{zlib} rather than that included with GCC@.
1473
1474@item --with-win32-nlsapi=ansi, unicows or unicode
1475Indicates how MinGW @samp{libgcj} translates between UNICODE
1476characters and the Win32 API@.
1477@table @code
1478@item ansi
1479Use the single-byte @code{char} and the Win32 A functions natively,
1480translating to and from UNICODE when using these functions. If
1481unspecified, this is the default.
1482
1483@item unicows
1484Use the @code{WCHAR} and Win32 W functions natively. Adds
1485@code{-lunicows} to @file{libgcj.spec} to link with @samp{libunicows}.
1486@file{unicows.dll} needs to be deployed on Microsoft Windows 9X machines
1487running built executables. @file{libunicows.a}, an open-source
1488import library around Microsoft's @code{unicows.dll}, is obtained from
1489@uref{http://libunicows.sourceforge.net/}, which also gives details
1490on getting @file{unicows.dll} from Microsoft.
1491
1492@item unicode
1493Use the @code{WCHAR} and Win32 W functions natively. Does @emph{not}
1494add @code{-lunicows} to @file{libgcj.spec}. The built executables will
1495only run on Microsoft Windows NT and above.
1496@end table
1497@end table
1498
1499@subsubheading AWT-Specific Options
1500
1501@table @code
1502@item --with-x
1503Use the X Window System.
1504
1505@item --enable-java-awt=PEER(S)
1506Specifies the AWT peer library or libraries to build alongside
1507@samp{libgcj}. If this option is unspecified or disabled, AWT
1508will be non-functional. Current valid values are @option{gtk} and
1509@option{xlib}. Multiple libraries should be separated by a
1510comma (i.e.@: @option{--enable-java-awt=gtk,xlib}).
1511
1512@item --enable-gtk-cairo
1513Build the cairo Graphics2D implementation on GTK@.
1514
1515@item --enable-java-gc=TYPE
1516Choose garbage collector. Defaults to @option{boehm} if unspecified.
1517
1518@item --disable-gtktest
1519Do not try to compile and run a test GTK+ program.
1520
1521@item --disable-glibtest
1522Do not try to compile and run a test GLIB program.
1523
1524@item --with-libart-prefix=PFX
1525Prefix where libart is installed (optional).
1526
1527@item --with-libart-exec-prefix=PFX
1528Exec prefix where libart is installed (optional).
1529
1530@item --disable-libarttest
1531Do not try to compile and run a test libart program.
1532
1533@end table
1534
1535@html
1536<hr />
1537<p>
1538@end html
1539@ifhtml
1540@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
1541@end ifhtml
1542@end ifset
1543
1544@c ***Building****************************************************************
1545@ifnothtml
1546@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1547@node Building, Testing, Configuration, Installing GCC
1548@end ifnothtml
1549@ifset buildhtml
1550@ifnothtml
1551@chapter Building
1552@end ifnothtml
1553@cindex Installing GCC: Building
1554
1555Now that GCC is configured, you are ready to build the compiler and
1556runtime libraries.
1557
1558Some commands executed when making the compiler may fail (return a
1559nonzero status) and be ignored by @command{make}. These failures, which
1560are often due to files that were not found, are expected, and can safely
1561be ignored.
1562
1563It is normal to have compiler warnings when compiling certain files.
1564Unless you are a GCC developer, you can generally ignore these warnings
1565unless they cause compilation to fail. Developers should attempt to fix
1566any warnings encountered, however they can temporarily continue past
1567warnings-as-errors by specifying the configure flag
1568@option{--disable-werror}.
1569
1570On certain old systems, defining certain environment variables such as
1571@env{CC} can interfere with the functioning of @command{make}.
1572
1573If you encounter seemingly strange errors when trying to build the
1574compiler in a directory other than the source directory, it could be
1575because you have previously configured the compiler in the source
1576directory. Make sure you have done all the necessary preparations.
1577
1578If you build GCC on a BSD system using a directory stored in an old System
1579V file system, problems may occur in running @command{fixincludes} if the
1580System V file system doesn't support symbolic links. These problems
1581result in a failure to fix the declaration of @code{size_t} in
1582@file{sys/types.h}. If you find that @code{size_t} is a signed type and
1583that type mismatches occur, this could be the cause.
1584
1585The solution is not to use such a directory for building GCC@.
1586
1587When building from SVN or snapshots, or if you modify parser sources,
1588you need the Bison parser generator installed. If you do not modify
1589parser sources, releases contain the Bison-generated files and you do
1590not need Bison installed to build them.
1591
1592When building from SVN or snapshots, or if you modify Texinfo
1593documentation, you need version 4.4 or later of Texinfo installed if you
1594want Info documentation to be regenerated. Releases contain Info
1595documentation pre-built for the unmodified documentation in the release.
1596
1597@section Building a native compiler
1598
1599For a native build, the default configuration is to perform
1600a 3-stage bootstrap of the compiler when @samp{make} is invoked.
1601This will build the entire GCC system and ensure that it compiles
1602itself correctly. It can be disabled with the @option{--disable-bootstrap}
1603parameter to @samp{configure}, but bootstrapping is suggested because
1604the compiler will be tested more completely and could also have
1605better performance.
1606
1607The bootstrapping process will complete the following steps:
1608
1609@itemize @bullet
1610@item
1611Build tools necessary to build the compiler.
1612
1613@item
1614Perform a 3-stage bootstrap of the compiler. This includes building
1615three times the target tools for use by the compiler such as binutils
1616(bfd, binutils, gas, gprof, ld, and opcodes) if they have been
1617individually linked or moved into the top level GCC source tree before
1618configuring.
1619
1620@item
1621Perform a comparison test of the stage2 and stage3 compilers.
1622
1623@item
1624Build runtime libraries using the stage3 compiler from the previous step.
1625
1626@end itemize
1627
1628If you are short on disk space you might consider @samp{make
1629bootstrap-lean} instead. The sequence of compilation is the
1630same described above, but object files from the stage1 and
1631stage2 of the 3-stage bootstrap of the compiler are deleted as
1632soon as they are no longer needed.
1633
1634If you want to save additional space during the bootstrap and in
1635the final installation as well, you can build the compiler binaries
1636without debugging information as in the following example. This will save
1637roughly 40% of disk space both for the bootstrap and the final installation.
1638(Libraries will still contain debugging information.)
1639
1640@smallexample
1641 make CFLAGS='-O' LIBCFLAGS='-g -O2' \
1642 LIBCXXFLAGS='-g -O2 -fno-implicit-templates' bootstrap
1643@end smallexample
1644
1645If you wish to use non-default GCC flags when compiling the stage2 and
1646stage3 compilers, set @code{BOOT_CFLAGS} on the command line when doing
1647@samp{make}. Non-default optimization flags are less well
1648tested here than the default of @samp{-g -O2}, but should still work.
1649In a few cases, you may find that you need to specify special flags such
1650as @option{-msoft-float} here to complete the bootstrap; or, if the
1651native compiler miscompiles the stage1 compiler, you may need to work
1652around this, by choosing @code{BOOT_CFLAGS} to avoid the parts of the
1653stage1 compiler that were miscompiled, or by using @samp{make
1654bootstrap4} to increase the number of stages of bootstrap.
1655
1656Note that using non-standard @code{CFLAGS} can cause bootstrap to fail
1657if these trigger a warning with the new compiler. For example using
1658@samp{-O2 -g -mcpu=i686} on @code{i686-pc-linux-gnu} will cause bootstrap
1659failure as @option{-mcpu=} is deprecated in 3.4.0 and above.
1660
1661
1662If you used the flag @option{--enable-languages=@dots{}} to restrict
1663the compilers to be built, only those you've actually enabled will be
1664built. This will of course only build those runtime libraries, for
1665which the particular compiler has been built. Please note,
1666that re-defining @env{LANGUAGES} when calling @samp{make}
1667@strong{does not} work anymore!
1668
1669If the comparison of stage2 and stage3 fails, this normally indicates
1670that the stage2 compiler has compiled GCC incorrectly, and is therefore
1671a potentially serious bug which you should investigate and report. (On
1672a few systems, meaningful comparison of object files is impossible; they
1673always appear ``different''. If you encounter this problem, you will
1674need to disable comparison in the @file{Makefile}.)
1675
1676If you do not want to bootstrap your compiler, you can configure with
1677@option{--disable-bootstrap}. In particular cases, you may want to
1678bootstrap your compiler even if the target system is not the same as
1679the one you are building on: for example, you could build a
1680@code{powerpc-unknown-linux-gnu} toolchain on a
1681@code{powerpc64-unknown-linux-gnu} host. In this case, pass
1682@option{--enable-bootstrap} to the configure script.
1683
1684
1685@section Building a cross compiler
1686
1687When building a cross compiler, it is not generally possible to do a
16883-stage bootstrap of the compiler. This makes for an interesting problem
1689as parts of GCC can only be built with GCC@.
1690
1691To build a cross compiler, we first recommend building and installing a
1692native compiler. You can then use the native GCC compiler to build the
1693cross compiler. The installed native compiler needs to be GCC version
16942.95 or later.
1695
1696Assuming you have already installed a native copy of GCC and configured
1697your cross compiler, issue the command @command{make}, which performs the
1698following steps:
1699
1700@itemize @bullet
1701@item
1702Build host tools necessary to build the compiler.
1703
1704@item
1705Build target tools for use by the compiler such as binutils (bfd,
1706binutils, gas, gprof, ld, and opcodes)
1707if they have been individually linked or moved into the top level GCC source
1708tree before configuring.
1709
1710@item
1711Build the compiler (single stage only).
1712
1713@item
1714Build runtime libraries using the compiler from the previous step.
1715@end itemize
1716
1717Note that if an error occurs in any step the make process will exit.
1718
1719If you are not building GNU binutils in the same source tree as GCC,
1720you will need a cross-assembler and cross-linker installed before
1721configuring GCC@. Put them in the directory
1722@file{@var{prefix}/@var{target}/bin}. Here is a table of the tools
1723you should put in this directory:
1724
1725@table @file
1726@item as
1727This should be the cross-assembler.
1728
1729@item ld
1730This should be the cross-linker.
1731
1732@item ar
1733This should be the cross-archiver: a program which can manipulate
1734archive files (linker libraries) in the target machine's format.
1735
1736@item ranlib
1737This should be a program to construct a symbol table in an archive file.
1738@end table
1739
1740The installation of GCC will find these programs in that directory,
1741and copy or link them to the proper place to for the cross-compiler to
1742find them when run later.
1743
1744The easiest way to provide these files is to build the Binutils package.
1745Configure it with the same @option{--host} and @option{--target}
1746options that you use for configuring GCC, then build and install
1747them. They install their executables automatically into the proper
1748directory. Alas, they do not support all the targets that GCC
1749supports.
1750
1751If you are not building a C library in the same source tree as GCC,
1752you should also provide the target libraries and headers before
1753configuring GCC, specifying the directories with
1754@option{--with-sysroot} or @option{--with-headers} and
1755@option{--with-libs}. Many targets also require ``start files'' such
1756as @file{crt0.o} and
1757@file{crtn.o} which are linked into each executable. There may be several
1758alternatives for @file{crt0.o}, for use with profiling or other
1759compilation options. Check your target's definition of
1760@code{STARTFILE_SPEC} to find out what start files it uses.
1761
1762@section Building in parallel
1763
1764GNU Make 3.79 and above, which is necessary to build GCC, support
1765building in parallel. To activate this, you can use @samp{make -j 2}
1766instead of @samp{make}. You can also specify a bigger number, and
1767in most cases using a value greater than the number of processors in
1768your machine will result in fewer and shorter I/O latency hits, thus
1769improving overall throughput; this is especially true for slow drives
1770and network filesystems.
1771
1772@section Building the Ada compiler
1773
1774In order to build GNAT, the Ada compiler, you need a working GNAT
1775compiler (GNAT version 3.14 or later, or GCC version 3.1 or later).
1776This includes GNAT tools such as @command{gnatmake} and
1777@command{gnatlink}, since the Ada front end is written in Ada and
1778uses some GNAT-specific extensions.
1779
1780In order to build a cross compiler, it is suggested to install
1781the new compiler as native first, and then use it to build the cross
1782compiler.
1783
1784@command{configure} does not test whether the GNAT installation works
1785and has a sufficiently recent version; if too old a GNAT version is
1786installed, the build will fail unless @option{--enable-languages} is
1787used to disable building the Ada front end.
1788
1789@section Building with profile feedback
1790
1791It is possible to use profile feedback to optimize the compiler itself. This
1792should result in a faster compiler binary. Experiments done on x86 using gcc
17933.3 showed approximately 7 percent speedup on compiling C programs. To
1794bootstrap the compiler with profile feedback, use @code{make profiledbootstrap}.
1795
1796When @samp{make profiledbootstrap} is run, it will first build a @code{stage1}
1797compiler. This compiler is used to build a @code{stageprofile} compiler
1798instrumented to collect execution counts of instruction and branch
1799probabilities. Then runtime libraries are compiled with profile collected.
1800Finally a @code{stagefeedback} compiler is built using the information collected.
1801
1802Unlike standard bootstrap, several additional restrictions apply. The
1803compiler used to build @code{stage1} needs to support a 64-bit integral type.
1804It is recommended to only use GCC for this. Also parallel make is currently
1805not supported since collisions in profile collecting may occur.
1806
1807@html
1808<hr />
1809<p>
1810@end html
1811@ifhtml
1812@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
1813@end ifhtml
1814@end ifset
1815
1816@c ***Testing*****************************************************************
1817@ifnothtml
1818@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1819@node Testing, Final install, Building, Installing GCC
1820@end ifnothtml
1821@ifset testhtml
1822@ifnothtml
1823@chapter Installing GCC: Testing
1824@end ifnothtml
1825@cindex Testing
1826@cindex Installing GCC: Testing
1827@cindex Testsuite
1828
1829Before you install GCC, we encourage you to run the testsuites and to
1830compare your results with results from a similar configuration that have
1831been submitted to the
1832@uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-testresults/,,gcc-testresults mailing list}.
1833Some of these archived results are linked from the build status lists
1834at @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/buildstat.html}, although not everyone who
1835reports a successful build runs the testsuites and submits the results.
1836This step is optional and may require you to download additional software,
1837but it can give you confidence in your new GCC installation or point out
1838problems before you install and start using your new GCC@.
1839
1840First, you must have @uref{download.html,,downloaded the testsuites}.
1841These are part of the full distribution, but if you downloaded the
1842``core'' compiler plus any front ends, you must download the testsuites
1843separately.
1844
1845Second, you must have the testing tools installed. This includes
1846@uref{http://www.gnu.org/software/dejagnu/,,DejaGnu}, Tcl, and Expect;
1847the DejaGnu site has links to these.
1848
1849If the directories where @command{runtest} and @command{expect} were
1850installed are not in the @env{PATH}, you may need to set the following
1851environment variables appropriately, as in the following example (which
1852assumes that DejaGnu has been installed under @file{/usr/local}):
1853
1854@smallexample
1855 TCL_LIBRARY = /usr/local/share/tcl8.0
1856 DEJAGNULIBS = /usr/local/share/dejagnu
1857@end smallexample
1858
1859(On systems such as Cygwin, these paths are required to be actual
1860paths, not mounts or links; presumably this is due to some lack of
1861portability in the DejaGnu code.)
1862
1863
1864Finally, you can run the testsuite (which may take a long time):
1865@smallexample
1866 cd @var{objdir}; make -k check
1867@end smallexample
1868
1869This will test various components of GCC, such as compiler
1870front ends and runtime libraries. While running the testsuite, DejaGnu
1871might emit some harmless messages resembling
1872@samp{WARNING: Couldn't find the global config file.} or
1873@samp{WARNING: Couldn't find tool init file} that can be ignored.
1874
1875@section How can you run the testsuite on selected tests?
1876
1877In order to run sets of tests selectively, there are targets
1878@samp{make check-gcc} and @samp{make check-g++}
1879in the @file{gcc} subdirectory of the object directory. You can also
1880just run @samp{make check} in a subdirectory of the object directory.
1881
1882
1883A more selective way to just run all @command{gcc} execute tests in the
1884testsuite is to use
1885
1886@smallexample
1887 make check-gcc RUNTESTFLAGS="execute.exp @var{other-options}"
1888@end smallexample
1889
1890Likewise, in order to run only the @command{g++} ``old-deja'' tests in
1891the testsuite with filenames matching @samp{9805*}, you would use
1892
1893@smallexample
1894 make check-g++ RUNTESTFLAGS="old-deja.exp=9805* @var{other-options}"
1895@end smallexample
1896
1897The @file{*.exp} files are located in the testsuite directories of the GCC
1898source, the most important ones being @file{compile.exp},
1899@file{execute.exp}, @file{dg.exp} and @file{old-deja.exp}.
1900To get a list of the possible @file{*.exp} files, pipe the
1901output of @samp{make check} into a file and look at the
1902@samp{Running @dots{} .exp} lines.
1903
1904@section Passing options and running multiple testsuites
1905
1906You can pass multiple options to the testsuite using the
1907@samp{--target_board} option of DejaGNU, either passed as part of
1908@samp{RUNTESTFLAGS}, or directly to @command{runtest} if you prefer to
1909work outside the makefiles. For example,
1910
1911@smallexample
1912 make check-g++ RUNTESTFLAGS="--target_board=unix/-O3/-fmerge-constants"
1913@end smallexample
1914
1915will run the standard @command{g++} testsuites (``unix'' is the target name
1916for a standard native testsuite situation), passing
1917@samp{-O3 -fmerge-constants} to the compiler on every test, i.e.,
1918slashes separate options.
1919
1920You can run the testsuites multiple times using combinations of options
1921with a syntax similar to the brace expansion of popular shells:
1922
1923@smallexample
1924 @dots{}"--target_board=arm-sim/@{-mhard-float,-msoft-float@}@{-O1,-O2,-O3,@}"
1925@end smallexample
1926
1927(Note the empty option caused by the trailing comma in the final group.)
1928The following will run each testsuite eight times using the @samp{arm-sim}
1929target, as if you had specified all possible combinations yourself:
1930
1931@smallexample
1932 --target_board=arm-sim/-mhard-float/-O1
1933 --target_board=arm-sim/-mhard-float/-O2
1934 --target_board=arm-sim/-mhard-float/-O3
1935 --target_board=arm-sim/-mhard-float
1936 --target_board=arm-sim/-msoft-float/-O1
1937 --target_board=arm-sim/-msoft-float/-O2
1938 --target_board=arm-sim/-msoft-float/-O3
1939 --target_board=arm-sim/-msoft-float
1940@end smallexample
1941
1942They can be combined as many times as you wish, in arbitrary ways. This
1943list:
1944
1945@smallexample
1946 @dots{}"--target_board=unix/-Wextra@{-O3,-fno-strength-reduce@}@{-fomit-frame-pointer,@}"
1947@end smallexample
1948
1949will generate four combinations, all involving @samp{-Wextra}.
1950
1951The disadvantage to this method is that the testsuites are run in serial,
1952which is a waste on multiprocessor systems. For users with GNU Make and
1953a shell which performs brace expansion, you can run the testsuites in
1954parallel by having the shell perform the combinations and @command{make}
1955do the parallel runs. Instead of using @samp{--target_board}, use a
1956special makefile target:
1957
1958@smallexample
1959 make -j@var{N} check-@var{testsuite}//@var{test-target}/@var{option1}/@var{option2}/@dots{}
1960@end smallexample
1961
1962For example,
1963
1964@smallexample
1965 make -j3 check-gcc//sh-hms-sim/@{-m1,-m2,-m3,-m3e,-m4@}/@{,-nofpu@}
1966@end smallexample
1967
1968will run three concurrent ``make-gcc'' testsuites, eventually testing all
1969ten combinations as described above. Note that this is currently only
1970supported in the @file{gcc} subdirectory. (To see how this works, try
1971typing @command{echo} before the example given here.)
1972
1973
1974@section Additional testing for Java Class Libraries
1975
1976The Java runtime tests can be executed via @samp{make check}
1977in the @file{@var{target}/libjava/testsuite} directory in
1978the build tree.
1979
1980The @uref{http://sources.redhat.com/mauve/,,Mauve Project} provides
1981a suite of tests for the Java Class Libraries. This suite can be run
1982as part of libgcj testing by placing the Mauve tree within the libjava
1983testsuite at @file{libjava/testsuite/libjava.mauve/mauve}, or by
1984specifying the location of that tree when invoking @samp{make}, as in
1985@samp{make MAUVEDIR=~/mauve check}.
1986
1987@uref{http://sources.redhat.com/mauve/jacks.html,,Jacks}
1988is a free testsuite that tests Java compiler front ends. This suite
1989can be run as part of libgcj testing by placing the Jacks tree within
1990the libjava testsuite at @file{libjava/testsuite/libjava.jacks/jacks}.
1991
1992@section How to interpret test results
1993
1994The result of running the testsuite are various @file{*.sum} and @file{*.log}
1995files in the testsuite subdirectories. The @file{*.log} files contain a
1996detailed log of the compiler invocations and the corresponding
1997results, the @file{*.sum} files summarize the results. These summaries
1998contain status codes for all tests:
1999
2000@itemize @bullet
2001@item
2002PASS: the test passed as expected
2003@item
2004XPASS: the test unexpectedly passed
2005@item
2006FAIL: the test unexpectedly failed
2007@item
2008XFAIL: the test failed as expected
2009@item
2010UNSUPPORTED: the test is not supported on this platform
2011@item
2012ERROR: the testsuite detected an error
2013@item
2014WARNING: the testsuite detected a possible problem
2015@end itemize
2016
2017It is normal for some tests to report unexpected failures. At the
2018current time the testing harness does not allow fine grained control
2019over whether or not a test is expected to fail. This problem should
2020be fixed in future releases.
2021
2022
2023@section Submitting test results
2024
2025If you want to report the results to the GCC project, use the
2026@file{contrib/test_summary} shell script. Start it in the @var{objdir} with
2027
2028@smallexample
2029 @var{srcdir}/contrib/test_summary -p your_commentary.txt \
2030 -m gcc-testresults@@gcc.gnu.org |sh
2031@end smallexample
2032
2033This script uses the @command{Mail} program to send the results, so
2034make sure it is in your @env{PATH}. The file @file{your_commentary.txt} is
2035prepended to the testsuite summary and should contain any special
2036remarks you have on your results or your build environment. Please
2037do not edit the testsuite result block or the subject line, as these
2038messages may be automatically processed.
2039
2040@html
2041<hr />
2042<p>
2043@end html
2044@ifhtml
2045@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
2046@end ifhtml
2047@end ifset
2048
2049@c ***Final install***********************************************************
2050@ifnothtml
2051@comment node-name, next, previous, up
2052@node Final install, , Testing, Installing GCC
2053@end ifnothtml
2054@ifset finalinstallhtml
2055@ifnothtml
2056@chapter Installing GCC: Final installation
2057@end ifnothtml
2058
2059Now that GCC has been built (and optionally tested), you can install it with
2060@smallexample
2061cd @var{objdir}; make install
2062@end smallexample
2063
2064We strongly recommend to install into a target directory where there is
2065no previous version of GCC present. Also, the GNAT runtime should not
2066be stripped, as this would break certain features of the debugger that
2067depend on this debugging information (catching Ada exceptions for
2068instance).
2069
2070That step completes the installation of GCC; user level binaries can
2071be found in @file{@var{prefix}/bin} where @var{prefix} is the value
2072you specified with the @option{--prefix} to configure (or
2073@file{/usr/local} by default). (If you specified @option{--bindir},
2074that directory will be used instead; otherwise, if you specified
2075@option{--exec-prefix}, @file{@var{exec-prefix}/bin} will be used.)
2076Headers for the C++ and Java libraries are installed in
2077@file{@var{prefix}/include}; libraries in @file{@var{libdir}}
2078(normally @file{@var{prefix}/lib}); internal parts of the compiler in
2079@file{@var{libdir}/gcc} and @file{@var{libexecdir}/gcc}; documentation
2080in info format in @file{@var{infodir}} (normally
2081@file{@var{prefix}/info}).
2082
2083When installing cross-compilers, GCC's executables
2084are not only installed into @file{@var{bindir}}, that
2085is, @file{@var{exec-prefix}/bin}, but additionally into
2086@file{@var{exec-prefix}/@var{target-alias}/bin}, if that directory
2087exists. Typically, such @dfn{tooldirs} hold target-specific
2088binutils, including assembler and linker.
2089
2090Installation into a temporary staging area or into a @command{chroot}
2091jail can be achieved with the command
2092
2093@smallexample
2094make DESTDIR=@var{path-to-rootdir} install
2095@end smallexample
2096
2097@noindent where @var{path-to-rootdir} is the absolute path of
2098a directory relative to which all installation paths will be
2099interpreted. Note that the directory specified by @code{DESTDIR}
2100need not exist yet; it will be created if necessary.
2101
2102There is a subtle point with tooldirs and @code{DESTDIR}:
2103If you relocate a cross-compiler installation with
2104e.g.@: @samp{DESTDIR=@var{rootdir}}, then the directory
2105@file{@var{rootdir}/@var{exec-prefix}/@var{target-alias}/bin} will
2106be filled with duplicated GCC executables only if it already exists,
2107it will not be created otherwise. This is regarded as a feature,
2108not as a bug, because it gives slightly more control to the packagers
2109using the @code{DESTDIR} feature.
2110
2111If you are bootstrapping a released version of GCC then please
2112quickly review the build status page for your release, available from
2113@uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/buildstat.html}.
2114If your system is not listed for the version of GCC that you built,
2115send a note to
2116@email{gcc@@gcc.gnu.org} indicating
2117that you successfully built and installed GCC@.
2118Include the following information:
2119
2120@itemize @bullet
2121@item
2122Output from running @file{@var{srcdir}/config.guess}. Do not send
2123that file itself, just the one-line output from running it.
2124
2125@item
2126The output of @samp{gcc -v} for your newly installed @command{gcc}.
2127This tells us which version of GCC you built and the options you passed to
2128configure.
2129
2130@item
2131Whether you enabled all languages or a subset of them. If you used a
2132full distribution then this information is part of the configure
2133options in the output of @samp{gcc -v}, but if you downloaded the
2134``core'' compiler plus additional front ends then it isn't apparent
2135which ones you built unless you tell us about it.
2136
2137@item
2138If the build was for GNU/Linux, also include:
2139@itemize @bullet
2140@item
2141The distribution name and version (e.g., Red Hat 7.1 or Debian 2.2.3);
2142this information should be available from @file{/etc/issue}.
2143
2144@item
2145The version of the Linux kernel, available from @samp{uname --version}
2146or @samp{uname -a}.
2147
2148@item
2149The version of glibc you used; for RPM-based systems like Red Hat,
2150Mandrake, and SuSE type @samp{rpm -q glibc} to get the glibc version,
2151and on systems like Debian and Progeny use @samp{dpkg -l libc6}.
2152@end itemize
2153For other systems, you can include similar information if you think it is
2154relevant.
2155
2156@item
2157Any other information that you think would be useful to people building
2158GCC on the same configuration. The new entry in the build status list
2159will include a link to the archived copy of your message.
2160@end itemize
2161
2162We'd also like to know if the
2163@ifnothtml
2164@ref{Specific, host/target specific installation notes}
2165@end ifnothtml
2166@ifhtml
2167@uref{specific.html,,host/target specific installation notes}
2168@end ifhtml
2169didn't include your host/target information or if that information is
2170incomplete or out of date. Send a note to
2171@email{gcc@@gcc.gnu.org} detailing how the information should be changed.
2172
2173If you find a bug, please report it following the
2174@uref{../bugs.html,,bug reporting guidelines}.
2175
2176If you want to print the GCC manuals, do @samp{cd @var{objdir}; make
2177dvi}. You will need to have @command{texi2dvi} (version at least 4.4)
2178and @TeX{} installed. This creates a number of @file{.dvi} files in
2179subdirectories of @file{@var{objdir}}; these may be converted for
2180printing with programs such as @command{dvips}. Alternately, by using
2181@samp{make pdf} in place of @samp{make dvi}, you can create documentation
2182in the form of @file{.pdf} files; this requires @command{texi2pdf}, which
2183is included with Texinfo version 4.8 and later. You can also
2184@uref{http://www.gnu.org/order/order.html,,buy printed manuals from the
2185Free Software Foundation}, though such manuals may not be for the most
2186recent version of GCC@.
2187
2188If you would like to generate online HTML documentation, do @samp{cd
2189@var{objdir}; make html} and HTML will be generated for the gcc manuals in
2190@file{@var{objdir}/gcc/HTML}.
2191
2192@html
2193<hr />
2194<p>
2195@end html
2196@ifhtml
2197@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
2198@end ifhtml
2199@end ifset
2200
2201@c ***Binaries****************************************************************
2202@ifnothtml
2203@comment node-name, next, previous, up
2204@node Binaries, Specific, Installing GCC, Top
2205@end ifnothtml
2206@ifset binarieshtml
2207@ifnothtml
2208@chapter Installing GCC: Binaries
2209@end ifnothtml
2210@cindex Binaries
2211@cindex Installing GCC: Binaries
2212
2213We are often asked about pre-compiled versions of GCC@. While we cannot
2214provide these for all platforms, below you'll find links to binaries for
2215various platforms where creating them by yourself is not easy due to various
2216reasons.
2217
2218Please note that we did not create these binaries, nor do we
2219support them. If you have any problems installing them, please
2220contact their makers.
2221
2222@itemize
2223@item
2224AIX:
2225@itemize
2226@item
2227@uref{http://www.bullfreeware.com,,Bull's Freeware and Shareware Archive for AIX};
2228
2229@item
2230@uref{http://aixpdslib.seas.ucla.edu,,UCLA Software Library for AIX}.
2231@end itemize
2232
2233@item
2234DOS---@uref{http://www.delorie.com/djgpp/,,DJGPP}.
2235
2236@item
2237Renesas H8/300[HS]---@uref{http://h8300-hms.sourceforge.net/,,GNU
2238Development Tools for the Renesas H8/300[HS] Series}.
2239
2240@item
2241HP-UX:
2242@itemize
2243@item
2244@uref{http://hpux.cs.utah.edu/,,HP-UX Porting Center};
2245
2246@item
2247@uref{ftp://sunsite.informatik.rwth-aachen.de/pub/packages/gcc_hpux/,,Binaries for HP-UX 11.00 at Aachen University of Technology}.
2248@end itemize
2249
2250@item
2251Motorola 68HC11/68HC12---@uref{http://www.gnu-m68hc11.org,,GNU
2252Development Tools for the Motorola 68HC11/68HC12}.
2253
2254@item
2255@uref{http://www.sco.com/skunkware/devtools/index.html#gcc,,SCO
2256OpenServer/Unixware}.
2257
2258@item
2259Solaris 2 (SPARC, Intel)---@uref{http://www.sunfreeware.com/,,Sunfreeware}.
2260
2261@item
2262SGI---@uref{http://freeware.sgi.com/,,SGI Freeware}.
2263
2264@item
2265Microsoft Windows:
2266@itemize
2267@item
2268The @uref{http://sources.redhat.com/cygwin/,,Cygwin} project;
2269@item
2270The @uref{http://www.mingw.org/,,MinGW} project.
2271@end itemize
2272
2273@item
2274@uref{ftp://ftp.thewrittenword.com/packages/by-name/,,The
2275Written Word} offers binaries for
2276AIX 4.3.2.
2277IRIX 6.5,
2278Digital UNIX 4.0D and 5.1,
2279GNU/Linux (i386),
2280HP-UX 10.20, 11.00, and 11.11, and
2281Solaris/SPARC 2.5.1, 2.6, 7, 8, and 9.
2282
2283@item
2284@uref{http://www.openpkg.org/,,OpenPKG} offers binaries for quite a
2285number of platforms.
2286
2287@item
2288The @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/GFortranBinaries,,GFortran Wiki} has
2289links to GNU Fortran binaries for several platforms.
2290@end itemize
2291
2292In addition to those specific offerings, you can get a binary
2293distribution CD-ROM from the
2294@uref{http://www.gnu.org/order/order.html,,Free Software Foundation}.
2295It contains binaries for a number of platforms, and
2296includes not only GCC, but other stuff as well. The current CD does
2297not contain the latest version of GCC, but it should allow
2298bootstrapping the compiler. An updated version of that disk is in the
2299works.
2300
2301@html
2302<hr />
2303<p>
2304@end html
2305@ifhtml
2306@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
2307@end ifhtml
2308@end ifset
2309
2310@c ***Specific****************************************************************
2311@ifnothtml
2312@comment node-name, next, previous, up
2313@node Specific, Old, Binaries, Top
2314@end ifnothtml
2315@ifset specifichtml
2316@ifnothtml
2317@chapter Host/target specific installation notes for GCC
2318@end ifnothtml
2319@cindex Specific
2320@cindex Specific installation notes
2321@cindex Target specific installation
2322@cindex Host specific installation
2323@cindex Target specific installation notes
2324
2325Please read this document carefully @emph{before} installing the
2326GNU Compiler Collection on your machine.
2327
2328Note that this list of install notes is @emph{not} a list of supported
2329hosts or targets. Not all supported hosts and targets are listed
2330here, only the ones that require host-specific or target-specific
2331information are.
2332
2333@ifhtml
2334@itemize
2335@item
2336@uref{#alpha-x-x,,alpha*-*-*}
2337@item
2338@uref{#alpha-dec-osf,,alpha*-dec-osf*}
2339@item
2340@uref{#alphaev5-cray-unicosmk,,alphaev5-cray-unicosmk*}
2341@item
2342@uref{#arc-x-elf,,arc-*-elf}
2343@item
2344@uref{#arm-x-elf,,arm-*-elf}
2345@uref{#arm-x-coff,,arm-*-coff}
2346@uref{#arm-x-aout,,arm-*-aout}
2347@item
2348@uref{#xscale-x-x,,xscale-*-*}
2349@item
2350@uref{#avr,,avr}
2351@item
2352@uref{#bfin,,Blackfin}
2353@item
2354@uref{#c4x,,c4x}
2355@item
2356@uref{#dos,,DOS}
2357@item
2358@uref{#x-x-freebsd,,*-*-freebsd*}
2359@item
2360@uref{#h8300-hms,,h8300-hms}
2361@item
2362@uref{#hppa-hp-hpux,,hppa*-hp-hpux*}
2363@item
2364@uref{#hppa-hp-hpux10,,hppa*-hp-hpux10}
2365@item
2366@uref{#hppa-hp-hpux11,,hppa*-hp-hpux11}
2367@item
2368@uref{#x-x-linux-gnu,,*-*-linux-gnu}
2369@item
2370@uref{#ix86-x-linuxaout,,i?86-*-linux*aout}
2371@item
2372@uref{#ix86-x-linux,,i?86-*-linux*}
2373@item
2374@uref{#ix86-x-sco32v5,,i?86-*-sco3.2v5*}
2375@item
2376@uref{#ix86-x-solaris210,,i?86-*-solaris2.10}
2377@item
2378@uref{#ix86-x-udk,,i?86-*-udk}
2379@item
2380@uref{#ia64-x-linux,,ia64-*-linux}
2381@item
2382@uref{#ia64-x-hpux,,ia64-*-hpux*}
2383@item
2384@uref{#x-ibm-aix,,*-ibm-aix*}
2385@item
2386@uref{#iq2000-x-elf,,iq2000-*-elf}
2387@item
2388@uref{#m32c-x-elf,,m32c-*-elf}
2389@item
2390@uref{#m32r-x-elf,,m32r-*-elf}
2391@item
2392@uref{#m6811-elf,,m6811-elf}
2393@item
2394@uref{#m6812-elf,,m6812-elf}
2395@item
2396@uref{#m68k-hp-hpux,,m68k-hp-hpux}
2397@item
2398@uref{#mips-x-x,,mips-*-*}
2399@item
2400@uref{#mips-sgi-irix5,,mips-sgi-irix5}
2401@item
2402@uref{#mips-sgi-irix6,,mips-sgi-irix6}
2403@item
2404@uref{#powerpc-x-x,,powerpc*-*-*, powerpc-*-sysv4}
2405@item
2406@uref{#powerpc-x-darwin,,powerpc-*-darwin*}
2407@item
2408@uref{#powerpc-x-elf,,powerpc-*-elf, powerpc-*-sysv4}
2409@item
2410@uref{#powerpc-x-linux-gnu,,powerpc*-*-linux-gnu*}
2411@item
2412@uref{#powerpc-x-netbsd,,powerpc-*-netbsd*}
2413@item
2414@uref{#powerpc-x-eabisim,,powerpc-*-eabisim}
2415@item
2416@uref{#powerpc-x-eabi,,powerpc-*-eabi}
2417@item
2418@uref{#powerpcle-x-elf,,powerpcle-*-elf, powerpcle-*-sysv4}
2419@item
2420@uref{#powerpcle-x-eabisim,,powerpcle-*-eabisim}
2421@item
2422@uref{#powerpcle-x-eabi,,powerpcle-*-eabi}
2423@item
2424@uref{#s390-x-linux,,s390-*-linux*}
2425@item
2426@uref{#s390x-x-linux,,s390x-*-linux*}
2427@item
2428@uref{#s390x-ibm-tpf,,s390x-ibm-tpf*}
2429@item
2430@uref{#x-x-solaris2,,*-*-solaris2*}
2431@item
2432@uref{#sparc-sun-solaris2,,sparc-sun-solaris2*}
2433@item
2434@uref{#sparc-sun-solaris27,,sparc-sun-solaris2.7}
2435@item
2436@uref{#sparc-x-linux,,sparc-*-linux*}
2437@item
2438@uref{#sparc64-x-solaris2,,sparc64-*-solaris2*}
2439@item
2440@uref{#sparcv9-x-solaris2,,sparcv9-*-solaris2*}
2441@item
2442@uref{#x-x-sysv,,*-*-sysv*}
2443@item
2444@uref{#vax-dec-ultrix,,vax-dec-ultrix}
2445@item
2446@uref{#x-x-vxworks,,*-*-vxworks*}
2447@item
2448@uref{#x86-64-x-x,,x86_64-*-*, amd64-*-*}
2449@item
2450@uref{#xtensa-x-elf,,xtensa-*-elf}
2451@item
2452@uref{#xtensa-x-linux,,xtensa-*-linux*}
2453@item
2454@uref{#windows,,Microsoft Windows}
2455@item
2456@uref{#os2,,OS/2}
2457@item
2458@uref{#older,,Older systems}
2459@end itemize
2460
2461@itemize
2462@item
2463@uref{#elf,,all ELF targets} (SVR4, Solaris 2, etc.)
2464@end itemize
2465@end ifhtml
2466
2467
2468@html
2469<!-- -------- host/target specific issues start here ---------------- -->
2470<hr />
2471@end html
2472@heading @anchor{alpha-x-x}alpha*-*-*
2473
2474This section contains general configuration information for all
2475alpha-based platforms using ELF (in particular, ignore this section for
2476DEC OSF/1, Digital UNIX and Tru64 UNIX)@. In addition to reading this
2477section, please read all other sections that match your target.
2478
2479We require binutils 2.11.2 or newer.
2480Previous binutils releases had a number of problems with DWARF 2
2481debugging information, not the least of which is incorrect linking of
2482shared libraries.
2483
2484@html
2485<hr />
2486@end html
2487@heading @anchor{alpha-dec-osf}alpha*-dec-osf*
2488Systems using processors that implement the DEC Alpha architecture and
2489are running the DEC/Compaq Unix (DEC OSF/1, Digital UNIX, or Compaq
2490Tru64 UNIX) operating system, for example the DEC Alpha AXP systems.
2491
2492As of GCC 3.2, versions before @code{alpha*-dec-osf4} are no longer
2493supported. (These are the versions which identify themselves as DEC
2494OSF/1.)
2495
2496In Digital Unix V4.0, virtual memory exhausted bootstrap failures
2497may be fixed by configuring with @option{--with-gc=simple},
2498reconfiguring Kernel Virtual Memory and Swap parameters
2499per the @command{/usr/sbin/sys_check} Tuning Suggestions,
2500or applying the patch in
2501@uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/2002-08/msg00822.html}.
2502
2503In Tru64 UNIX V5.1, Compaq introduced a new assembler that does not
2504currently (2001-06-13) work with @command{mips-tfile}. As a workaround,
2505we need to use the old assembler, invoked via the barely documented
2506@option{-oldas} option. To bootstrap GCC, you either need to use the
2507Compaq C Compiler:
2508
2509@smallexample
2510 % CC=cc @var{srcdir}/configure [@var{options}] [@var{target}]
2511@end smallexample
2512
2513or you can use a copy of GCC 2.95.3 or higher built on Tru64 UNIX V4.0:
2514
2515@smallexample
2516 % CC=gcc -Wa,-oldas @var{srcdir}/configure [@var{options}] [@var{target}]
2517@end smallexample
2518
2519As of GNU binutils 2.11.2, neither GNU @command{as} nor GNU @command{ld}
2520are supported on Tru64 UNIX, so you must not configure GCC with
2521@option{--with-gnu-as} or @option{--with-gnu-ld}.
2522
2523GCC writes a @samp{.verstamp} directive to the assembler output file
2524unless it is built as a cross-compiler. It gets the version to use from
2525the system header file @file{/usr/include/stamp.h}. If you install a
2526new version of DEC Unix, you should rebuild GCC to pick up the new version
2527stamp.
2528
2529Note that since the Alpha is a 64-bit architecture, cross-compilers from
253032-bit machines will not generate code as efficient as that generated
2531when the compiler is running on a 64-bit machine because many
2532optimizations that depend on being able to represent a word on the
2533target in an integral value on the host cannot be performed. Building
2534cross-compilers on the Alpha for 32-bit machines has only been tested in
2535a few cases and may not work properly.
2536
2537@samp{make compare} may fail on old versions of DEC Unix unless you add
2538@option{-save-temps} to @code{CFLAGS}. On these systems, the name of the
2539assembler input file is stored in the object file, and that makes
2540comparison fail if it differs between the @code{stage1} and
2541@code{stage2} compilations. The option @option{-save-temps} forces a
2542fixed name to be used for the assembler input file, instead of a
2543randomly chosen name in @file{/tmp}. Do not add @option{-save-temps}
2544unless the comparisons fail without that option. If you add
2545@option{-save-temps}, you will have to manually delete the @samp{.i} and
2546@samp{.s} files after each series of compilations.
2547
2548GCC now supports both the native (ECOFF) debugging format used by DBX
2549and GDB and an encapsulated STABS format for use only with GDB@. See the
2550discussion of the @option{--with-stabs} option of @file{configure} above
2551for more information on these formats and how to select them.
2552
2553There is a bug in DEC's assembler that produces incorrect line numbers
2554for ECOFF format when the @samp{.align} directive is used. To work
2555around this problem, GCC will not emit such alignment directives
2556while writing ECOFF format debugging information even if optimization is
2557being performed. Unfortunately, this has the very undesirable
2558side-effect that code addresses when @option{-O} is specified are
2559different depending on whether or not @option{-g} is also specified.
2560
2561To avoid this behavior, specify @option{-gstabs+} and use GDB instead of
2562DBX@. DEC is now aware of this problem with the assembler and hopes to
2563provide a fix shortly.
2564
2565@html
2566<hr />
2567@end html
2568@heading @anchor{alphaev5-cray-unicosmk}alphaev5-cray-unicosmk*
2569Cray T3E systems running Unicos/Mk.
2570
2571This port is incomplete and has many known bugs. We hope to improve the
2572support for this target soon. Currently, only the C front end is supported,
2573and it is not possible to build parallel applications. Cray modules are not
2574supported; in particular, Craylibs are assumed to be in
2575@file{/opt/ctl/craylibs/craylibs}.
2576
2577On this platform, you need to tell GCC where to find the assembler and
2578the linker. The simplest way to do so is by providing @option{--with-as}
2579and @option{--with-ld} to @file{configure}, e.g.@:
2580
2581@smallexample
2582 configure --with-as=/opt/ctl/bin/cam --with-ld=/opt/ctl/bin/cld \
2583 --enable-languages=c
2584@end smallexample
2585
2586The comparison test at the end of the bootstrapping process fails on Unicos/Mk
2587because the assembler inserts timestamps into object files. You should
2588be able to work around this by doing @samp{make all} after getting this
2589failure.
2590
2591@html
2592<hr />
2593@end html
2594@heading @anchor{arc-x-elf}arc-*-elf
2595Argonaut ARC processor.
2596This configuration is intended for embedded systems.
2597
2598@html
2599<hr />
2600@end html
2601@heading @anchor{arm-x-elf}arm-*-elf
2602@heading @anchor{xscale-x-x}xscale-*-*
2603ARM-family processors. Subtargets that use the ELF object format
2604require GNU binutils 2.13 or newer. Such subtargets include:
2605@code{arm-*-freebsd}, @code{arm-*-netbsdelf}, @code{arm-*-*linux},
2606@code{arm-*-rtems} and @code{arm-*-kaos}.
2607
2608@html
2609<hr />
2610@end html
2611@heading @anchor{arm-x-coff}arm-*-coff
2612ARM-family processors. Note that there are two different varieties
2613of PE format subtarget supported: @code{arm-wince-pe} and
2614@code{arm-pe} as well as a standard COFF target @code{arm-*-coff}.
2615
2616@html
2617<hr />
2618@end html
2619@heading @anchor{arm-x-aout}arm-*-aout
2620ARM-family processors. These targets support the AOUT file format:
2621@code{arm-*-aout}, @code{arm-*-netbsd}.
2622
2623@html
2624<hr />
2625@end html
2626@heading @anchor{avr}avr
2627
2628ATMEL AVR-family micro controllers. These are used in embedded
2629applications. There are no standard Unix configurations.
2630@ifnothtml
2631@xref{AVR Options,, AVR Options, gcc, Using the GNU Compiler
2632Collection (GCC)},
2633@end ifnothtml
2634@ifhtml
2635See ``AVR Options'' in the main manual
2636@end ifhtml
2637for the list of supported MCU types.
2638
2639Use @samp{configure --target=avr --enable-languages="c"} to configure GCC@.
2640
2641Further installation notes and other useful information about AVR tools
2642can also be obtained from:
2643
2644@itemize @bullet
2645@item
2646@uref{http://www.nongnu.org/avr/,,http://www.nongnu.org/avr/}
2647@item
2648@uref{http://home.overta.ru/users/denisc/,,http://home.overta.ru/users/denisc/}
2649@item
2650@uref{http://www.amelek.gda.pl/avr/,,http://www.amelek.gda.pl/avr/}
2651@end itemize
2652
2653We @emph{strongly} recommend using binutils 2.13 or newer.
2654
2655The following error:
2656@smallexample
2657 Error: register required
2658@end smallexample
2659
2660indicates that you should upgrade to a newer version of the binutils.
2661
2662@html
2663<hr />
2664@end html
2665@heading @anchor{bfin}Blackfin
2666
2667The Blackfin processor, an Analog Devices DSP.
2668@ifnothtml
2669@xref{Blackfin Options,, Blackfin Options, gcc, Using the GNU Compiler
2670Collection (GCC)},
2671@end ifnothtml
2672@ifhtml
2673See ``Blackfin Options'' in the main manual
2674@end ifhtml
2675
2676More information, and a version of binutils with support for this processor,
2677is available at @uref{http://blackfin.uclinux.org}
2678
2679@html
2680<hr />
2681@end html
2682@heading @anchor{c4x}c4x
2683
2684Texas Instruments TMS320C3x and TMS320C4x Floating Point Digital Signal
2685Processors. These are used in embedded applications. There are no
2686standard Unix configurations.
2687@ifnothtml
2688@xref{TMS320C3x/C4x Options,, TMS320C3x/C4x Options, gcc, Using the
2689GNU Compiler Collection (GCC)},
2690@end ifnothtml
2691@ifhtml
2692See ``TMS320C3x/C4x Options'' in the main manual
2693@end ifhtml
2694for the list of supported MCU types.
2695
2696GCC can be configured as a cross compiler for both the C3x and C4x
2697architectures on the same system. Use @samp{configure --target=c4x
2698--enable-languages="c,c++"} to configure.
2699
2700
2701Further installation notes and other useful information about C4x tools
2702can also be obtained from:
2703
2704@itemize @bullet
2705@item
2706@uref{http://www.elec.canterbury.ac.nz/c4x/,,http://www.elec.canterbury.ac.nz/c4x/}
2707@end itemize
2708
2709@html
2710<hr />
2711@end html
2712@heading @anchor{cris}CRIS
2713
2714CRIS is the CPU architecture in Axis Communications ETRAX system-on-a-chip
2715series. These are used in embedded applications.
2716
2717@ifnothtml
2718@xref{CRIS Options,, CRIS Options, gcc, Using the GNU Compiler
2719Collection (GCC)},
2720@end ifnothtml
2721@ifhtml
2722See ``CRIS Options'' in the main manual
2723@end ifhtml
2724for a list of CRIS-specific options.
2725
2726There are a few different CRIS targets:
2727@table @code
2728@item cris-axis-aout
2729Old target. Includes a multilib for the @samp{elinux} a.out-based
2730target. No multilibs for newer architecture variants.
2731@item cris-axis-elf
2732Mainly for monolithic embedded systems. Includes a multilib for the
2733@samp{v10} core used in @samp{ETRAX 100 LX}.
2734@item cris-axis-linux-gnu
2735A GNU/Linux port for the CRIS architecture, currently targeting
2736@samp{ETRAX 100 LX} by default.
2737@end table
2738
2739For @code{cris-axis-aout} and @code{cris-axis-elf} you need binutils 2.11
2740or newer. For @code{cris-axis-linux-gnu} you need binutils 2.12 or newer.
2741
2742Pre-packaged tools can be obtained from
2743@uref{ftp://ftp.axis.com/pub/axis/tools/cris/compiler-kit/}. More
2744information about this platform is available at
2745@uref{http://developer.axis.com/}.
2746
2747@html
2748<hr />
2749@end html
2750@heading @anchor{crx}CRX
2751
2752The CRX CompactRISC architecture is a low-power 32-bit architecture with
2753fast context switching and architectural extensibility features.
2754
2755@ifnothtml
2756@xref{CRX Options,, CRX Options, gcc, Using and Porting the GNU Compiler
2757Collection (GCC)},
2758@end ifnothtml
2759
2760@ifhtml
2761See ``CRX Options'' in the main manual for a list of CRX-specific options.
2762@end ifhtml
2763
2764Use @samp{configure --target=crx-elf --enable-languages=c,c++} to configure
2765GCC@ for building a CRX cross-compiler. The option @samp{--target=crx-elf}
2766is also used to build the @samp{newlib} C library for CRX.
2767
2768It is also possible to build libstdc++-v3 for the CRX architecture. This
2769needs to be done in a separate step with the following configure settings:
2770@samp{gcc/libstdc++-v3/configure --host=crx-elf --with-newlib
2771--enable-sjlj-exceptions --enable-cxx-flags='-fexceptions -frtti'}
2772
2773@html
2774<hr />
2775@end html
2776@heading @anchor{dos}DOS
2777
2778Please have a look at the @uref{binaries.html,,binaries page}.
2779
2780You cannot install GCC by itself on MSDOS; it will not compile under
2781any MSDOS compiler except itself. You need to get the complete
2782compilation package DJGPP, which includes binaries as well as sources,
2783and includes all the necessary compilation tools and libraries.
2784
2785@html
2786<hr />
2787@end html
2788@heading @anchor{x-x-freebsd}*-*-freebsd*
2789
2790The version of binutils installed in @file{/usr/bin} probably works with
2791this release of GCC@. However, on FreeBSD 4, bootstrapping against the
2792latest FSF binutils is known to improve overall testsuite results; and,
2793on FreeBSD/alpha, using binutils 2.14 or later is required to build libjava.
2794
2795Support for FreeBSD 1 was discontinued in GCC 3.2.
2796
2797Support for FreeBSD 2 will be discontinued after GCC 3.4. The
2798following was true for GCC 3.1 but the current status is unknown.
2799For FreeBSD 2 or any mutant a.out versions of FreeBSD 3: All
2800configuration support and files as shipped with GCC 2.95 are still in
2801place. FreeBSD 2.2.7 has been known to bootstrap completely; however,
2802it is unknown which version of binutils was used (it is assumed that it
2803was the system copy in @file{/usr/bin}) and C++ EH failures were noted.
2804
2805For FreeBSD using the ELF file format: DWARF 2 debugging is now the
2806default for all CPU architectures. It had been the default on
2807FreeBSD/alpha since its inception. You may use @option{-gstabs} instead
2808of @option{-g}, if you really want the old debugging format. There are
2809no known issues with mixing object files and libraries with different
2810debugging formats. Otherwise, this release of GCC should now match more
2811of the configuration used in the stock FreeBSD configuration of GCC@. In
2812particular, @option{--enable-threads} is now configured by default.
2813However, as a general user, do not attempt to replace the system
2814compiler with this release. Known to bootstrap and check with good
2815results on FreeBSD 4.9-STABLE and 5-CURRENT@. In the past, known to
2816bootstrap and check with good results on FreeBSD 3.0, 3.4, 4.0, 4.2,
28174.3, 4.4, 4.5, 4.8-STABLE@.
2818
2819In principle, @option{--enable-threads} is now compatible with
2820@option{--enable-libgcj} on FreeBSD@. However, it has only been built
2821and tested on @samp{i386-*-freebsd[45]} and @samp{alpha-*-freebsd[45]}.
2822The static
2823library may be incorrectly built (symbols are missing at link time).
2824There is a rare timing-based startup hang (probably involves an
2825assumption about the thread library). Multi-threaded boehm-gc (required for
2826libjava) exposes severe threaded signal-handling bugs on FreeBSD before
28274.5-RELEASE@. Other CPU architectures
2828supported by FreeBSD will require additional configuration tuning in, at
2829the very least, both boehm-gc and libffi.
2830
2831Shared @file{libgcc_s.so} is now built and installed by default.
2832
2833@html
2834<hr />
2835@end html
2836@heading @anchor{h8300-hms}h8300-hms
2837Renesas H8/300 series of processors.
2838
2839Please have a look at the @uref{binaries.html,,binaries page}.
2840
2841The calling convention and structure layout has changed in release 2.6.
2842All code must be recompiled. The calling convention now passes the
2843first three arguments in function calls in registers. Structures are no
2844longer a multiple of 2 bytes.
2845
2846@html
2847<hr />
2848@end html
2849@heading @anchor{hppa-hp-hpux}hppa*-hp-hpux*
2850Support for HP-UX version 9 and older was discontinued in GCC 3.4.
2851
2852We require using gas/binutils on all hppa platforms;
2853you may encounter a variety of problems if you try to use the HP assembler.
2854
2855Specifically, @option{-g} does not work on HP-UX (since that system
2856uses a peculiar debugging format which GCC does not know about), unless
2857you use GAS and GDB@. It may be helpful to configure GCC with the
2858@uref{./configure.html#with-gnu-as,,@option{--with-gnu-as}} and
2859@option{--with-as=@dots{}} options to ensure that GCC can find GAS@.
2860
2861If you wish to use the pa-risc 2.0 architecture support with a 32-bit
2862runtime, you must use gas/binutils 2.11 or newer.
2863
2864There are two default scheduling models for instructions. These are
2865PROCESSOR_7100LC and PROCESSOR_8000. They are selected from the pa-risc
2866architecture specified for the target machine when configuring.
2867PROCESSOR_8000 is the default. PROCESSOR_7100LC is selected when
2868the target is a @samp{hppa1*} machine.
2869
2870The PROCESSOR_8000 model is not well suited to older processors. Thus,
2871it is important to completely specify the machine architecture when
2872configuring if you want a model other than PROCESSOR_8000. The macro
2873TARGET_SCHED_DEFAULT can be defined in BOOT_CFLAGS if a different
2874default scheduling model is desired.
2875
2876As of GCC 4.0, GCC uses the UNIX 95 namespace for HP-UX 10.10
2877through 11.00, and the UNIX 98 namespace for HP-UX 11.11 and later.
2878This namespace change might cause problems when bootstrapping with
2879an earlier version of GCC or the HP compiler as essentially the same
2880namespace is required for an entire build. This problem can be avoided
2881in a number of ways. With HP cc, @env{UNIX_STD} can be set to @samp{95}
2882or @samp{98}. Another way is to add an appropriate set of predefines
2883to @env{CC}. The description for the @option{munix=} option contains
2884a list of the predefines used with each standard.
2885
2886As of GCC 4.1, @env{DWARF2} exception handling is available on HP-UX.
2887It is now the default. This exposed a bug in the handling of data
2888relocations in the GAS assembler. The handling of 64-bit data relocations
2889was seriously broken, affecting debugging and exception support on all
2890@samp{hppa64-*-*} targets. Under some circumstances, 32-bit data relocations
2891could also be handled incorrectly. This problem is fixed in GAS version
28922.16.91 20051125.
2893
2894GCC versions prior to 4.1 incorrectly passed and returned complex
2895values. They are now passed in the same manner as aggregates.
2896
2897More specific information to @samp{hppa*-hp-hpux*} targets follows.
2898
2899@html
2900<hr />
2901@end html
2902@heading @anchor{hppa-hp-hpux10}hppa*-hp-hpux10
2903
2904For hpux10.20, we @emph{highly} recommend you pick up the latest sed patch
2905@code{PHCO_19798} from HP@. HP has two sites which provide patches free of
2906charge:
2907
2908@itemize @bullet
2909@item
2910@html
2911<a href="http://us.itrc.hp.com/service/home/home.do">US, Canada, Asia-Pacific, and
2912Latin-America</a>
2913@end html
2914@ifnothtml
2915@uref{http://us.itrc.hp.com/service/home/home.do,,} US, Canada, Asia-Pacific,
2916and Latin-America.
2917@end ifnothtml
2918@item
2919@uref{http://europe.itrc.hp.com/service/home/home.do,,} Europe.
2920@end itemize
2921
2922The HP assembler on these systems has some problems. Most notably the
2923assembler inserts timestamps into each object file it creates, causing
2924the 3-stage comparison test to fail during a bootstrap.
2925You should be able to continue by saying @samp{make all-host all-target}
2926after getting the failure from @samp{make}.
2927
2928GCC 4.0 requires CVS binutils as of April 28, 2004 or later. Earlier
2929versions require binutils 2.8 or later.
2930
2931The C++ ABI has changed incompatibly in GCC 4.0. COMDAT subspaces are
2932used for one-only code and data. This resolves many of the previous
2933problems in using C++ on this target. However, the ABI is not compatible
2934with the one implemented under HP-UX 11 using secondary definitions.
2935
2936@html
2937<hr />
2938@end html
2939@heading @anchor{hppa-hp-hpux11}hppa*-hp-hpux11
2940
2941GCC 3.0 and up support HP-UX 11. GCC 2.95.x is not supported and cannot
2942be used to compile GCC 3.0 and up.
2943
2944Refer to @uref{binaries.html,,binaries} for information about obtaining
2945precompiled GCC binaries for HP-UX@. Precompiled binaries must be obtained
2946to build the Ada language as it can't be bootstrapped using C@. Ada is
2947only available for the 32-bit PA-RISC runtime. The libffi and libjava
2948haven't been ported to HP-UX and don't build.
2949
2950Starting with GCC 3.4 an ISO C compiler is required to bootstrap. The
2951bundled compiler supports only traditional C; you will need either HP's
2952unbundled compiler, or a binary distribution of GCC@.
2953
2954It is possible to build GCC 3.3 starting with the bundled HP compiler,
2955but the process requires several steps. GCC 3.3 can then be used to
2956build later versions. The fastjar program contains ISO C code and
2957can't be built with the HP bundled compiler. This problem can be
2958avoided by not building the Java language. For example, use the
2959@option{--enable-languages="c,c++,f77,objc"} option in your configure
2960command.
2961
2962There are several possible approaches to building the distribution.
2963Binutils can be built first using the HP tools. Then, the GCC
2964distribution can be built. The second approach is to build GCC
2965first using the HP tools, then build binutils, then rebuild GCC@.
2966There have been problems with various binary distributions, so it
2967is best not to start from a binary distribution.
2968
2969On 64-bit capable systems, there are two distinct targets. Different
2970installation prefixes must be used if both are to be installed on
2971the same system. The @samp{hppa[1-2]*-hp-hpux11*} target generates code
2972for the 32-bit PA-RISC runtime architecture and uses the HP linker.
2973The @samp{hppa64-hp-hpux11*} target generates 64-bit code for the
2974PA-RISC 2.0 architecture. The HP and GNU linkers are both supported
2975for this target.
2976
2977The script config.guess now selects the target type based on the compiler
2978detected during configuration. You must define @env{PATH} or @env{CC} so
2979that configure finds an appropriate compiler for the initial bootstrap.
2980When @env{CC} is used, the definition should contain the options that are
2981needed whenever @env{CC} is used.
2982
2983Specifically, options that determine the runtime architecture must be
2984in @env{CC} to correctly select the target for the build. It is also
2985convenient to place many other compiler options in @env{CC}. For example,
2986@env{CC="cc -Ac +DA2.0W -Wp,-H16376 -D_CLASSIC_TYPES -D_HPUX_SOURCE"}
2987can be used to bootstrap the GCC 3.3 branch with the HP compiler in
298864-bit K&R/bundled mode. The @option{+DA2.0W} option will result in
2989the automatic selection of the @samp{hppa64-hp-hpux11*} target. The
2990macro definition table of cpp needs to be increased for a successful
2991build with the HP compiler. _CLASSIC_TYPES and _HPUX_SOURCE need to
2992be defined when building with the bundled compiler, or when using the
2993@option{-Ac} option. These defines aren't necessary with @option{-Ae}.
2994
2995It is best to explicitly configure the @samp{hppa64-hp-hpux11*} target
2996with the @option{--with-ld=@dots{}} option. This overrides the standard
2997search for ld. The two linkers supported on this target require different
2998commands. The default linker is determined during configuration. As a
2999result, it's not possible to switch linkers in the middle of a GCC build.
3000This has been been reported to sometimes occur in unified builds of
3001binutils and GCC@.
3002
3003GCC 3.0 through 3.2 require binutils 2.11 or above. GCC 3.3 through
3004GCC 4.0 require binutils 2.14 or later.
3005
3006Although the HP assembler can be used for an initial build, it shouldn't
3007be used with any languages other than C and perhaps Fortran due to its
3008many limitations. For example, it does not support weak symbols or alias
3009definitions. As a result, explicit template instantiations are required
3010when using C++. This makes it difficult if not impossible to build many
3011C++ applications. You can't generate debugging information when using
3012the HP assembler. Finally, bootstrapping fails in the final
3013comparison of object modules due to the time stamps that it inserts into
3014the modules. The bootstrap can be continued from this point with
3015@samp{make all-host all-target}.
3016
3017A recent linker patch must be installed for the correct operation of
3018GCC 3.3 and later. @code{PHSS_26559} and @code{PHSS_24304} are the
3019oldest linker patches that are known to work. They are for HP-UX
302011.00 and 11.11, respectively. @code{PHSS_24303}, the companion to
3021@code{PHSS_24304}, might be usable but it hasn't been tested. These
3022patches have been superseded. Consult the HP patch database to obtain
3023the currently recommended linker patch for your system.
3024
3025The patches are necessary for the support of weak symbols on the
302632-bit port, and for the running of initializers and finalizers. Weak
3027symbols are implemented using SOM secondary definition symbols. Prior
3028to HP-UX 11, there are bugs in the linker support for secondary symbols.
3029The patches correct a problem of linker core dumps creating shared
3030libraries containing secondary symbols, as well as various other
3031linking issues involving secondary symbols.
3032
3033GCC 3.3 uses the ELF DT_INIT_ARRAY and DT_FINI_ARRAY capabilities to
3034run initializers and finalizers on the 64-bit port. The 32-bit port
3035uses the linker @option{+init} and @option{+fini} options for the same
3036purpose. The patches correct various problems with the +init/+fini
3037options, including program core dumps. Binutils 2.14 corrects a
3038problem on the 64-bit port resulting from HP's non-standard use of
3039the .init and .fini sections for array initializers and finalizers.
3040
3041There are a number of issues to consider in selecting which linker to
3042use with the 64-bit port. The GNU 64-bit linker can only create dynamic
3043binaries. The @option{-static} option causes linking with archive
3044libraries but doesn't produce a truly static binary. Dynamic binaries
3045still require final binding by the dynamic loader to resolve a set of
3046dynamic-loader-defined symbols. The default behavior of the HP linker
3047is the same as the GNU linker. However, it can generate true 64-bit
3048static binaries using the @option{+compat} option.
3049
3050The HP 64-bit linker doesn't support linkonce semantics. As a
3051result, C++ programs have many more sections than they should.
3052
3053The GNU 64-bit linker has some issues with shared library support
3054and exceptions. As a result, we only support libgcc in archive
3055format. For similar reasons, dwarf2 unwind and exception support
3056are disabled. The GNU linker also has problems creating binaries
3057with @option{-static}. It doesn't provide stubs for internal
3058calls to global functions in shared libraries, so these calls
3059can't be overloaded.
3060
3061Thread support is not implemented in GCC 3.0 through 3.2, so the
3062@option{--enable-threads} configure option does not work. In 3.3
3063and later, POSIX threads are supported. The optional DCE thread
3064library is not supported.
3065
3066This port still is undergoing significant development.
3067
3068@html
3069<hr />
3070@end html
3071@heading @anchor{x-x-linux-gnu}*-*-linux-gnu
3072
3073Versions of libstdc++-v3 starting with 3.2.1 require bugfixes present
3074in glibc 2.2.5 and later. More information is available in the
3075libstdc++-v3 documentation.
3076
3077@html
3078<hr />
3079@end html
3080@heading @anchor{ix86-x-linuxaout}i?86-*-linux*aout
3081Use this configuration to generate @file{a.out} binaries on Linux-based
3082GNU systems. This configuration is being superseded.
3083
3084@html
3085<hr />
3086@end html
3087@heading @anchor{ix86-x-linux}i?86-*-linux*
3088
3089As of GCC 3.3, binutils 2.13.1 or later is required for this platform.
3090See @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10877,,bug 10877} for more information.
3091
3092If you receive Signal 11 errors when building on GNU/Linux, then it is
3093possible you have a hardware problem. Further information on this can be
3094found on @uref{http://www.bitwizard.nl/sig11/,,www.bitwizard.nl}.
3095
3096@html
3097<hr />
3098@end html
3099@heading @anchor{ix86-x-sco32v5}i?86-*-sco3.2v5*
3100Use this for the SCO OpenServer Release 5 family of operating systems.
3101
3102Unlike earlier versions of GCC, the ability to generate COFF with this
3103target is no longer provided.
3104
3105Earlier versions of GCC emitted DWARF 1 when generating ELF to allow
3106the system debugger to be used. That support was too burdensome to
3107maintain. GCC now emits only DWARF 2 for this target. This means you
3108may use either the UDK debugger or GDB to debug programs built by this
3109version of GCC@.
3110
3111GCC is now only supported on releases 5.0.4 and later, and requires that
3112you install Support Level Supplement OSS646B or later, and Support Level
3113Supplement OSS631C or later. If you are using release 5.0.7 of
3114OpenServer, you must have at least the first maintenance pack installed
3115(this includes the relevant portions of OSS646). OSS646, also known as
3116the ``Execution Environment Update'', provides updated link editors and
3117assemblers, as well as updated standard C and math libraries. The C
3118startup modules are also updated to support the System V gABI draft, and
3119GCC relies on that behavior. OSS631 provides a collection of commonly
3120used open source libraries, some of which GCC depends on (such as GNU
3121gettext and zlib). SCO OpenServer Release 5.0.7 has all of this built
3122in by default, but OSS631C and later also apply to that release. Please
3123visit
3124@uref{ftp://ftp.sco.com/pub/openserver5,,ftp://ftp.sco.com/pub/openserver5}
3125for the latest versions of these (and other potentially useful)
3126supplements.
3127
3128Although there is support for using the native assembler, it is
3129recommended that you configure GCC to use the GNU assembler. You do
3130this by using the flags
3131@uref{./configure.html#with-gnu-as,,@option{--with-gnu-as}}. You should
3132use a modern version of GNU binutils. Version 2.13.2.1 was used for all
3133testing. In general, only the @option{--with-gnu-as} option is tested.
3134A modern bintuils (as well as a plethora of other development related
3135GNU utilities) can be found in Support Level Supplement OSS658A, the
3136``GNU Development Tools'' package. See the SCO web and ftp sites for details.
3137That package also contains the currently ``officially supported'' version of
3138GCC, version 2.95.3. It is useful for bootstrapping this version.
3139
3140@html
3141<hr />
3142@end html
3143@heading @anchor{ix86-x-solaris210}i?86-*-solaris2.10
3144Use this for Solaris 10 or later on x86 and x86-64 systems. This
3145configuration is supported by GCC 4.0 and later versions only.
3146
3147It is recommended that you configure GCC to use the GNU assembler in
3148@file{/usr/sfw/bin/gas} but the Sun linker, using the options
3149@option{--with-gnu-as --with-as=/usr/sfw/bin/gas --without-gnu-ld
3150--with-ld=/usr/ccs/bin/ld}.
3151
3152@html
3153<hr />
3154@end html
3155@heading @anchor{ix86-x-udk}i?86-*-udk
3156
3157This target emulates the SCO Universal Development Kit and requires that
3158package be installed. (If it is installed, you will have a
3159@file{/udk/usr/ccs/bin/cc} file present.) It's very much like the
3160@samp{i?86-*-unixware7*} target
3161but is meant to be used when hosting on a system where UDK isn't the
3162default compiler such as OpenServer 5 or Unixware 2. This target will
3163generate binaries that will run on OpenServer, Unixware 2, or Unixware 7,
3164with the same warnings and caveats as the SCO UDK@.
3165
3166This target is a little tricky to build because we have to distinguish
3167it from the native tools (so it gets headers, startups, and libraries
3168from the right place) while making the tools not think we're actually
3169building a cross compiler. The easiest way to do this is with a configure
3170command like this:
3171
3172@smallexample
3173 CC=/udk/usr/ccs/bin/cc @var{/your/path/to}/gcc/configure \
3174 --host=i686-pc-udk --target=i686-pc-udk --program-prefix=udk-
3175@end smallexample
3176
3177@emph{You should substitute @samp{i686} in the above command with the appropriate
3178processor for your host.}
3179
3180After the usual @samp{make} and
3181@samp{make install}, you can then access the UDK-targeted GCC
3182tools by adding @command{udk-} before the commonly known name. For
3183example, to invoke the C compiler, you would use @command{udk-gcc}.
3184They will coexist peacefully with any native-target GCC tools you may
3185have installed.
3186
3187
3188@html
3189<hr />
3190@end html
3191@heading @anchor{ia64-x-linux}ia64-*-linux
3192IA-64 processor (also known as IPF, or Itanium Processor Family)
3193running GNU/Linux.
3194
3195If you are using the installed system libunwind library with
3196@option{--with-system-libunwind}, then you must use libunwind 0.98 or
3197later.
3198
3199None of the following versions of GCC has an ABI that is compatible
3200with any of the other versions in this list, with the exception that
3201Red Hat 2.96 and Trillian 000171 are compatible with each other:
32023.1, 3.0.2, 3.0.1, 3.0, Red Hat 2.96, and Trillian 000717.
3203This primarily affects C++ programs and programs that create shared libraries.
3204GCC 3.1 or later is recommended for compiling linux, the kernel.
3205As of version 3.1 GCC is believed to be fully ABI compliant, and hence no
3206more major ABI changes are expected.
3207
3208@html
3209<hr />
3210@end html
3211@heading @anchor{ia64-x-hpux}ia64-*-hpux*
3212Building GCC on this target requires the GNU Assembler. The bundled HP
3213assembler will not work. To prevent GCC from using the wrong assembler,
3214the option @option{--with-gnu-as} may be necessary.
3215
3216The GCC libunwind library has not been ported to HPUX@. This means that for
3217GCC versions 3.2.3 and earlier, @option{--enable-libunwind-exceptions}
3218is required to build GCC@. For GCC 3.3 and later, this is the default.
3219For gcc 3.4.3 and later, @option{--enable-libunwind-exceptions} is
3220removed and the system libunwind library will always be used.
3221
3222@html
3223<hr />
3224<!-- rs6000-ibm-aix*, powerpc-ibm-aix* -->
3225@end html
3226@heading @anchor{x-ibm-aix}*-ibm-aix*
3227Support for AIX version 3 and older was discontinued in GCC 3.4.
3228
3229``out of memory'' bootstrap failures may indicate a problem with
3230process resource limits (ulimit). Hard limits are configured in the
3231@file{/etc/security/limits} system configuration file.
3232
3233To speed up the configuration phases of bootstrapping and installing GCC,
3234one may use GNU Bash instead of AIX @command{/bin/sh}, e.g.,
3235
3236@smallexample
3237 % CONFIG_SHELL=/opt/freeware/bin/bash
3238 % export CONFIG_SHELL
3239@end smallexample
3240
3241and then proceed as described in @uref{build.html,,the build
3242instructions}, where we strongly recommend specifying an absolute path
3243to invoke @var{srcdir}/configure.
3244
3245Because GCC on AIX is built as a 32-bit executable by default,
3246(although it can generate 64-bit programs) the GMP and MPFR libraries
3247required by gfortran must be 32-bit libraries. Building GMP and MPFR
3248as static archive libraries works better than shared libraries.
3249
3250Errors involving @code{alloca} when building GCC generally are due
3251to an incorrect definition of @code{CC} in the Makefile or mixing files
3252compiled with the native C compiler and GCC@. During the stage1 phase of
3253the build, the native AIX compiler @strong{must} be invoked as @command{cc}
3254(not @command{xlc}). Once @command{configure} has been informed of
3255@command{xlc}, one needs to use @samp{make distclean} to remove the
3256configure cache files and ensure that @env{CC} environment variable
3257does not provide a definition that will confuse @command{configure}.
3258If this error occurs during stage2 or later, then the problem most likely
3259is the version of Make (see above).
3260
3261The native @command{as} and @command{ld} are recommended for bootstrapping
3262on AIX 4 and required for bootstrapping on AIX 5L@. The GNU Assembler
3263reports that it supports WEAK symbols on AIX 4, which causes GCC to try to
3264utilize weak symbol functionality although it is not supported. The GNU
3265Assembler and Linker do not support AIX 5L sufficiently to bootstrap GCC@.
3266The native AIX tools do interoperate with GCC@.
3267
3268Building @file{libstdc++.a} requires a fix for an AIX Assembler bug
3269APAR IY26685 (AIX 4.3) or APAR IY25528 (AIX 5.1). It also requires a
3270fix for another AIX Assembler bug and a co-dependent AIX Archiver fix
3271referenced as APAR IY53606 (AIX 5.2) or a APAR IY54774 (AIX 5.1)
3272
3273@samp{libstdc++} in GCC 3.4 increments the major version number of the
3274shared object and GCC installation places the @file{libstdc++.a}
3275shared library in a common location which will overwrite the and GCC
32763.3 version of the shared library. Applications either need to be
3277re-linked against the new shared library or the GCC 3.1 and GCC 3.3
3278versions of the @samp{libstdc++} shared object needs to be available
3279to the AIX runtime loader. The GCC 3.1 @samp{libstdc++.so.4}, if
3280present, and GCC 3.3 @samp{libstdc++.so.5} shared objects can be
3281installed for runtime dynamic loading using the following steps to set
3282the @samp{F_LOADONLY} flag in the shared object for @emph{each}
3283multilib @file{libstdc++.a} installed:
3284
3285Extract the shared objects from the currently installed
3286@file{libstdc++.a} archive:
3287@smallexample
3288 % ar -x libstdc++.a libstdc++.so.4 libstdc++.so.5
3289@end smallexample
3290
3291Enable the @samp{F_LOADONLY} flag so that the shared object will be
3292available for runtime dynamic loading, but not linking:
3293@smallexample
3294 % strip -e libstdc++.so.4 libstdc++.so.5
3295@end smallexample
3296
3297Archive the runtime-only shared object in the GCC 3.4
3298@file{libstdc++.a} archive:
3299@smallexample
3300 % ar -q libstdc++.a libstdc++.so.4 libstdc++.so.5
3301@end smallexample
3302
3303Linking executables and shared libraries may produce warnings of
3304duplicate symbols. The assembly files generated by GCC for AIX always
3305have included multiple symbol definitions for certain global variable
3306and function declarations in the original program. The warnings should
3307not prevent the linker from producing a correct library or runnable
3308executable.
3309
3310AIX 4.3 utilizes a ``large format'' archive to support both 32-bit and
331164-bit object modules. The routines provided in AIX 4.3.0 and AIX 4.3.1
3312to parse archive libraries did not handle the new format correctly.
3313These routines are used by GCC and result in error messages during
3314linking such as ``not a COFF file''. The version of the routines shipped
3315with AIX 4.3.1 should work for a 32-bit environment. The @option{-g}
3316option of the archive command may be used to create archives of 32-bit
3317objects using the original ``small format''. A correct version of the
3318routines is shipped with AIX 4.3.2 and above.
3319
3320Some versions of the AIX binder (linker) can fail with a relocation
3321overflow severe error when the @option{-bbigtoc} option is used to link
3322GCC-produced object files into an executable that overflows the TOC@. A fix
3323for APAR IX75823 (OVERFLOW DURING LINK WHEN USING GCC AND -BBIGTOC) is
3324available from IBM Customer Support and from its
3325@uref{http://techsupport.services.ibm.com/,,techsupport.services.ibm.com}
3326website as PTF U455193.
3327
3328The AIX 4.3.2.1 linker (bos.rte.bind_cmds Level 4.3.2.1) will dump core
3329with a segmentation fault when invoked by any version of GCC@. A fix for
3330APAR IX87327 is available from IBM Customer Support and from its
3331@uref{http://techsupport.services.ibm.com/,,techsupport.services.ibm.com}
3332website as PTF U461879. This fix is incorporated in AIX 4.3.3 and above.
3333
3334The initial assembler shipped with AIX 4.3.0 generates incorrect object
3335files. A fix for APAR IX74254 (64BIT DISASSEMBLED OUTPUT FROM COMPILER FAILS
3336TO ASSEMBLE/BIND) is available from IBM Customer Support and from its
3337@uref{http://techsupport.services.ibm.com/,,techsupport.services.ibm.com}
3338website as PTF U453956. This fix is incorporated in AIX 4.3.1 and above.
3339
3340AIX provides National Language Support (NLS)@. Compilers and assemblers
3341use NLS to support locale-specific representations of various data
3342formats including floating-point numbers (e.g., @samp{.} vs @samp{,} for
3343separating decimal fractions). There have been problems reported where
3344GCC does not produce the same floating-point formats that the assembler
3345expects. If one encounters this problem, set the @env{LANG}
3346environment variable to @samp{C} or @samp{En_US}.
3347
3348By default, GCC for AIX 4.1 and above produces code that can be used on
3349both Power or PowerPC processors.
3350
3351A default can be specified with the @option{-mcpu=@var{cpu_type}}
3352switch and using the configure option @option{--with-cpu-@var{cpu_type}}.
3353
3354@html
3355<hr />
3356@end html
3357@heading @anchor{iq2000-x-elf}iq2000-*-elf
3358Vitesse IQ2000 processors. These are used in embedded
3359applications. There are no standard Unix configurations.
3360
3361@html
3362<hr />
3363@end html
3364@heading @anchor{m32c-x-elf}m32c-*-elf
3365Renesas M32C processor.
3366This configuration is intended for embedded systems.
3367
3368@html
3369<hr />
3370@end html
3371@heading @anchor{m32r-x-elf}m32r-*-elf
3372Renesas M32R processor.
3373This configuration is intended for embedded systems.
3374
3375@html
3376<hr />
3377@end html
3378@heading @anchor{m6811-elf}m6811-elf
3379Motorola 68HC11 family micro controllers. These are used in embedded
3380applications. There are no standard Unix configurations.
3381
3382@html
3383<hr />
3384@end html
3385@heading @anchor{m6812-elf}m6812-elf
3386Motorola 68HC12 family micro controllers. These are used in embedded
3387applications. There are no standard Unix configurations.
3388
3389@html
3390<hr />
3391@end html
3392@heading @anchor{m68k-hp-hpux}m68k-hp-hpux
3393HP 9000 series 300 or 400 running HP-UX@. HP-UX version 8.0 has a bug in
3394the assembler that prevents compilation of GCC@. This
3395bug manifests itself during the first stage of compilation, while
3396building @file{libgcc2.a}:
3397
3398@smallexample
3399_floatdisf
3400cc1: warning: `-g' option not supported on this version of GCC
3401cc1: warning: `-g1' option not supported on this version of GCC
3402./xgcc: Internal compiler error: program as got fatal signal 11
3403@end smallexample
3404
3405A patched version of the assembler is available as the file
3406@uref{ftp://altdorf.ai.mit.edu/archive/cph/hpux-8.0-assembler}. If you
3407have HP software support, the patch can also be obtained directly from
3408HP, as described in the following note:
3409
3410@quotation
3411This is the patched assembler, to patch SR#1653-010439, where the
3412assembler aborts on floating point constants.
3413
3414The bug is not really in the assembler, but in the shared library
3415version of the function ``cvtnum(3c)''. The bug on ``cvtnum(3c)'' is
3416SR#4701-078451. Anyway, the attached assembler uses the archive
3417library version of ``cvtnum(3c)'' and thus does not exhibit the bug.
3418@end quotation
3419
3420This patch is also known as PHCO_4484.
3421
3422In addition gdb does not understand that native HP-UX format, so
3423you must use gas if you wish to use gdb.
3424
3425On HP-UX version 8.05, but not on 8.07 or more recent versions, the
3426@command{fixproto} shell script triggers a bug in the system shell. If you
3427encounter this problem, upgrade your operating system or use BASH (the
3428GNU shell) to run @command{fixproto}. This bug will cause the fixproto
3429program to report an error of the form:
3430
3431@smallexample
3432./fixproto: sh internal 1K buffer overflow
3433@end smallexample
3434
3435To fix this, you can also change the first line of the fixproto script
3436to look like:
3437
3438@smallexample
3439#!/bin/ksh
3440@end smallexample
3441
3442@html
3443<hr />
3444@end html
3445@heading @anchor{mips-x-x}mips-*-*
3446If on a MIPS system you get an error message saying ``does not have gp
3447sections for all it's [sic] sectons [sic]'', don't worry about it. This
3448happens whenever you use GAS with the MIPS linker, but there is not
3449really anything wrong, and it is okay to use the output file. You can
3450stop such warnings by installing the GNU linker.
3451
3452It would be nice to extend GAS to produce the gp tables, but they are
3453optional, and there should not be a warning about their absence.
3454
3455The libstdc++ atomic locking routines for MIPS targets requires MIPS II
3456and later. A patch went in just after the GCC 3.3 release to
3457make @samp{mips*-*-*} use the generic implementation instead. You can also
3458configure for @samp{mipsel-elf} as a workaround. The
3459@samp{mips*-*-linux*} target continues to use the MIPS II routines. More
3460work on this is expected in future releases.
3461
3462MIPS systems check for division by zero (unless
3463@option{-mno-check-zero-division} is passed to the compiler) by
3464generating either a conditional trap or a break instruction. Using
3465trap results in smaller code, but is only supported on MIPS II and
3466later. Also, some versions of the Linux kernel have a bug that
3467prevents trap from generating the proper signal (@code{SIGFPE}). To enable
3468the use of break, use the @option{--with-divide=breaks}
3469@command{configure} option when configuring GCC@. The default is to
3470use traps on systems that support them.
3471
3472Cross-compilers for the MIPS as target using the MIPS assembler
3473currently do not work, because the auxiliary programs
3474@file{mips-tdump.c} and @file{mips-tfile.c} can't be compiled on
3475anything but a MIPS. It does work to cross compile for a MIPS
3476if you use the GNU assembler and linker.
3477
3478The linker from GNU binutils versions prior to 2.17 has a bug which
3479causes the runtime linker stubs in @file{libgcj.so} to be incorrectly
3480generated. If you want to use libgcj, either use binutils 2.17 or
3481later to build it or export @samp{LD_BIND_NOW=1} in your runtime environment.
3482
3483@html
3484<hr />
3485@end html
3486@heading @anchor{mips-sgi-irix5}mips-sgi-irix5
3487
3488In order to compile GCC on an SGI running IRIX 5, the @samp{compiler_dev.hdr}
3489subsystem must be installed from the IDO CD-ROM supplied by SGI@.
3490It is also available for download from
3491@uref{ftp://ftp.sgi.com/sgi/IRIX5.3/iris-development-option-5.3.tardist}.
3492
3493If you use the MIPS C compiler to bootstrap, it may be necessary
3494to increase its table size for switch statements with the
3495@option{-Wf,-XNg1500} option. If you use the @option{-O2}
3496optimization option, you also need to use @option{-Olimit 3000}.
3497
3498To enable debugging under IRIX 5, you must use GNU binutils 2.15 or
3499later, and use the @option{--with-gnu-ld} @command{configure} option
3500when configuring GCC@. You need to use GNU @command{ar} and @command{nm},
3501also distributed with GNU binutils.
3502
3503Some users have reported that @command{/bin/sh} will hang during bootstrap.
3504This problem can be avoided by running the commands:
3505
3506@smallexample
3507 % CONFIG_SHELL=/bin/ksh
3508 % export CONFIG_SHELL
3509@end smallexample
3510
3511before starting the build.
3512
3513@html
3514<hr />
3515@end html
3516@heading @anchor{mips-sgi-irix6}mips-sgi-irix6
3517
3518If you are using SGI's MIPSpro @command{cc} as your bootstrap compiler, you must
3519ensure that the N32 ABI is in use. To test this, compile a simple C
3520file with @command{cc} and then run @command{file} on the
3521resulting object file. The output should look like:
3522
3523@smallexample
3524test.o: ELF N32 MSB @dots{}
3525@end smallexample
3526
3527If you see:
3528
3529@smallexample
3530test.o: ELF 32-bit MSB @dots{}
3531@end smallexample
3532
3533or
3534
3535@smallexample
3536test.o: ELF 64-bit MSB @dots{}
3537@end smallexample
3538
3539then your version of @command{cc} uses the O32 or N64 ABI by default. You
3540should set the environment variable @env{CC} to @samp{cc -n32}
3541before configuring GCC@.
3542
3543If you want the resulting @command{gcc} to run on old 32-bit systems
3544with the MIPS R4400 CPU, you need to ensure that only code for the @samp{mips3}
3545instruction set architecture (ISA) is generated. While GCC 3.x does
3546this correctly, both GCC 2.95 and SGI's MIPSpro @command{cc} may change
3547the ISA depending on the machine where GCC is built. Using one of them
3548as the bootstrap compiler may result in @samp{mips4} code, which won't run at
3549all on @samp{mips3}-only systems. For the test program above, you should see:
3550
3551@smallexample
3552test.o: ELF N32 MSB mips-3 @dots{}
3553@end smallexample
3554
3555If you get:
3556
3557@smallexample
3558test.o: ELF N32 MSB mips-4 @dots{}
3559@end smallexample
3560
3561instead, you should set the environment variable @env{CC} to @samp{cc
3562-n32 -mips3} or @samp{gcc -mips3} respectively before configuring GCC@.
3563
3564MIPSpro C 7.4 may cause bootstrap failures, due to a bug when inlining
3565@code{memcmp}. Either add @code{-U__INLINE_INTRINSICS} to the @env{CC}
3566environment variable as a workaround or upgrade to MIPSpro C 7.4.1m.
3567
3568GCC on IRIX 6 is usually built to support the N32, O32 and N64 ABIs. If
3569you build GCC on a system that doesn't have the N64 libraries installed
3570or cannot run 64-bit binaries,
3571you need to configure with @option{--disable-multilib} so GCC doesn't
3572try to use them. This will disable building the O32 libraries, too.
3573Look for @file{/usr/lib64/libc.so.1} to see if you
3574have the 64-bit libraries installed.
3575
3576To enable debugging for the O32 ABI, you must use GNU @command{as} from
3577GNU binutils 2.15 or later. You may also use GNU @command{ld}, but
3578this is not required and currently causes some problems with Ada.
3579
3580The @option{--enable-threads} option doesn't currently work, a patch is
3581in preparation for a future release. The @option{--enable-libgcj}
3582option is disabled by default: IRIX 6 uses a very low default limit
3583(20480) for the command line length. Although @command{libtool} contains a
3584workaround for this problem, at least the N64 @samp{libgcj} is known not
3585to build despite this, running into an internal error of the native
3586@command{ld}. A sure fix is to increase this limit (@samp{ncargs}) to
3587its maximum of 262144 bytes. If you have root access, you can use the
3588@command{systune} command to do this.
3589
3590@code{wchar_t} support in @samp{libstdc++} is not available for old
3591IRIX 6.5.x releases, @math{x < 19}. The problem cannot be autodetected
3592and in order to build GCC for such targets you need to configure with
3593@option{--disable-wchar_t}.
3594
3595See @uref{http://freeware.sgi.com/} for more
3596information about using GCC on IRIX platforms.
3597
3598@html
3599<hr />
3600@end html
3601@heading @anchor{powerpc-x-x}powerpc-*-*
3602
3603You can specify a default version for the @option{-mcpu=@var{cpu_type}}
3604switch by using the configure option @option{--with-cpu-@var{cpu_type}}.
3605
3606@html
3607<hr />
3608@end html
3609@heading @anchor{powerpc-x-darwin}powerpc-*-darwin*
3610PowerPC running Darwin (Mac OS X kernel).
3611
3612Pre-installed versions of Mac OS X may not include any developer tools,
3613meaning that you will not be able to build GCC from source. Tool
3614binaries are available at
3615@uref{http://developer.apple.com/darwin/projects/compiler/} (free
3616registration required).
3617
3618This version of GCC requires at least cctools-590.36. The
3619cctools-590.36 package referenced from
3620@uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/2006-03/msg00507.html} will not work
3621on systems older than 10.3.9 (aka darwin7.9.0).
3622
3623@html
3624<hr />
3625@end html
3626@heading @anchor{powerpc-x-elf}powerpc-*-elf, powerpc-*-sysv4
3627PowerPC system in big endian mode, running System V.4.
3628
3629@html
3630<hr />
3631@end html
3632@heading @anchor{powerpc-x-linux-gnu}powerpc*-*-linux-gnu*
3633
3634You will need
3635@uref{ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/devel/binutils,,binutils 2.15}
3636or newer for a working GCC@.
3637
3638@html
3639<hr />
3640@end html
3641@heading @anchor{powerpc-x-netbsd}powerpc-*-netbsd*
3642PowerPC system in big endian mode running NetBSD@. To build the
3643documentation you will need Texinfo version 4.4 (NetBSD 1.5.1 included
3644Texinfo version 3.12).
3645
3646@html
3647<hr />
3648@end html
3649@heading @anchor{powerpc-x-eabisim}powerpc-*-eabisim
3650Embedded PowerPC system in big endian mode for use in running under the
3651PSIM simulator.
3652
3653@html
3654<hr />
3655@end html
3656@heading @anchor{powerpc-x-eabi}powerpc-*-eabi
3657Embedded PowerPC system in big endian mode.
3658
3659@html
3660<hr />
3661@end html
3662@heading @anchor{powerpcle-x-elf}powerpcle-*-elf, powerpcle-*-sysv4
3663PowerPC system in little endian mode, running System V.4.
3664
3665@html
3666<hr />
3667@end html
3668@heading @anchor{powerpcle-x-eabisim}powerpcle-*-eabisim
3669Embedded PowerPC system in little endian mode for use in running under
3670the PSIM simulator.
3671
3672@html
3673<hr />
3674@end html
3675@heading @anchor{powerpcle-x-eabi}powerpcle-*-eabi
3676Embedded PowerPC system in little endian mode.
3677
3678@html
3679<hr />
3680@end html
3681@heading @anchor{s390-x-linux}s390-*-linux*
3682S/390 system running GNU/Linux for S/390@.
3683
3684@html
3685<hr />
3686@end html
3687@heading @anchor{s390x-x-linux}s390x-*-linux*
3688zSeries system (64-bit) running GNU/Linux for zSeries@.
3689
3690@html
3691<hr />
3692@end html
3693@heading @anchor{s390x-ibm-tpf}s390x-ibm-tpf*
3694zSeries system (64-bit) running TPF@. This platform is
3695supported as cross-compilation target only.
3696
3697@html
3698<hr />
3699@end html
3700@c Please use Solaris 2 to refer to all release of Solaris, starting
3701@c with 2.0 until 2.6, 7, 8, etc. Solaris 1 was a marketing name for
3702@c SunOS 4 releases which we don't use to avoid confusion. Solaris
3703@c alone is too unspecific and must be avoided.
3704@heading @anchor{x-x-solaris2}*-*-solaris2*
3705
3706Sun does not ship a C compiler with Solaris 2. To bootstrap and install
3707GCC you first have to install a pre-built compiler, see the
3708@uref{binaries.html,,binaries page} for details.
3709
3710The Solaris 2 @command{/bin/sh} will often fail to configure
3711@file{libstdc++-v3}, @file{boehm-gc} or @file{libjava}. We therefore
3712recommend using the following initial sequence of commands
3713
3714@smallexample
3715 % CONFIG_SHELL=/bin/ksh
3716 % export CONFIG_SHELL
3717@end smallexample
3718
3719and proceed as described in @uref{configure.html,,the configure instructions}.
3720In addition we strongly recommend specifying an absolute path to invoke
3721@var{srcdir}/configure.
3722
3723Solaris 2 comes with a number of optional OS packages. Some of these
3724are needed to use GCC fully, namely @code{SUNWarc},
3725@code{SUNWbtool}, @code{SUNWesu}, @code{SUNWhea}, @code{SUNWlibm},
3726@code{SUNWsprot}, and @code{SUNWtoo}. If you did not install all
3727optional packages when installing Solaris 2, you will need to verify that
3728the packages that GCC needs are installed.
3729
3730To check whether an optional package is installed, use
3731the @command{pkginfo} command. To add an optional package, use the
3732@command{pkgadd} command. For further details, see the Solaris 2
3733documentation.
3734
3735Trying to use the linker and other tools in
3736@file{/usr/ucb} to install GCC has been observed to cause trouble.
3737For example, the linker may hang indefinitely. The fix is to remove
3738@file{/usr/ucb} from your @env{PATH}.
3739
3740The build process works more smoothly with the legacy Sun tools so, if you
3741have @file{/usr/xpg4/bin} in your @env{PATH}, we recommend that you place
3742@file{/usr/bin} before @file{/usr/xpg4/bin} for the duration of the build.
3743
3744All releases of GNU binutils prior to 2.11.2 have known bugs on this
3745platform. We recommend the use of GNU binutils 2.11.2 or later, or the
3746vendor tools (Sun @command{as}, Sun @command{ld}). Note that your mileage
3747may vary if you use a combination of the GNU tools and the Sun tools: while
3748the combination GNU @command{as} + Sun @command{ld} should reasonably work,
3749the reverse combination Sun @command{as} + GNU @command{ld} is known to
3750cause memory corruption at runtime in some cases for C++ programs.
3751
3752The stock GNU binutils 2.15 release is broken on this platform because of a
3753single bug. It has been fixed on the 2.15 branch in the CVS repository.
3754You can obtain a working version by checking out the binutils-2_15-branch
3755from the CVS repository or applying the patch
3756@uref{http://sources.redhat.com/ml/binutils-cvs/2004-09/msg00036.html} to the
3757release.
3758
3759We recommend using GNU binutils 2.16 or later in conjunction with GCC 4.x,
3760or the vendor tools (Sun @command{as}, Sun @command{ld}). However, for
3761Solaris 10 and above, an additional patch is required in order for the GNU
3762linker to be able to cope with a new flavor of shared libraries. You
3763can obtain a working version by checking out the binutils-2_16-branch from
3764the CVS repository or applying the patch
3765@uref{http://sourceware.org/ml/binutils-cvs/2005-07/msg00122.html} to the
3766release.
3767
3768Sun bug 4296832 turns up when compiling X11 headers with GCC 2.95 or
3769newer: @command{g++} will complain that types are missing. These headers assume
3770that omitting the type means @code{int}; this assumption worked for C89 but
3771is wrong for C++, and is now wrong for C99 also.
3772
3773@command{g++} accepts such (invalid) constructs with the option
3774@option{-fpermissive}; it
3775will assume that any missing type is @code{int} (as defined by C89).
3776
3777There are patches for Solaris 2.6 (105633-56 or newer for SPARC,
3778106248-42 or newer for Intel), Solaris 7 (108376-21 or newer for SPARC,
3779108377-20 for Intel), and Solaris 8 (108652-24 or newer for SPARC,
3780108653-22 for Intel) that fix this bug.
3781
3782Sun bug 4927647 sometimes causes random spurious testsuite failures
3783related to missing diagnostic output. This bug doesn't affect GCC
3784itself, rather it is a kernel bug triggered by the @command{expect}
3785program which is used only by the GCC testsuite driver. When the bug
3786causes the @command{expect} program to miss anticipated output, extra
3787testsuite failures appear.
3788
3789There are patches for Solaris 8 (117350-12 or newer for SPARC,
3790117351-12 or newer for Intel) and Solaris 9 (117171-11 or newer for
3791SPARC, 117172-11 or newer for Intel) that address this problem.
3792
3793@html
3794<hr />
3795@end html
3796@heading @anchor{sparc-sun-solaris2}sparc-sun-solaris2*
3797
3798When GCC is configured to use binutils 2.11.2 or later the binaries
3799produced are smaller than the ones produced using Sun's native tools;
3800this difference is quite significant for binaries containing debugging
3801information.
3802
3803Sun @command{as} 4.x is broken in that it cannot cope with long symbol names.
3804A typical error message might look similar to the following:
3805
3806@smallexample
3807/usr/ccs/bin/as: "/var/tmp/ccMsw135.s", line 11041: error:
3808 can't compute value of an expression involving an external symbol.
3809@end smallexample
3810
3811This is Sun bug 4237974. This is fixed with patch 108908-02 for Solaris
38122.6 and has been fixed in later (5.x) versions of the assembler,
3813starting with Solaris 7.
3814
3815Starting with Solaris 7, the operating system is capable of executing
381664-bit SPARC V9 binaries. GCC 3.1 and later properly supports
3817this; the @option{-m64} option enables 64-bit code generation.
3818However, if all you want is code tuned for the UltraSPARC CPU, you
3819should try the @option{-mtune=ultrasparc} option instead, which produces
3820code that, unlike full 64-bit code, can still run on non-UltraSPARC
3821machines.
3822
3823When configuring on a Solaris 7 or later system that is running a kernel
3824that supports only 32-bit binaries, one must configure with
3825@option{--disable-multilib}, since we will not be able to build the
382664-bit target libraries.
3827
3828GCC 3.3 and GCC 3.4 trigger code generation bugs in earlier versions of
3829the GNU compiler (especially GCC 3.0.x versions), which lead to the
3830miscompilation of the stage1 compiler and the subsequent failure of the
3831bootstrap process. A workaround is to use GCC 3.2.3 as an intermediary
3832stage, i.e.@: to bootstrap that compiler with the base compiler and then
3833use it to bootstrap the final compiler.
3834
3835GCC 3.4 triggers a code generation bug in versions 5.4 (Sun ONE Studio 7)
3836and 5.5 (Sun ONE Studio 8) of the Sun compiler, which causes a bootstrap
3837failure in form of a miscompilation of the stage1 compiler by the Sun
3838compiler. This is Sun bug 4974440. This is fixed with patch 112760-07.
3839
3840GCC 3.4 changed the default debugging format from STABS to DWARF-2 for
384132-bit code on Solaris 7 and later. If you use the Sun assembler, this
3842change apparently runs afoul of Sun bug 4910101 (which is referenced as
3843a x86-only problem by Sun, probably because they do not use DWARF-2).
3844A symptom of the problem is that you cannot compile C++ programs like
3845@command{groff} 1.19.1 without getting messages similar to the following:
3846
3847@smallexample
3848ld: warning: relocation error: R_SPARC_UA32: @dots{}
3849 external symbolic relocation against non-allocatable section
3850 .debug_info cannot be processed at runtime: relocation ignored.
3851@end smallexample
3852
3853To work around this problem, compile with @option{-gstabs+} instead of
3854plain @option{-g}.
3855
3856When configuring the GNU Multiple Precision Library (GMP) or the MPFR
3857library on a Solaris 7 or later system, the canonical target triplet
3858must be specified as the @command{build} parameter on the configure
3859line. This triplet can be obtained by invoking ./config.guess in
3860the toplevel source directory of GCC (and not that of GMP or MPFR).
3861For example on a Solaris 7 system:
3862
3863@smallexample
3864 % ./configure --build=sparc-sun-solaris2.7 --prefix=xxx
3865@end smallexample
3866
3867@html
3868<hr />
3869@end html
3870@heading @anchor{sparc-sun-solaris27}sparc-sun-solaris2.7
3871
3872Sun patch 107058-01 (1999-01-13) for Solaris 7/SPARC triggers a bug in
3873the dynamic linker. This problem (Sun bug 4210064) affects GCC 2.8
3874and later, including all EGCS releases. Sun formerly recommended
3875107058-01 for all Solaris 7 users, but around 1999-09-01 it started to
3876recommend it only for people who use Sun's compilers.
3877
3878Here are some workarounds to this problem:
3879@itemize @bullet
3880@item
3881Do not install Sun patch 107058-01 until after Sun releases a
3882complete patch for bug 4210064. This is the simplest course to take,
3883unless you must also use Sun's C compiler. Unfortunately 107058-01
3884is preinstalled on some new Solaris 7-based hosts, so you may have to
3885back it out.
3886
3887@item
3888Copy the original, unpatched Solaris 7
3889@command{/usr/ccs/bin/as} into
3890@command{/usr/local/libexec/gcc/sparc-sun-solaris2.7/3.4/as},
3891adjusting the latter name to fit your local conventions and software
3892version numbers.
3893
3894@item
3895Install Sun patch 106950-03 (1999-05-25) or later. Nobody with
3896both 107058-01 and 106950-03 installed has reported the bug with GCC
3897and Sun's dynamic linker. This last course of action is riskiest,
3898for two reasons. First, you must install 106950 on all hosts that
3899run code generated by GCC; it doesn't suffice to install it only on
3900the hosts that run GCC itself. Second, Sun says that 106950-03 is
3901only a partial fix for bug 4210064, but Sun doesn't know whether the
3902partial fix is adequate for GCC@. Revision -08 or later should fix
3903the bug. The current (as of 2004-05-23) revision is -24, and is included in
3904the Solaris 7 Recommended Patch Cluster.
3905@end itemize
3906
3907GCC 3.3 triggers a bug in version 5.0 Alpha 03/27/98 of the Sun assembler,
3908which causes a bootstrap failure when linking the 64-bit shared version of
3909libgcc. A typical error message is:
3910
3911@smallexample
3912ld: fatal: relocation error: R_SPARC_32: file libgcc/sparcv9/_muldi3.o:
3913 symbol <unknown>: offset 0xffffffff7ec133e7 is non-aligned.
3914@end smallexample
3915
3916This bug has been fixed in the final 5.0 version of the assembler.
3917
3918A similar problem was reported for version Sun WorkShop 6 99/08/18 of the
3919Sun assembler, which causes a bootstrap failure with GCC 4.0.0:
3920
3921@smallexample
3922ld: fatal: relocation error: R_SPARC_DISP32:
3923 file .libs/libstdc++.lax/libsupc++convenience.a/vterminate.o:
3924 symbol <unknown>: offset 0xfccd33ad is non-aligned
3925@end smallexample
3926
3927This bug has been fixed in more recent revisions of the assembler.
3928
3929@html
3930<hr />
3931@end html
3932@heading @anchor{sparc-x-linux}sparc-*-linux*
3933
3934GCC versions 3.0 and higher require binutils 2.11.2 and glibc 2.2.4
3935or newer on this platform. All earlier binutils and glibc
3936releases mishandled unaligned relocations on @code{sparc-*-*} targets.
3937
3938
3939@html
3940<hr />
3941@end html
3942@heading @anchor{sparc64-x-solaris2}sparc64-*-solaris2*
3943
3944When configuring the GNU Multiple Precision Library (GMP) or the
3945MPFR library, the canonical target triplet must be specified as
3946the @command{build} parameter on the configure line. For example
3947on a Solaris 7 system:
3948
3949@smallexample
3950 % ./configure --build=sparc64-sun-solaris2.7 --prefix=xxx
3951@end smallexample
3952
3953The following compiler flags must be specified in the configure
3954step in order to bootstrap this target with the Sun compiler:
3955
3956@smallexample
3957 % CC="cc -xarch=v9 -xildoff" @var{srcdir}/configure [@var{options}] [@var{target}]
3958@end smallexample
3959
3960@option{-xarch=v9} specifies the SPARC-V9 architecture to the Sun toolchain
3961and @option{-xildoff} turns off the incremental linker.
3962
3963@html
3964<hr />
3965@end html
3966@heading @anchor{sparcv9-x-solaris2}sparcv9-*-solaris2*
3967
3968This is a synonym for sparc64-*-solaris2*.
3969
3970@html
3971<hr />
3972@end html
3973@heading @anchor{x-x-sysv}*-*-sysv*
3974On System V release 3, you may get this error message
3975while linking:
3976
3977@smallexample
3978ld fatal: failed to write symbol name @var{something}
3979 in strings table for file @var{whatever}
3980@end smallexample
3981
3982This probably indicates that the disk is full or your ulimit won't allow
3983the file to be as large as it needs to be.
3984
3985This problem can also result because the kernel parameter @code{MAXUMEM}
3986is too small. If so, you must regenerate the kernel and make the value
3987much larger. The default value is reported to be 1024; a value of 32768
3988is said to work. Smaller values may also work.
3989
3990On System V, if you get an error like this,
3991
3992@smallexample
3993/usr/local/lib/bison.simple: In function `yyparse':
3994/usr/local/lib/bison.simple:625: virtual memory exhausted
3995@end smallexample
3996
3997@noindent
3998that too indicates a problem with disk space, ulimit, or @code{MAXUMEM}.
3999
4000On a System V release 4 system, make sure @file{/usr/bin} precedes
4001@file{/usr/ucb} in @code{PATH}. The @command{cc} command in
4002@file{/usr/ucb} uses libraries which have bugs.
4003
4004@html
4005<hr />
4006@end html
4007@heading @anchor{vax-dec-ultrix}vax-dec-ultrix
4008Don't try compiling with VAX C (@command{vcc}). It produces incorrect code
4009in some cases (for example, when @code{alloca} is used).
4010
4011@html
4012<hr />
4013@end html
4014@heading @anchor{x-x-vxworks}*-*-vxworks*
4015Support for VxWorks is in flux. At present GCC supports @emph{only} the
4016very recent VxWorks 5.5 (aka Tornado 2.2) release, and only on PowerPC@.
4017We welcome patches for other architectures supported by VxWorks 5.5.
4018Support for VxWorks AE would also be welcome; we believe this is merely
4019a matter of writing an appropriate ``configlette'' (see below). We are
4020not interested in supporting older, a.out or COFF-based, versions of
4021VxWorks in GCC 3.
4022
4023VxWorks comes with an older version of GCC installed in
4024@file{@var{$WIND_BASE}/host}; we recommend you do not overwrite it.
4025Choose an installation @var{prefix} entirely outside @var{$WIND_BASE}.
4026Before running @command{configure}, create the directories @file{@var{prefix}}
4027and @file{@var{prefix}/bin}. Link or copy the appropriate assembler,
4028linker, etc.@: into @file{@var{prefix}/bin}, and set your @var{PATH} to
4029include that directory while running both @command{configure} and
4030@command{make}.
4031
4032You must give @command{configure} the
4033@option{--with-headers=@var{$WIND_BASE}/target/h} switch so that it can
4034find the VxWorks system headers. Since VxWorks is a cross compilation
4035target only, you must also specify @option{--target=@var{target}}.
4036@command{configure} will attempt to create the directory
4037@file{@var{prefix}/@var{target}/sys-include} and copy files into it;
4038make sure the user running @command{configure} has sufficient privilege
4039to do so.
4040
4041GCC's exception handling runtime requires a special ``configlette''
4042module, @file{contrib/gthr_supp_vxw_5x.c}. Follow the instructions in
4043that file to add the module to your kernel build. (Future versions of
4044VxWorks will incorporate this module.)
4045
4046@html
4047<hr />
4048@end html
4049@heading @anchor{x86-64-x-x}x86_64-*-*, amd64-*-*
4050
4051GCC supports the x86-64 architecture implemented by the AMD64 processor
4052(amd64-*-* is an alias for x86_64-*-*) on GNU/Linux, FreeBSD and NetBSD@.
4053On GNU/Linux the default is a bi-arch compiler which is able to generate
4054both 64-bit x86-64 and 32-bit x86 code (via the @option{-m32} switch).
4055
4056@html
4057<hr />
4058@end html
4059@heading @anchor{xtensa-x-elf}xtensa-*-elf
4060
4061This target is intended for embedded Xtensa systems using the
4062@samp{newlib} C library. It uses ELF but does not support shared
4063objects. Designed-defined instructions specified via the
4064Tensilica Instruction Extension (TIE) language are only supported
4065through inline assembly.
4066
4067The Xtensa configuration information must be specified prior to
4068building GCC@. The @file{include/xtensa-config.h} header
4069file contains the configuration information. If you created your
4070own Xtensa configuration with the Xtensa Processor Generator, the
4071downloaded files include a customized copy of this header file,
4072which you can use to replace the default header file.
4073
4074@html
4075<hr />
4076@end html
4077@heading @anchor{xtensa-x-linux}xtensa-*-linux*
4078
4079This target is for Xtensa systems running GNU/Linux. It supports ELF
4080shared objects and the GNU C library (glibc). It also generates
4081position-independent code (PIC) regardless of whether the
4082@option{-fpic} or @option{-fPIC} options are used. In other
4083respects, this target is the same as the
4084@uref{#xtensa-*-elf,,@samp{xtensa-*-elf}} target.
4085
4086@html
4087<hr />
4088@end html
4089@heading @anchor{windows}Microsoft Windows (32-bit)
4090
4091Ports of GCC are included with the
4092@uref{http://www.cygwin.com/,,Cygwin environment}.
4093
4094GCC will build under Cygwin without modification; it does not build
4095with Microsoft's C++ compiler and there are no plans to make it do so.
4096
4097@html
4098<hr />
4099@end html
4100@heading @anchor{os2}OS/2
4101
4102GCC does not currently support OS/2. However, Andrew Zabolotny has been
4103working on a generic OS/2 port with pgcc. The current code can be found
4104at @uref{http://www.goof.com/pcg/os2/,,http://www.goof.com/pcg/os2/}.
4105
4106@html
4107<hr />
4108@end html
4109@heading @anchor{older}Older systems
4110
4111GCC contains support files for many older (1980s and early
41121990s) Unix variants. For the most part, support for these systems
4113has not been deliberately removed, but it has not been maintained for
4114several years and may suffer from bitrot.
4115
4116Starting with GCC 3.1, each release has a list of ``obsoleted'' systems.
4117Support for these systems is still present in that release, but
4118@command{configure} will fail unless the @option{--enable-obsolete}
4119option is given. Unless a maintainer steps forward, support for these
4120systems will be removed from the next release of GCC@.
4121
4122Support for old systems as hosts for GCC can cause problems if the
4123workarounds for compiler, library and operating system bugs affect the
4124cleanliness or maintainability of the rest of GCC@. In some cases, to
4125bring GCC up on such a system, if still possible with current GCC, may
4126require first installing an old version of GCC which did work on that
4127system, and using it to compile a more recent GCC, to avoid bugs in the
4128vendor compiler. Old releases of GCC 1 and GCC 2 are available in the
4129@file{old-releases} directory on the @uref{../mirrors.html,,GCC mirror
4130sites}. Header bugs may generally be avoided using
4131@command{fixincludes}, but bugs or deficiencies in libraries and the
4132operating system may still cause problems.
4133
4134Support for older systems as targets for cross-compilation is less
4135problematic than support for them as hosts for GCC; if an enthusiast
4136wishes to make such a target work again (including resurrecting any of
4137the targets that never worked with GCC 2, starting from the last
4138version before they were removed), patches
4139@uref{../contribute.html,,following the usual requirements} would be
4140likely to be accepted, since they should not affect the support for more
4141modern targets.
4142
4143For some systems, old versions of GNU binutils may also be useful,
4144and are available from @file{pub/binutils/old-releases} on
4145@uref{http://sources.redhat.com/mirrors.html,,sources.redhat.com mirror sites}.
4146
4147Some of the information on specific systems above relates to
4148such older systems, but much of the information
4149about GCC on such systems (which may no longer be applicable to
4150current GCC) is to be found in the GCC texinfo manual.
4151
4152@html
4153<hr />
4154@end html
4155@heading @anchor{elf}all ELF targets (SVR4, Solaris 2, etc.)
4156
4157C++ support is significantly better on ELF targets if you use the
4158@uref{./configure.html#with-gnu-ld,,GNU linker}; duplicate copies of
4159inlines, vtables and template instantiations will be discarded
4160automatically.
4161
4162
4163@html
4164<hr />
4165<p>
4166@end html
4167@ifhtml
4168@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
4169@end ifhtml
4170@end ifset
4171
4172@c ***Old documentation******************************************************
4173@ifset oldhtml
4174@include install-old.texi
4175@html
4176<hr />
4177<p>
4178@end html
4179@ifhtml
4180@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
4181@end ifhtml
4182@end ifset
4183
4184@c ***GFDL********************************************************************
4185@ifset gfdlhtml
4186@include fdl.texi
4187@html
4188<hr />
4189<p>
4190@end html
4191@ifhtml
4192@uref{./index.html,,Return to the GCC Installation page}
4193@end ifhtml
4194@end ifset
4195
4196@c ***************************************************************************
4197@c Part 6 The End of the Document
4198@ifinfo
4199@comment node-name, next, previous, up
4200@node Concept Index, , GNU Free Documentation License, Top
4201@end ifinfo
4202
4203@ifinfo
4204@unnumbered Concept Index
4205
4206@printindex cp
4207
4208@contents
4209@end ifinfo
4210@bye