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1 Installing the GNU C Library
2 ****************************
3
4 Before you do anything else, you should read the FAQ at
5 <https://sourceware.org/glibc/wiki/FAQ>. It answers common questions
6 and describes problems you may experience with compilation and
7 installation.
8
9 You will need recent versions of several GNU tools: definitely GCC
10 and GNU Make, and possibly others. *Note Tools for Compilation::,
11 below.
12
13 Configuring and compiling the GNU C Library
14 ===========================================
15
16 The GNU C Library cannot be compiled in the source directory. You must
17 build it in a separate build directory. For example, if you have
18 unpacked the GNU C Library sources in ‘/src/gnu/glibc-VERSION’, create a
19 directory ‘/src/gnu/glibc-build’ to put the object files in. This
20 allows removing the whole build directory in case an error occurs, which
21 is the safest way to get a fresh start and should always be done.
22
23 From your object directory, run the shell script ‘configure’ located
24 at the top level of the source tree. In the scenario above, you’d type
25
26 $ ../glibc-VERSION/configure ARGS...
27
28 Please note that even though you’re building in a separate build
29 directory, the compilation may need to create or modify files and
30 directories in the source directory.
31
32 ‘configure’ takes many options, but the only one that is usually
33 mandatory is ‘--prefix’. This option tells ‘configure’ where you want
34 the GNU C Library installed. This defaults to ‘/usr/local’, but the
35 normal setting to install as the standard system library is
36 ‘--prefix=/usr’ for GNU/Linux systems and ‘--prefix=’ (an empty prefix)
37 for GNU/Hurd systems.
38
39 It may also be useful to pass ‘CC=COMPILER’ and ‘CFLAGS=FLAGS’
40 arguments to ‘configure’. ‘CC’ selects the C compiler that will be
41 used, and ‘CFLAGS’ sets optimization options for the compiler. Any
42 compiler options required for all compilations, such as options
43 selecting an ABI or a processor for which to generate code, should be
44 included in ‘CC’. Options that may be overridden by the GNU C Library
45 build system for particular files, such as for optimization and
46 debugging, should go in ‘CFLAGS’. The default value of ‘CFLAGS’ is ‘-g
47 -O2’, and the GNU C Library cannot be compiled without optimization, so
48 if ‘CFLAGS’ is specified it must enable optimization. For example:
49
50 $ ../glibc-VERSION/configure CC="gcc -m32" CFLAGS="-O3"
51
52 The following list describes all of the available options for
53 ‘configure’:
54
55 ‘--prefix=DIRECTORY’
56 Install machine-independent data files in subdirectories of
57 ‘DIRECTORY’. The default is to install in ‘/usr/local’.
58
59 ‘--exec-prefix=DIRECTORY’
60 Install the library and other machine-dependent files in
61 subdirectories of ‘DIRECTORY’. The default is to the ‘--prefix’
62 directory if that option is specified, or ‘/usr/local’ otherwise.
63
64 ‘--with-headers=DIRECTORY’
65 Look for kernel header files in DIRECTORY, not ‘/usr/include’. The
66 GNU C Library needs information from the kernel’s header files
67 describing the interface to the kernel. The GNU C Library will
68 normally look in ‘/usr/include’ for them, but if you specify this
69 option, it will look in DIRECTORY instead.
70
71 This option is primarily of use on a system where the headers in
72 ‘/usr/include’ come from an older version of the GNU C Library.
73 Conflicts can occasionally happen in this case. You can also use
74 this option if you want to compile the GNU C Library with a newer
75 set of kernel headers than the ones found in ‘/usr/include’.
76
77 ‘--enable-kernel=VERSION’
78 This option is currently only useful on GNU/Linux systems. The
79 VERSION parameter should have the form X.Y.Z and describes the
80 smallest version of the Linux kernel the generated library is
81 expected to support. The higher the VERSION number is, the less
82 compatibility code is added, and the faster the code gets.
83
84 ‘--with-binutils=DIRECTORY’
85 Use the binutils (assembler and linker) in ‘DIRECTORY’, not the
86 ones the C compiler would default to. You can use this option if
87 the default binutils on your system cannot deal with all the
88 constructs in the GNU C Library. In that case, ‘configure’ will
89 detect the problem and suppress these constructs, so that the
90 library will still be usable, but functionality may be lost—for
91 example, you can’t build a shared libc with old binutils.
92
93 ‘--with-nonshared-cflags=CFLAGS’
94 Use additional compiler flags CFLAGS to build the parts of the
95 library which are always statically linked into applications and
96 libraries even with shared linking (that is, the object files
97 contained in ‘lib*_nonshared.a’ libraries). The build process will
98 automatically use the appropriate flags, but this option can be
99 used to set additional flags required for building applications and
100 libraries, to match local policy. For example, if such a policy
101 requires that all code linked into applications must be built with
102 source fortification,
103 ‘--with-nonshared-cflags=-Wp,-D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=2’ will make sure
104 that the objects in ‘libc_nonshared.a’ are compiled with this flag
105 (although this will not affect the generated code in this
106 particular case and potentially change debugging information and
107 metadata only).
108
109 ‘--with-rtld-early-cflags=CFLAGS’
110 Use additional compiler flags CFLAGS to build the early startup
111 code of the dynamic linker. These flags can be used to enable
112 early dynamic linker diagnostics to run on CPUs which are not
113 compatible with the rest of the GNU C Library, for example, due to
114 compiler flags which target a later instruction set architecture
115 (ISA).
116
117 ‘--with-timeoutfactor=NUM’
118 Specify an integer NUM to scale the timeout of test programs. This
119 factor can be changed at run time using ‘TIMEOUTFACTOR’ environment
120 variable.
121
122 ‘--disable-shared’
123 Don’t build shared libraries even if it is possible. Not all
124 systems support shared libraries; you need ELF support and
125 (currently) the GNU linker.
126
127 ‘--disable-default-pie’
128 Don’t build glibc programs and the testsuite as position
129 independent executables (PIE). By default, glibc programs and tests
130 are created as position independent executables on targets that
131 support it. If the toolchain and architecture support it, static
132 executables are built as static PIE and the resulting glibc can be
133 used with the GCC option, -static-pie, which is available with GCC
134 8 or above, to create static PIE.
135
136 ‘--enable-cet’
137 ‘--enable-cet=permissive’
138 Enable Intel Control-flow Enforcement Technology (CET) support.
139 When the GNU C Library is built with ‘--enable-cet’ or
140 ‘--enable-cet=permissive’, the resulting library is protected with
141 indirect branch tracking (IBT) and shadow stack (SHSTK). When CET
142 is enabled, the GNU C Library is compatible with all existing
143 executables and shared libraries. This feature is currently
144 supported on i386, x86_64 and x32 with GCC 8 and binutils 2.29 or
145 later. Note that when CET is enabled, the GNU C Library requires
146 CPUs capable of multi-byte NOPs, like x86-64 processors as well as
147 Intel Pentium Pro or newer. With ‘--enable-cet’, it is an error to
148 dlopen a non CET enabled shared library in CET enabled application.
149 With ‘--enable-cet=permissive’, CET is disabled when dlopening a
150 non CET enabled shared library in CET enabled application.
151
152 NOTE: ‘--enable-cet’ has been tested for i686, x86_64 and x32 on
153 non-CET processors. ‘--enable-cet’ has been tested for i686,
154 x86_64 and x32 on CET processors.
155
156 ‘--enable-memory-tagging’
157 Enable memory tagging support if the architecture supports it.
158 When the GNU C Library is built with this option then the resulting
159 library will be able to control the use of tagged memory when
160 hardware support is present by use of the tunable
161 ‘glibc.mem.tagging’. This includes the generation of tagged memory
162 when using the ‘malloc’ APIs.
163
164 At present only AArch64 platforms with MTE provide this
165 functionality, although the library will still operate (without
166 memory tagging) on older versions of the architecture.
167
168 The default is to disable support for memory tagging.
169
170 ‘--disable-profile’
171 Don’t build libraries with profiling information. You may want to
172 use this option if you don’t plan to do profiling.
173
174 ‘--enable-static-nss’
175 Compile static versions of the NSS (Name Service Switch) libraries.
176 This is not recommended because it defeats the purpose of NSS; a
177 program linked statically with the NSS libraries cannot be
178 dynamically reconfigured to use a different name database.
179
180 ‘--enable-hardcoded-path-in-tests’
181 By default, dynamic tests are linked to run with the installed C
182 library. This option hardcodes the newly built C library path in
183 dynamic tests so that they can be invoked directly.
184
185 ‘--disable-timezone-tools’
186 By default, timezone related utilities (‘zic’, ‘zdump’, and
187 ‘tzselect’) are installed with the GNU C Library. If you are
188 building these independently (e.g. by using the ‘tzcode’ package),
189 then this option will allow disabling the install of these.
190
191 Note that you need to make sure the external tools are kept in sync
192 with the versions that the GNU C Library expects as the data
193 formats may change over time. Consult the ‘timezone’ subdirectory
194 for more details.
195
196 ‘--enable-stack-protector’
197 ‘--enable-stack-protector=strong’
198 ‘--enable-stack-protector=all’
199 Compile the C library and all other parts of the glibc package
200 (including the threading and math libraries, NSS modules, and
201 transliteration modules) using the GCC ‘-fstack-protector’,
202 ‘-fstack-protector-strong’ or ‘-fstack-protector-all’ options to
203 detect stack overruns. Only the dynamic linker and a small number
204 of routines called directly from assembler are excluded from this
205 protection.
206
207 ‘--enable-bind-now’
208 Disable lazy binding for installed shared objects and programs.
209 This provides additional security hardening because it enables full
210 RELRO and a read-only global offset table (GOT), at the cost of
211 slightly increased program load times.
212
213 ‘--enable-pt_chown’
214 The file ‘pt_chown’ is a helper binary for ‘grantpt’ (*note
215 Pseudo-Terminals: Allocation.) that is installed setuid root to fix
216 up pseudo-terminal ownership on GNU/Hurd. It is not required on
217 GNU/Linux, and the GNU C Library will not use the installed
218 ‘pt_chown’ program when configured with ‘--enable-pt_chown’.
219
220 ‘--disable-werror’
221 By default, the GNU C Library is built with ‘-Werror’. If you wish
222 to build without this option (for example, if building with a newer
223 version of GCC than this version of the GNU C Library was tested
224 with, so new warnings cause the build with ‘-Werror’ to fail), you
225 can configure with ‘--disable-werror’.
226
227 ‘--disable-mathvec’
228 By default for x86_64, the GNU C Library is built with the vector
229 math library. Use this option to disable the vector math library.
230
231 ‘--disable-crypt’
232 Do not install the passphrase-hashing library ‘libcrypt’ or the
233 header file ‘crypt.h’. ‘unistd.h’ will still declare the function
234 ‘crypt’. Using this option does not change the set of programs
235 that may need to be linked with ‘-lcrypt’; it only means that the
236 GNU C Library will not provide that library.
237
238 This option is for hackers and distributions experimenting with
239 independently-maintained implementations of libcrypt. It may
240 become the default in a future release.
241
242 ‘--disable-scv’
243 Disable using ‘scv’ instruction for syscalls. All syscalls will
244 use ‘sc’ instead, even if the kernel supports ‘scv’. PowerPC only.
245
246 ‘--build=BUILD-SYSTEM’
247 ‘--host=HOST-SYSTEM’
248 These options are for cross-compiling. If you specify both options
249 and BUILD-SYSTEM is different from HOST-SYSTEM, ‘configure’ will
250 prepare to cross-compile the GNU C Library from BUILD-SYSTEM to be
251 used on HOST-SYSTEM. You’ll probably need the ‘--with-headers’
252 option too, and you may have to override CONFIGURE’s selection of
253 the compiler and/or binutils.
254
255 If you only specify ‘--host’, ‘configure’ will prepare for a native
256 compile but use what you specify instead of guessing what your
257 system is. This is most useful to change the CPU submodel. For
258 example, if ‘configure’ guesses your machine as ‘i686-pc-linux-gnu’
259 but you want to compile a library for 586es, give
260 ‘--host=i586-pc-linux-gnu’ or just ‘--host=i586-linux’ and add the
261 appropriate compiler flags (‘-mcpu=i586’ will do the trick) to
262 ‘CC’.
263
264 If you specify just ‘--build’, ‘configure’ will get confused.
265
266 ‘--with-pkgversion=VERSION’
267 Specify a description, possibly including a build number or build
268 date, of the binaries being built, to be included in ‘--version’
269 output from programs installed with the GNU C Library. For
270 example, ‘--with-pkgversion='FooBar GNU/Linux glibc build 123'’.
271 The default value is ‘GNU libc’.
272
273 ‘--with-bugurl=URL’
274 Specify the URL that users should visit if they wish to report a
275 bug, to be included in ‘--help’ output from programs installed with
276 the GNU C Library. The default value refers to the main
277 bug-reporting information for the GNU C Library.
278
279 ‘--enable-fortify-source’
280 ‘--enable-fortify-source=LEVEL’
281 Use -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=‘LEVEL’ to control hardening in the GNU C
282 Library. If not provided, ‘LEVEL’ defaults to highest possible
283 value supported by the build compiler.
284
285 Default is to disable fortification.
286
287 To build the library and related programs, type ‘make’. This will
288 produce a lot of output, some of which may look like errors from ‘make’
289 but aren’t. Look for error messages from ‘make’ containing ‘***’.
290 Those indicate that something is seriously wrong.
291
292 The compilation process can take a long time, depending on the
293 configuration and the speed of your machine. Some complex modules may
294 take a very long time to compile, as much as several minutes on slower
295 machines. Do not panic if the compiler appears to hang.
296
297 If you want to run a parallel make, simply pass the ‘-j’ option with
298 an appropriate numeric parameter to ‘make’. You need a recent GNU
299 ‘make’ version, though.
300
301 To build and run test programs which exercise some of the library
302 facilities, type ‘make check’. If it does not complete successfully, do
303 not use the built library, and report a bug after verifying that the
304 problem is not already known. *Note Reporting Bugs::, for instructions
305 on reporting bugs. Note that some of the tests assume they are not
306 being run by ‘root’. We recommend you compile and test the GNU C
307 Library as an unprivileged user.
308
309 Before reporting bugs make sure there is no problem with your system.
310 The tests (and later installation) use some pre-existing files of the
311 system such as ‘/etc/passwd’, ‘/etc/nsswitch.conf’ and others. These
312 files must all contain correct and sensible content.
313
314 Normally, ‘make check’ will run all the tests before reporting all
315 problems found and exiting with error status if any problems occurred.
316 You can specify ‘stop-on-test-failure=y’ when running ‘make check’ to
317 make the test run stop and exit with an error status immediately when a
318 failure occurs.
319
320 To format the ‘GNU C Library Reference Manual’ for printing, type
321 ‘make dvi’. You need a working TeX installation to do this. The
322 distribution builds the on-line formatted version of the manual, as Info
323 files, as part of the build process. You can build them manually with
324 ‘make info’.
325
326 The library has a number of special-purpose configuration parameters
327 which you can find in ‘Makeconfig’. These can be overwritten with the
328 file ‘configparms’. To change them, create a ‘configparms’ in your
329 build directory and add values as appropriate for your system. The file
330 is included and parsed by ‘make’ and has to follow the conventions for
331 makefiles.
332
333 It is easy to configure the GNU C Library for cross-compilation by
334 setting a few variables in ‘configparms’. Set ‘CC’ to the
335 cross-compiler for the target you configured the library for; it is
336 important to use this same ‘CC’ value when running ‘configure’, like
337 this: ‘configure TARGET CC=TARGET-gcc’. Set ‘BUILD_CC’ to the compiler
338 to use for programs run on the build system as part of compiling the
339 library. You may need to set ‘AR’ to cross-compiling versions of ‘ar’
340 if the native tools are not configured to work with object files for the
341 target you configured for. When cross-compiling the GNU C Library, it
342 may be tested using ‘make check
343 test-wrapper="SRCDIR/scripts/cross-test-ssh.sh HOSTNAME"’, where SRCDIR
344 is the absolute directory name for the main source directory and
345 HOSTNAME is the host name of a system that can run the newly built
346 binaries of the GNU C Library. The source and build directories must be
347 visible at the same locations on both the build system and HOSTNAME.
348 The ‘cross-test-ssh.sh’ script requires ‘flock’ from ‘util-linux’ to
349 work when GLIBC_TEST_ALLOW_TIME_SETTING environment variable is set.
350
351 It is also possible to execute tests, which require setting the date
352 on the target machine. Following use cases are supported:
353 • ‘GLIBC_TEST_ALLOW_TIME_SETTING’ is set in the environment in which
354 eligible tests are executed and have the privilege to run
355 ‘clock_settime’. In this case, nothing prevents those tests from
356 running in parallel, so the caller shall assure that those tests
357 are serialized or provide a proper wrapper script for them.
358
359 • The ‘cross-test-ssh.sh’ script is used and one passes the
360 ‘--allow-time-setting’ flag. In this case, both sets
361 ‘GLIBC_TEST_ALLOW_TIME_SETTING’ and serialization of test execution
362 are assured automatically.
363
364 In general, when testing the GNU C Library, ‘test-wrapper’ may be set
365 to the name and arguments of any program to run newly built binaries.
366 This program must preserve the arguments to the binary being run, its
367 working directory and the standard input, output and error file
368 descriptors. If ‘TEST-WRAPPER env’ will not work to run a program with
369 environment variables set, then ‘test-wrapper-env’ must be set to a
370 program that runs a newly built program with environment variable
371 assignments in effect, those assignments being specified as ‘VAR=VALUE’
372 before the name of the program to be run. If multiple assignments to
373 the same variable are specified, the last assignment specified must take
374 precedence. Similarly, if ‘TEST-WRAPPER env -i’ will not work to run a
375 program with an environment completely empty of variables except those
376 directly assigned, then ‘test-wrapper-env-only’ must be set; its use has
377 the same syntax as ‘test-wrapper-env’, the only difference in its
378 semantics being starting with an empty set of environment variables
379 rather than the ambient set.
380
381 For AArch64 with SVE, when testing the GNU C Library, ‘test-wrapper’
382 may be set to "SRCDIR/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/aarch64/vltest.py
383 VECTOR-LENGTH" to change Vector Length.
384
385 Installing the C Library
386 ========================
387
388 To install the library and its header files, and the Info files of the
389 manual, type ‘make install’. This will build things, if necessary,
390 before installing them; however, you should still compile everything
391 first. If you are installing the GNU C Library as your primary C
392 library, we recommend that you shut the system down to single-user mode
393 first, and reboot afterward. This minimizes the risk of breaking things
394 when the library changes out from underneath.
395
396 ‘make install’ will do the entire job of upgrading from a previous
397 installation of the GNU C Library version 2.x. There may sometimes be
398 headers left behind from the previous installation, but those are
399 generally harmless. If you want to avoid leaving headers behind you can
400 do things in the following order.
401
402 You must first build the library (‘make’), optionally check it (‘make
403 check’), switch the include directories and then install (‘make
404 install’). The steps must be done in this order. Not moving the
405 directory before install will result in an unusable mixture of header
406 files from both libraries, but configuring, building, and checking the
407 library requires the ability to compile and run programs against the old
408 library. The new ‘/usr/include’, after switching the include
409 directories and before installing the library should contain the Linux
410 headers, but nothing else. If you do this, you will need to restore any
411 headers from libraries other than the GNU C Library yourself after
412 installing the library.
413
414 You can install the GNU C Library somewhere other than where you
415 configured it to go by setting the ‘DESTDIR’ GNU standard make variable
416 on the command line for ‘make install’. The value of this variable is
417 prepended to all the paths for installation. This is useful when
418 setting up a chroot environment or preparing a binary distribution. The
419 directory should be specified with an absolute file name. Installing
420 with the ‘prefix’ and ‘exec_prefix’ GNU standard make variables set is
421 not supported.
422
423 The GNU C Library includes a daemon called ‘nscd’, which you may or
424 may not want to run. ‘nscd’ caches name service lookups; it can
425 dramatically improve performance with NIS+, and may help with DNS as
426 well.
427
428 One auxiliary program, ‘/usr/libexec/pt_chown’, is installed setuid
429 ‘root’ if the ‘--enable-pt_chown’ configuration option is used. This
430 program is invoked by the ‘grantpt’ function; it sets the permissions on
431 a pseudoterminal so it can be used by the calling process. If you are
432 using a Linux kernel with the ‘devpts’ filesystem enabled and mounted at
433 ‘/dev/pts’, you don’t need this program.
434
435 After installation you should configure the timezone and install
436 locales for your system. The time zone configuration ensures that your
437 system time matches the time for your current timezone. The locales
438 ensure that the display of information on your system matches the
439 expectations of your language and geographic region.
440
441 The GNU C Library is able to use two kinds of localization
442 information sources, the first is a locale database named
443 ‘locale-archive’ which is generally installed as
444 ‘/usr/lib/locale/locale-archive’. The locale archive has the benefit of
445 taking up less space and being very fast to load, but only if you plan
446 to install sixty or more locales. If you plan to install one or two
447 locales you can instead install individual locales into their self-named
448 directories e.g. ‘/usr/lib/locale/en_US.utf8’. For example to install
449 the German locale using the character set for UTF-8 with name ‘de_DE’
450 into the locale archive issue the command ‘localedef -i de_DE -f UTF-8
451 de_DE’, and to install just the one locale issue the command ‘localedef
452 --no-archive -i de_DE -f UTF-8 de_DE’. To configure all locales that
453 are supported by the GNU C Library, you can issue from your build
454 directory the command ‘make localedata/install-locales’ to install all
455 locales into the locale archive or ‘make
456 localedata/install-locale-files’ to install all locales as files in the
457 default configured locale installation directory (derived from
458 ‘--prefix’ or ‘--localedir’). To install into an alternative system
459 root use ‘DESTDIR’ e.g. ‘make localedata/install-locale-files
460 DESTDIR=/opt/glibc’, but note that this does not change the configured
461 prefix.
462
463 To configure the locally used timezone, set the ‘TZ’ environment
464 variable. The script ‘tzselect’ helps you to select the right value.
465 As an example, for Germany, ‘tzselect’ would tell you to use
466 ‘TZ='Europe/Berlin'’. For a system wide installation (the given paths
467 are for an installation with ‘--prefix=/usr’), link the timezone file
468 which is in ‘/usr/share/zoneinfo’ to the file ‘/etc/localtime’. For
469 Germany, you might execute ‘ln -s /usr/share/zoneinfo/Europe/Berlin
470 /etc/localtime’.
471
472 Recommended Tools for Compilation
473 =================================
474
475 We recommend installing the following GNU tools before attempting to
476 build the GNU C Library:
477
478 • GNU ‘make’ 4.0 or newer
479
480 As of release time, GNU ‘make’ 4.4 is the newest verified to work
481 to build the GNU C Library.
482
483 • GCC 6.2 or newer
484
485 GCC 6.2 or higher is required. In general it is recommended to use
486 the newest version of the compiler that is known to work for
487 building the GNU C Library, as newer compilers usually produce
488 better code. As of release time, GCC 13.0 is the newest compiler
489 verified to work to build the GNU C Library.
490
491 For PowerPC 64-bits little-endian (powerpc64le), a GCC version with
492 support for ‘-mno-gnu-attribute’, ‘-mabi=ieeelongdouble’, and
493 ‘-mabi=ibmlondouble’ is required. Likewise, the compiler must also
494 support passing ‘-mlong-double-128’ with the preceding options. As
495 of release, this implies GCC 7.4 and newer (excepting GCC 7.5.0,
496 see GCC PR94200). These additional features are required for
497 building the GNU C Library with support for IEEE long double.
498
499 For ARC architecture builds, GCC 8.3 or higher is needed.
500
501 For s390x architecture builds, GCC 7.1 or higher is needed (See gcc
502 Bug 98269).
503
504 For AArch64 architecture builds with mathvec enabled, GCC 10 or
505 higher is needed due to dependency on arm_sve.h.
506
507 For multi-arch support it is recommended to use a GCC which has
508 been built with support for GNU indirect functions. This ensures
509 that correct debugging information is generated for functions
510 selected by IFUNC resolvers. This support can either be enabled by
511 configuring GCC with ‘--enable-gnu-indirect-function’, or by
512 enabling it by default by setting ‘default_gnu_indirect_function’
513 variable for a particular architecture in the GCC source file
514 ‘gcc/config.gcc’.
515
516 You can use whatever compiler you like to compile programs that use
517 the GNU C Library.
518
519 Check the FAQ for any special compiler issues on particular
520 platforms.
521
522 • GNU ‘binutils’ 2.25 or later
523
524 You must use GNU ‘binutils’ (as and ld) to build the GNU C Library.
525 No other assembler or linker has the necessary functionality at the
526 moment. As of release time, GNU ‘binutils’ 2.39 is the newest
527 verified to work to build the GNU C Library.
528
529 For PowerPC 64-bits little-endian (powerpc64le), ‘objcopy’ is
530 required to support ‘--update-section’. This option requires
531 binutils 2.26 or newer.
532
533 ARC architecture needs ‘binutils’ 2.32 or higher for TLS related
534 fixes.
535
536 • GNU ‘texinfo’ 4.7 or later
537
538 To correctly translate and install the Texinfo documentation you
539 need this version of the ‘texinfo’ package. Earlier versions do
540 not understand all the tags used in the document, and the
541 installation mechanism for the info files is not present or works
542 differently. As of release time, ‘texinfo’ 7.0.2 is the newest
543 verified to work to build the GNU C Library.
544
545 • GNU ‘awk’ 3.1.2, or higher
546
547 ‘awk’ is used in several places to generate files. Some ‘gawk’
548 extensions are used, including the ‘asorti’ function, which was
549 introduced in version 3.1.2 of ‘gawk’. As of release time, ‘gawk’
550 version 5.1.1 is the newest verified to work to build the GNU C
551 Library.
552
553 • GNU ‘bison’ 2.7 or later
554
555 ‘bison’ is used to generate the ‘yacc’ parser code in the ‘intl’
556 subdirectory. As of release time, ‘bison’ version 3.8.2 is the
557 newest verified to work to build the GNU C Library.
558
559 • Perl 5
560
561 Perl is not required, but if present it is used in some tests and
562 the ‘mtrace’ program, to build the GNU C Library manual. As of
563 release time ‘perl’ version 5.36.0 is the newest verified to work
564 to build the GNU C Library.
565
566 • GNU ‘sed’ 3.02 or newer
567
568 ‘Sed’ is used in several places to generate files. Most scripts
569 work with any version of ‘sed’. As of release time, ‘sed’ version
570 4.8 is the newest verified to work to build the GNU C Library.
571
572 • Python 3.4 or later
573
574 Python is required to build the GNU C Library. As of release time,
575 Python 3.11 is the newest verified to work for building and testing
576 the GNU C Library.
577
578 • PExpect 4.0
579
580 The pretty printer tests drive GDB through test programs and
581 compare its output to the printers’. PExpect is used to capture
582 the output of GDB, and should be compatible with the Python version
583 in your system. As of release time PExpect 4.8.0 is the newest
584 verified to work to test the pretty printers.
585
586 • GDB 7.8 or later with support for Python 2.7/3.4 or later
587
588 GDB itself needs to be configured with Python support in order to
589 use the pretty printers. Notice that your system having Python
590 available doesn’t imply that GDB supports it, nor that your
591 system’s Python and GDB’s have the same version. As of release
592 time GNU ‘debugger’ 12.1 is the newest verified to work to test the
593 pretty printers.
594
595 Unless Python, PExpect and GDB with Python support are present, the
596 printer tests will report themselves as ‘UNSUPPORTED’. Notice that
597 some of the printer tests require the GNU C Library to be compiled
598 with debugging symbols.
599
600 If you change any of the ‘configure.ac’ files you will also need
601
602 • GNU ‘autoconf’ 2.69 (exactly)
603
604 and if you change any of the message translation files you will need
605
606 • GNU ‘gettext’ 0.10.36 or later
607
608 As of release time, GNU ‘gettext’ version 0.21.1 is the newest
609 version verified to work to build the GNU C Library.
610
611 You may also need these packages if you upgrade your source tree using
612 patches, although we try to avoid this.
613
614 Specific advice for GNU/Linux systems
615 =====================================
616
617 If you are installing the GNU C Library on GNU/Linux systems, you need
618 to have the header files from a 3.2 or newer kernel around for
619 reference. (For the ia64 architecture, you need version 3.2.18 or newer
620 because this is the first version with support for the ‘accept4’ system
621 call.) These headers must be installed using ‘make headers_install’;
622 the headers present in the kernel source directory are not suitable for
623 direct use by the GNU C Library. You do not need to use that kernel,
624 just have its headers installed where the GNU C Library can access them,
625 referred to here as INSTALL-DIRECTORY. The easiest way to do this is to
626 unpack it in a directory such as ‘/usr/src/linux-VERSION’. In that
627 directory, run ‘make headers_install
628 INSTALL_HDR_PATH=INSTALL-DIRECTORY’. Finally, configure the GNU C
629 Library with the option ‘--with-headers=INSTALL-DIRECTORY/include’. Use
630 the most recent kernel you can get your hands on. (If you are
631 cross-compiling the GNU C Library, you need to specify
632 ‘ARCH=ARCHITECTURE’ in the ‘make headers_install’ command, where
633 ARCHITECTURE is the architecture name used by the Linux kernel, such as
634 ‘x86’ or ‘powerpc’.)
635
636 After installing the GNU C Library, you may need to remove or rename
637 directories such as ‘/usr/include/linux’ and ‘/usr/include/asm’, and
638 replace them with copies of directories such as ‘linux’ and ‘asm’ from
639 ‘INSTALL-DIRECTORY/include’. All directories present in
640 ‘INSTALL-DIRECTORY/include’ should be copied, except that the GNU C
641 Library provides its own version of ‘/usr/include/scsi’; the files
642 provided by the kernel should be copied without replacing those provided
643 by the GNU C Library. The ‘linux’, ‘asm’ and ‘asm-generic’ directories
644 are required to compile programs using the GNU C Library; the other
645 directories describe interfaces to the kernel but are not required if
646 not compiling programs using those interfaces. You do not need to copy
647 kernel headers if you did not specify an alternate kernel header source
648 using ‘--with-headers’.
649
650 The Filesystem Hierarchy Standard for GNU/Linux systems expects some
651 components of the GNU C Library installation to be in ‘/lib’ and some in
652 ‘/usr/lib’. This is handled automatically if you configure the GNU C
653 Library with ‘--prefix=/usr’. If you set some other prefix or allow it
654 to default to ‘/usr/local’, then all the components are installed there.
655
656 As of release time, Linux version 6.1.5 is the newest stable version
657 verified to work to build the GNU C Library.
658
659 Reporting Bugs
660 ==============
661
662 There are probably bugs in the GNU C Library. There are certainly
663 errors and omissions in this manual. If you report them, they will get
664 fixed. If you don’t, no one will ever know about them and they will
665 remain unfixed for all eternity, if not longer.
666
667 It is a good idea to verify that the problem has not already been
668 reported. Bugs are documented in two places: The file ‘BUGS’ describes
669 a number of well known bugs and the central GNU C Library bug tracking
670 system has a WWW interface at <https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/>. The
671 WWW interface gives you access to open and closed reports. A closed
672 report normally includes a patch or a hint on solving the problem.
673
674 To report a bug, first you must find it. With any luck, this will be
675 the hard part. Once you’ve found a bug, make sure it’s really a bug. A
676 good way to do this is to see if the GNU C Library behaves the same way
677 some other C library does. If so, probably you are wrong and the
678 libraries are right (but not necessarily). If not, one of the libraries
679 is probably wrong. It might not be the GNU C Library. Many historical
680 Unix C libraries permit things that we don’t, such as closing a file
681 twice.
682
683 If you think you have found some way in which the GNU C Library does
684 not conform to the ISO and POSIX standards (*note Standards and
685 Portability::), that is definitely a bug. Report it!
686
687 Once you’re sure you’ve found a bug, try to narrow it down to the
688 smallest test case that reproduces the problem. In the case of a C
689 library, you really only need to narrow it down to one library function
690 call, if possible. This should not be too difficult.
691
692 The final step when you have a simple test case is to report the bug.
693 Do this at <https://www.gnu.org/software/libc/bugs.html>.
694
695 If you are not sure how a function should behave, and this manual
696 doesn’t tell you, that’s a bug in the manual. Report that too! If the
697 function’s behavior disagrees with the manual, then either the library
698 or the manual has a bug, so report the disagreement. If you find any
699 errors or omissions in this manual, please report them to the bug
700 database. If you refer to specific sections of the manual, please
701 include the section names for easier identification.