| 1 | 
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| 2 |                         GCC Frequently Asked Questions
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| 3 | 
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| 4 |    The latest version of this document is always available at
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| 5 |    [1]http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html.
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| 6 | 
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| 7 |    This FAQ tries to answer specific questions concerning GCC. For
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| 8 |    general information regarding C, C++, resp. Fortran please check the
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| 9 |    [2]comp.lang.c FAQ, [3]comp.std.c++ FAQ, and the [4]Fortran
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| 10 |    Information page.
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| 11 | 
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| 12 |    Other GCC-related FAQs: [5]libstdc++-v3, and [6]GCJ.
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| 13 |      _________________________________________________________________
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| 14 | 
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| 15 |                                    Questions
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| 16 | 
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| 17 |     1. [7]General information
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| 18 |          1. [8]What is the relationship between GCC and EGCS?
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| 19 |          2. [9]What is an open development model?
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| 20 |          3. [10]How do I get a bug fixed or a feature added?
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| 21 |          4. [11]Does GCC work on my platform?
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| 22 |     2. [12]Installation
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| 23 |          1. [13]How to install multiple versions of GCC
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| 24 |          2. [14]Dynamic linker is unable to find GCC libraries
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| 25 |          3. [15]libstdc++/libio tests fail badly with --enable-shared
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| 26 |          4. [16]GCC can not find GNU as/GNU ld
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| 27 |          5. [17]cpp: Usage:... Error
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| 28 |          6. [18]Optimizing the compiler itself
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| 29 |          7. [19]Why does libiconv get linked into jc1 on Solaris?
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| 30 |     3. [20]Testsuite problems
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| 31 |          1. [21]How do I pass flags like -fnew-abi to the testsuite?
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| 32 |          2. [22]How can I run the test suite with multiple options?
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| 33 |     4. [23]Older versions of GCC
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| 34 |          1. [24]Is there a stringstream / sstream for GCC 2.95.2?
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| 35 |     5. [25]Miscellaneous
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| 36 |          1. [26]Friend Templates
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| 37 |          2. [27]dynamic_cast, throw, typeid don't work with shared
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| 38 |             libraries
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| 39 |          3. [28]Why do I need autoconf, bison, xgettext, automake, etc?
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| 40 |          4. [29]Why can't I build a shared library?
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| 41 |          5. [30]When building C++, the linker says my constructors,
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| 42 |             destructors or virtual tables are undefined, but I defined
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| 43 |             them
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| 44 |          6. [31]Will GCC someday include an incremental linker?
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| 45 |      _________________________________________________________________
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| 46 | 
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| 47 |                               General information
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| 48 | 
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| 49 | What is the relationship between GCC and EGCS?
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| 50 | 
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| 51 |    In 1990/1991 gcc version 1 had reached a point of stability. For the
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| 52 |    targets it could support, it worked well. It had limitations inherent
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| 53 |    in its design that would be difficult to resolve, so a major effort
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| 54 |    was made to resolve those limitations and gcc version 2 was the
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| 55 |    result.
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| 56 | 
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| 57 |    When we had gcc2 in a useful state, development efforts on gcc1
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| 58 |    stopped and we all concentrated on making gcc2 better than gcc1 could
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| 59 |    ever be. This is the kind of step forward we wanted to make with the
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| 60 |    EGCS project when it was formed in 1997.
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| 61 | 
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| 62 |    In April 1999 the Free Software Foundation officially halted
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| 63 |    development on the gcc2 compiler and appointed the EGCS project as the
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| 64 |    official GCC maintainers. The net result was a single project which
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| 65 |    carries forward GCC development under the ultimate control of the
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| 66 |    [32]GCC Steering Committee.
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| 67 |      _________________________________________________________________
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| 68 | 
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| 69 | What is an open development model?
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| 70 | 
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| 71 |    We are using a bazaar style [33][1] approach to GCC development: we
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| 72 |    make snapshots publicly available to anyone who wants to try them; we
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| 73 |    welcome anyone to join the development mailing list. All of the
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| 74 |    discussions on the development mailing list are available via the web.
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| 75 |    We're going to be making releases with a much higher frequency than
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| 76 |    they have been made in the past.
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| 77 | 
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| 78 |    In addition to weekly snapshots of the GCC development sources, we
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| 79 |    have the sources readable from a CVS server by anyone. Furthermore we
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| 80 |    are using remote CVS to allow remote maintainers write access to the
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| 81 |    sources.
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| 82 | 
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| 83 |    There have been many potential GCC developers who were not able to
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| 84 |    participate in GCC development in the past. We want these people to
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| 85 |    help in any way they can; we ultimately want GCC to be the best
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| 86 |    compiler in the world.
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| 87 | 
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| 88 |    A compiler is a complicated piece of software, there will still be
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| 89 |    strong central maintainers who will reject patches, who will demand
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| 90 |    documentation of implementations, and who will keep the level of
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| 91 |    quality as high as it is today. Code that could use wider testing may
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| 92 |    be integrated--code that is simply ill-conceived won't be.
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| 93 | 
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| 94 |    GCC is not the first piece of software to use this open development
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| 95 |    process; FreeBSD, the Emacs lisp repository, and the Linux kernel are
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| 96 |    a few examples of the bazaar style of development.
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| 97 | 
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| 98 |    With GCC, we are adding new features and optimizations at a rate that
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| 99 |    has not been done since the creation of gcc2; these additions
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| 100 |    inevitably have a temporarily destabilizing effect. With the help of
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| 101 |    developers working together with this bazaar style development, the
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| 102 |    resulting stability and quality levels will be better than we've had
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| 103 |    before.
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| 104 | 
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| 105 |      [1] We've been discussing different development models a lot over
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| 106 |      the past few months. The paper which started all of this introduced
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| 107 |      two terms: A cathedral development model versus a bazaar
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| 108 |      development model. The paper is written by Eric S. Raymond, it is
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| 109 |      called ``The Cathedral and the Bazaar''. The paper is a useful
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| 110 |      starting point for discussions.
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| 111 |      _________________________________________________________________
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| 112 | 
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| 113 | How do I get a bug fixed or a feature added?
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| 114 | 
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| 115 |    There are lots of ways to get something fixed. The list below may be
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| 116 |    incomplete, but it covers many of the common cases. These are listed
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| 117 |    roughly in order of decreasing difficulty for the average GCC user,
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| 118 |    meaning someone who is not skilled in the internals of GCC, and where
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| 119 |    difficulty is measured in terms of the time required to fix the bug.
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| 120 |    No alternative is better than any other; each has its benefits and
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| 121 |    disadvantages.
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| 122 |      * Fix it yourself. This alternative will probably bring results, if
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| 123 |        you work hard enough, but will probably take a lot of time, and,
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| 124 |        depending on the quality of your work and the perceived benefits
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| 125 |        of your changes, your code may or may not ever make it into an
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| 126 |        official release of GCC.
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| 127 |      * [34]Report the problem to the GCC bug tracking system and hope
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| 128 |        that someone will be kind enough to fix it for you. While this is
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| 129 |        certainly possible, and often happens, there is no guarantee that
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| 130 |        it will. You should not expect the same response from this method
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| 131 |        that you would see from a commercial support organization since
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| 132 |        the people who read GCC bug reports, if they choose to help you,
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| 133 |        will be volunteering their time.
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| 134 |      * Hire someone to fix it for you. There are various companies and
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| 135 |        individuals providing support for GCC. This alternative costs
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| 136 |        money, but is relatively likely to get results.
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| 137 |      _________________________________________________________________
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| 138 | 
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| 139 | Does GCC work on my platform?
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| 140 | 
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| 141 |    The host/target specific installation notes for GCC include
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| 142 |    information about known problems with installing or using GCC on
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| 143 |    particular platforms. These are included in the sources for a release
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| 144 |    in INSTALL/specific.html, and the [35]latest version is always
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| 145 |    available at the GCC web site. Reports of [36]successful builds for
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| 146 |    several versions of GCC are also available at the web site.
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| 147 |      _________________________________________________________________
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| 148 | 
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| 149 |                                  Installation
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| 150 | 
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| 151 | How to install multiple versions of GCC
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| 152 | 
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| 153 |    It may be desirable to install multiple versions of the compiler on
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| 154 |    the same system. This can be done by using different prefix paths at
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| 155 |    configure time and a few symlinks.
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| 156 | 
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| 157 |    Basically, configure the two compilers with different --prefix
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| 158 |    options, then build and install each compiler. Assume you want "gcc"
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| 159 |    to be the latest compiler and available in /usr/local/bin; also assume
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| 160 |    that you want "gcc2" to be the older gcc2 compiler and also available
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| 161 |    in /usr/local/bin.
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| 162 | 
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| 163 |    The easiest way to do this is to configure the new GCC with
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| 164 |    --prefix=/usr/local/gcc and the older gcc2 with
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| 165 |    --prefix=/usr/local/gcc2. Build and install both compilers. Then make
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| 166 |    a symlink from /usr/local/bin/gcc to /usr/local/gcc/bin/gcc and from
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| 167 |    /usr/local/bin/gcc2 to /usr/local/gcc2/bin/gcc. Create similar links
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| 168 |    for the "g++", "c++" and "g77" compiler drivers.
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| 169 | 
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| 170 |    An alternative to using symlinks is to configure with a
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| 171 |    --program-transform-name option. This option specifies a sed command
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| 172 |    to process installed program names with. Using it you can, for
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| 173 |    instance, have all the new GCC programs installed as "new-gcc" and the
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| 174 |    like. You will still have to specify different --prefix options for
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| 175 |    new GCC and old GCC, because it is only the executable program names
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| 176 |    that are transformed. The difference is that you (as administrator) do
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| 177 |    not have to set up symlinks, but must specify additional directories
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| 178 |    in your (as a user) PATH. A complication with --program-transform-name
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| 179 |    is that the sed command invariably contains characters significant to
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| 180 |    the shell, and these have to be escaped correctly, also it is not
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| 181 |    possible to use "^" or "$" in the command. Here is the option to
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| 182 |    prefix "new-" to the new GCC installed programs:
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| 183 | 
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| 184 |      --program-transform-name='s,\\\\(.*\\\\),new-\\\\1,'
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| 185 | 
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| 186 |    With the above --prefix option, that will install the new GCC programs
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| 187 |    into /usr/local/gcc/bin with names prefixed by "new-". You can use
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| 188 |    --program-transform-name if you have multiple versions of GCC, and
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| 189 |    wish to be sure about which version you are invoking.
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| 190 | 
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| 191 |    If you use --prefix, GCC may have difficulty locating a GNU assembler
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| 192 |    or linker on your system, [37]GCC can not find GNU as/GNU ld explains
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| 193 |    how to deal with this.
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| 194 | 
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| 195 |    Another option that may be easier is to use the --program-prefix= or
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| 196 |    --program-suffix= options to configure. So if you're installing GCC
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| 197 |    2.95.2 and don't want to disturb the current version of GCC in
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| 198 |    /usr/local/bin/, you could do
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| 199 | 
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| 200 |      configure --program-suffix=-2.95.2 <other configure options>
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| 201 | 
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| 202 |    This should result in GCC being installed as /usr/local/bin/gcc-2.95.2
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| 203 |    instead of /usr/local/bin/gcc.
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| 204 |      _________________________________________________________________
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| 205 | 
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| 206 | Dynamic linker is unable to find GCC libraries
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| 207 | 
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| 208 |    This problem manifests itself by programs not finding shared libraries
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| 209 |    they depend on when the programs are started. Note this problem often
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| 210 |    manifests itself with failures in the libio/libstdc++ tests after
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| 211 |    configuring with --enable-shared and building GCC.
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| 212 | 
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| 213 |    GCC does not specify a runpath so that the dynamic linker can find
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| 214 |    dynamic libraries at runtime.
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| 215 | 
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| 216 |    The short explanation is that if you always pass a -R option to the
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| 217 |    linker, then your programs become dependent on directories which may
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| 218 |    be NFS mounted, and programs may hang unnecessarily when an NFS server
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| 219 |    goes down.
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| 220 | 
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| 221 |    The problem is not programs that do require the directories; those
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| 222 |    programs are going to hang no matter what you do. The problem is
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| 223 |    programs that do not require the directories.
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| 224 | 
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| 225 |    SunOS effectively always passed a -R option for every -L option; this
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| 226 |    was a bad idea, and so it was removed for Solaris. We should not
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| 227 |    recreate it.
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| 228 | 
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| 229 |    However, if you feel you really need such an option to be passed
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| 230 |    automatically to the linker, you may add it to the GCC specs file.
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| 231 |    This file can be found in the same directory that contains cc1 (run
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| 232 |    gcc -print-prog-name=cc1 to find it). You may add linker flags such as
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| 233 |    -R or -rpath, depending on platform and linker, to the *link or *lib
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| 234 |    specs.
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| 235 | 
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| 236 |    Another alternative is to install a wrapper script around gcc, g++ or
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| 237 |    ld that adds the appropriate directory to the environment variable
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| 238 |    LD_RUN_PATH or equivalent (again, it's platform-dependent).
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| 239 | 
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| 240 |    Yet another option, that works on a few platforms, is to hard-code the
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| 241 |    full pathname of the library into its soname. This can only be
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| 242 |    accomplished by modifying the appropriate .ml file within
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| 243 |    libstdc++/config (and also libg++/config, if you are building libg++),
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| 244 |    so that $(libdir)/ appears just before the library name in -soname or
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| 245 |    -h options.
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| 246 |      _________________________________________________________________
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| 247 | 
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| 248 | GCC can not find GNU as/GNU ld
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| 249 | 
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| 250 |    GCC searches the PATH for an assembler and a loader, but it only does
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| 251 |    so after searching a directory list hard-coded in the GCC executables.
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| 252 |    Since, on most platforms, the hard-coded list includes directories in
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| 253 |    which the system assembler and loader can be found, you may have to
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| 254 |    take one of the following actions to arrange that GCC uses the GNU
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| 255 |    versions of those programs.
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| 256 | 
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| 257 |    To ensure that GCC finds the GNU assembler (the GNU loader), which are
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| 258 |    required by [38]some configurations, you should configure these with
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| 259 |    the same --prefix option as you used for GCC. Then build & install GNU
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| 260 |    as (GNU ld) and proceed with building GCC.
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| 261 | 
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| 262 |    Another alternative is to create links to GNU as and ld in any of the
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| 263 |    directories printed by the command `gcc -print-search-dirs | grep
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| 264 |    '^programs:''. The link to `ld' should be named `real-ld' if `ld'
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| 265 |    already exists. If such links do not exist while you're compiling GCC,
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| 266 |    you may have to create them in the build directories too, within the
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| 267 |    gcc directory and in all the gcc/stage* subdirectories.
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| 268 | 
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| 269 |    GCC 2.95 allows you to specify the full pathname of the assembler and
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| 270 |    the linker to use. The configure flags are `--with-as=/path/to/as' and
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| 271 |    `--with-ld=/path/to/ld'. GCC will try to use these pathnames before
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| 272 |    looking for `as' or `(real-)ld' in the standard search dirs. If, at
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| 273 |    configure-time, the specified programs are found to be GNU utilities,
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| 274 |    `--with-gnu-as' and `--with-gnu-ld' need not be used; these flags will
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| 275 |    be auto-detected. One drawback of this option is that it won't allow
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| 276 |    you to override the search path for assembler and linker with
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| 277 |    command-line options -B/path/ if the specified filenames exist.
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| 278 |      _________________________________________________________________
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| 279 | 
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| 280 | cpp: Usage:... Error
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| 281 | 
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| 282 |    If you get an error like this when building GCC (particularly when
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| 283 |    building __mulsi3), then you likely have a problem with your
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| 284 |    environment variables.
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| 285 |   cpp: Usage: /usr/lib/gcc-lib/i586-unknown-linux-gnulibc1/2.7.2.3/cpp
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| 286 |   [switches] input output
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| 287 | 
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| 288 |    First look for an explicit '.' in either LIBRARY_PATH or
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| 289 |    GCC_EXEC_PREFIX from your environment. If you do not find an explicit
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| 290 |    '.', look for an empty pathname in those variables. Note that ':' at
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| 291 |    either the start or end of these variables is an implicit '.' and will
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| 292 |    cause problems.
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| 293 | 
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| 294 |    Also note '::' in these paths will also cause similar problems.
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| 295 |      _________________________________________________________________
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| 296 | 
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| 297 | Optimizing the compiler itself
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| 298 | 
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| 299 |    If you want to test a particular optimization option, it's useful to
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| 300 |    try bootstrapping the compiler with that option turned on. For
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| 301 |    example, to test the -fssa option, you could bootstrap like this:
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| 302 | make BOOT_CFLAGS="-O2 -fssa" bootstrap
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| 303 |      _________________________________________________________________
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| 304 | 
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| 305 | Why does libiconv get linked into jc1 on Solaris?
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| 306 | 
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| 307 |    The Java front end requires iconv. If the compiler used to bootstrap
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| 308 |    GCC finds libiconv (because the GNU version of libiconv has been
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| 309 |    installed in the same prefix as the bootstrap compiler), but the newly
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| 310 |    built GCC does not find the library (because it will be installed with
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| 311 |    a different prefix), then a link-time error will occur when building
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| 312 |    jc1. This problem does not show up so often on platforms that have
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| 313 |    libiconv in a default location (like /usr/lib) because then both
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| 314 |    compilers can find a library named libiconv, even though it is a
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| 315 |    different library.
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| 316 | 
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| 317 |    Using --disable-nls at configure-time does not prevent this problem
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| 318 |    because jc1 uses iconv even in that case. Solutions include
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| 319 |    temporarily removing the GNU libiconv, copying it to a default
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| 320 |    location such as /usr/lib/, and using --enable-languages at
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| 321 |    configure-time to disable Java.
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| 322 |      _________________________________________________________________
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| 323 | 
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| 324 |                               Testsuite problems
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| 325 | 
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| 326 | How do I pass flags like -fnew-abi to the testsuite?
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| 327 | 
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| 328 |    If you invoke runtest directly, you can use the --tool_opts option,
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| 329 |    e.g:
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| 330 |   runtest --tool_opts "-fnew-abi -fno-honor-std" <other options>
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| 331 | 
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| 332 |    Or, if you use make check you can use the make variable RUNTESTFLAGS,
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| 333 |    e.g:
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| 334 |   make RUNTESTFLAGS="--tool_opts '-fnew-abi -fno-honor-std'" check-g++
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| 335 |      _________________________________________________________________
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| 336 | 
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| 337 | How can I run the test suite with multiple options?
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| 338 | 
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| 339 |    If you invoke runtest directly, you can use the --target_board option,
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| 340 |    e.g:
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| 341 |   runtest --target_board "unix{-fPIC,-fpic,}" <other options>
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| 342 | 
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| 343 |    Or, if you use make check you can use the make variable RUNTESTFLAGS,
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| 344 |    e.g:
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| 345 |   make RUNTESTFLAGS="--target_board 'unix{-fPIC,-fpic,}'" check-gcc
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| 346 | 
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| 347 |    Either of these examples will run the tests three times. Once with
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| 348 |    -fPIC, once with -fpic, and once with no additional flags.
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| 349 | 
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| 350 |    This technique is particularly useful on multilibbed targets.
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| 351 |      _________________________________________________________________
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| 352 | 
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| 353 |                         Older versions of GCC and EGCS
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| 354 | 
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| 355 | Is there a stringstream / sstream for GCC 2.95.2?
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| 356 | 
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| 357 |    Yes, it's at:
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| 358 |    [39]http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/libstdc++/2000-q2/msg00700/sstream.
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| 359 |      _________________________________________________________________
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| 360 | 
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| 361 |                                  Miscellaneous
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| 362 | 
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| 363 | Friend Templates
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| 364 | 
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| 365 |    In order to make a specialization of a template function a friend of a
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| 366 |    (possibly template) class, you must explicitly state that the friend
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| 367 |    function is a template, by appending angle brackets to its name, and
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| 368 |    this template function must have been declared already. Here's an
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| 369 |    example:
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| 370 | template <typename T> class foo {
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| 371 |   friend void bar(foo<T>);
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| 372 | }
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| 373 | 
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| 374 |    The above declaration declares a non-template function named bar, so
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| 375 |    it must be explicitly defined for each specialization of foo. A
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| 376 |    template definition of bar won't do, because it is unrelated with the
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| 377 |    non-template declaration above. So you'd have to end up writing:
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| 378 | void bar(foo<int>) { /* ... */ }
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| 379 | void bar(foo<void>) { /* ... */ }
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| 380 | 
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| 381 |    If you meant bar to be a template function, you should have
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| 382 |    forward-declared it as follows. Note that, since the template function
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| 383 |    declaration refers to the template class, the template class must be
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| 384 |    forward-declared too:
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| 385 | template <typename T>
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| 386 | class foo;
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| 387 | 
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| 388 | template <typename T>
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| 389 | void bar(foo<T>);
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| 390 | 
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| 391 | template <typename T>
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| 392 | class foo {
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| 393 |   friend void bar<>(foo<T>);
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| 394 | };
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| 395 | 
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| 396 | template <typename T>
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| 397 | void bar(foo<T>) { /* ... */ }
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| 398 | 
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| 399 |    In this case, the template argument list could be left empty, because
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| 400 |    it can be implicitly deduced from the function arguments, but the
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| 401 |    angle brackets must be present, otherwise the declaration will be
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| 402 |    taken as a non-template function. Furthermore, in some cases, you may
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| 403 |    have to explicitly specify the template arguments, to remove
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| 404 |    ambiguity.
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| 405 | 
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| 406 |    An error in the last public comment draft of the ANSI/ISO C++ Standard
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| 407 |    and the fact that previous releases of GCC would accept such friend
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| 408 |    declarations as template declarations has led people to believe that
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| 409 |    the forward declaration was not necessary, but, according to the final
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| 410 |    version of the Standard, it is.
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| 411 |      _________________________________________________________________
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| 412 | 
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| 413 | dynamic_cast, throw, typeid don't work with shared libraries
 | 
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| 414 | 
 | 
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| 415 |    The new C++ ABI in the GCC 3.0 series uses address comparisons, rather
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| 416 |    than string compares, to determine type equality. This leads to better
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| 417 |    performance. Like other objects that have to be present in the final
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| 418 |    executable, these std::type_info objects have what is called vague
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| 419 |    linkage because they are not tightly bound to any one particular
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| 420 |    translation unit (object file). The compiler has to emit them in any
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| 421 |    translation unit that requires their presence, and then rely on the
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| 422 |    linking and loading process to make sure that only one of them is
 | 
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| 423 |    active in the final executable. With static linking all of these
 | 
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| 424 |    symbols are resolved at link time, but with dynamic linking, further
 | 
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| 425 |    resolution occurs at load time. You have to ensure that objects within
 | 
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| 426 |    a shared library are resolved against objects in the executable and
 | 
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| 427 |    other shared libraries.
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| 428 |      * For a program which is linked against a shared library, no
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| 429 |        additional precautions are needed.
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| 430 |      * You cannot create a shared library with the "-Bsymbolic" option,
 | 
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| 431 |        as that prevents the resolution described above.
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| 432 |      * If you use dlopen to explicitly load code from a shared library,
 | 
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| 433 |        you must do several things. First, export global symbols from the
 | 
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| 434 |        executable by linking it with the "-E" flag (you will have to
 | 
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| 435 |        specify this as "-Wl,-E" if you are invoking the linker in the
 | 
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| 436 |        usual manner from the compiler driver, g++). You must also make
 | 
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| 437 |        the external symbols in the loaded library available for
 | 
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| 438 |        subsequent libraries by providing the RTLD_GLOBAL flag to dlopen.
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| 439 |        The symbol resolution can be immediate or lazy.
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| 440 | 
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| 441 |    Template instantiations are another, user visible, case of objects
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| 442 |    with vague linkage, which needs similar resolution. If you do not take
 | 
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| 443 |    the above precautions, you may discover that a template instantiation
 | 
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| 444 |    with the same argument list, but instantiated in multiple translation
 | 
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| 445 |    units, has several addresses, depending in which translation unit the
 | 
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| 446 |    address is taken. (This is not an exhaustive list of the kind of
 | 
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| 447 |    objects which have vague linkage and are expected to be resolved
 | 
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| 448 |    during linking & loading.)
 | 
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| 449 | 
 | 
|---|
| 450 |    If you are worried about different objects with the same name
 | 
|---|
| 451 |    colliding during the linking or loading process, then you should use
 | 
|---|
| 452 |    namespaces to disambiguate them. Giving distinct objects with global
 | 
|---|
| 453 |    linkage the same name is a violation of the One Definition Rule (ODR)
 | 
|---|
| 454 |    [basic.def.odr].
 | 
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| 455 | 
 | 
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| 456 |    For more details about the way that GCC implements these and other C++
 | 
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| 457 |    features, please read the [40]ABI specification. Note the
 | 
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| 458 |    std::type_info objects which must be resolved all begin with "_ZTS".
 | 
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| 459 |    Refer to ld's documentation for a description of the "-E" &
 | 
|---|
| 460 |    "-Bsymbolic" flags.
 | 
|---|
| 461 |      _________________________________________________________________
 | 
|---|
| 462 | 
 | 
|---|
| 463 | Why do I need autoconf, bison, xgettext, automake, etc?
 | 
|---|
| 464 | 
 | 
|---|
| 465 |    If you're using diffs up dated from one snapshot to the next, or if
 | 
|---|
| 466 |    you're using the CVS repository, you may need several additional
 | 
|---|
| 467 |    programs to build GCC.
 | 
|---|
| 468 | 
 | 
|---|
| 469 |    These include, but are not necessarily limited to autoconf, automake,
 | 
|---|
| 470 |    bison, and xgettext.
 | 
|---|
| 471 | 
 | 
|---|
| 472 |    This is necessary because neither diff nor cvs keep timestamps
 | 
|---|
| 473 |    correct. This causes problems for generated files as "make" may think
 | 
|---|
| 474 |    those generated files are out of date and try to regenerate them.
 | 
|---|
| 475 | 
 | 
|---|
| 476 |    An easy way to work around this problem is to use the gcc_update
 | 
|---|
| 477 |    script in the contrib subdirectory of GCC, which handles this
 | 
|---|
| 478 |    transparently without requiring installation of any additional tools.
 | 
|---|
| 479 |    (Note: Up to and including GCC 2.95 this script was called egcs_update
 | 
|---|
| 480 |    .)
 | 
|---|
| 481 | 
 | 
|---|
| 482 |    When building from diffs or CVS or if you modified some sources, you
 | 
|---|
| 483 |    may also need to obtain development versions of some GNU tools, as the
 | 
|---|
| 484 |    production versions do not necessarily handle all features needed to
 | 
|---|
| 485 |    rebuild GCC.
 | 
|---|
| 486 | 
 | 
|---|
| 487 |    In general, the current versions of these tools from
 | 
|---|
| 488 |    [41]ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/ will work. At present, Autoconf 2.50 is not
 | 
|---|
| 489 |    supported, and you will need to use Autoconf 2.13; work is in progress
 | 
|---|
| 490 |    to fix this problem. Also look at
 | 
|---|
| 491 |    [42]ftp://gcc.gnu.org/pub/gcc/infrastructure/ for any special versions
 | 
|---|
| 492 |    of packages.
 | 
|---|
| 493 |      _________________________________________________________________
 | 
|---|
| 494 | 
 | 
|---|
| 495 | Why can't I build a shared library?
 | 
|---|
| 496 | 
 | 
|---|
| 497 |    When building a shared library you may get an error message from the
 | 
|---|
| 498 |    linker like `assert pure-text failed:' or `DP relative code in file'.
 | 
|---|
| 499 | 
 | 
|---|
| 500 |    This kind of error occurs when you've failed to provide proper flags
 | 
|---|
| 501 |    to gcc when linking the shared library.
 | 
|---|
| 502 | 
 | 
|---|
| 503 |    You can get this error even if all the .o files for the shared library
 | 
|---|
| 504 |    were compiled with the proper PIC option. When building a shared
 | 
|---|
| 505 |    library, gcc will compile additional code to be included in the
 | 
|---|
| 506 |    library. That additional code must also be compiled with the proper
 | 
|---|
| 507 |    PIC option.
 | 
|---|
| 508 | 
 | 
|---|
| 509 |    Adding the proper PIC option (-fpic or -fPIC) to the link line which
 | 
|---|
| 510 |    creates the shared library will fix this problem on targets that
 | 
|---|
| 511 |    support PIC in this manner. For example:
 | 
|---|
| 512 |         gcc -c -fPIC myfile.c
 | 
|---|
| 513 |         gcc -shared -o libmyfile.so -fPIC myfile.o
 | 
|---|
| 514 |      _________________________________________________________________
 | 
|---|
| 515 | 
 | 
|---|
| 516 | When building C++, the linker says my constructors, destructors or virtual
 | 
|---|
| 517 | tables are undefined, but I defined them
 | 
|---|
| 518 | 
 | 
|---|
| 519 |    The ISO C++ Standard specifies that all virtual methods of a class
 | 
|---|
| 520 |    that are not pure-virtual must be defined, but does not require any
 | 
|---|
| 521 |    diagnostic for violations of this rule [class.virtual]/8. Based on
 | 
|---|
| 522 |    this assumption, GCC will only emit the implicitly defined
 | 
|---|
| 523 |    constructors, the assignment operator, the destructor and the virtual
 | 
|---|
| 524 |    table of a class in the translation unit that defines its first such
 | 
|---|
| 525 |    non-inline method.
 | 
|---|
| 526 | 
 | 
|---|
| 527 |    Therefore, if you fail to define this particular method, the linker
 | 
|---|
| 528 |    may complain about the lack of definitions for apparently unrelated
 | 
|---|
| 529 |    symbols. Unfortunately, in order to improve this error message, it
 | 
|---|
| 530 |    might be necessary to change the linker, and this can't always be
 | 
|---|
| 531 |    done.
 | 
|---|
| 532 | 
 | 
|---|
| 533 |    The solution is to ensure that all virtual methods that are not pure
 | 
|---|
| 534 |    are defined. Note that a destructor must be defined even if it is
 | 
|---|
| 535 |    declared pure-virtual [class.dtor]/7.
 | 
|---|
| 536 |      _________________________________________________________________
 | 
|---|
| 537 | 
 | 
|---|
| 538 | Will GCC someday include an incremental linker?
 | 
|---|
| 539 | 
 | 
|---|
| 540 |    Incremental linking is part of the linker, not the compiler. As such,
 | 
|---|
| 541 |    GCC doesn't have anything to do with incremental linking. Depending on
 | 
|---|
| 542 |    what platform you use, it may be possible to tell GCC to use the
 | 
|---|
| 543 |    platform's native linker (e.g., Solaris' ild(1)).
 | 
|---|
| 544 | 
 | 
|---|
| 545 | References
 | 
|---|
| 546 | 
 | 
|---|
| 547 |    1. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html
 | 
|---|
| 548 |    2. http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/C-faq/top.html
 | 
|---|
| 549 |    3. http://www.jamesd.demon.co.uk/csc/faq.html
 | 
|---|
| 550 |    4. http://www.fortran.com/fortran/info.html
 | 
|---|
| 551 |    5. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/libstdc++/faq/index.html
 | 
|---|
| 552 |    6. http://gcc.gnu.org/java/faq.html
 | 
|---|
| 553 |    7. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#general
 | 
|---|
| 554 |    8. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#gcc
 | 
|---|
| 555 |    9. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#open-development
 | 
|---|
| 556 |   10. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#support
 | 
|---|
| 557 |   11. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#platforms
 | 
|---|
| 558 |   12. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#installation
 | 
|---|
| 559 |   13. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#multiple
 | 
|---|
| 560 |   14. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#rpath
 | 
|---|
| 561 |   15. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#rpath
 | 
|---|
| 562 |   16. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#gas
 | 
|---|
| 563 |   17. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#environ
 | 
|---|
| 564 |   18. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#optimizing
 | 
|---|
| 565 |   19. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#iconv
 | 
|---|
| 566 |   20. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#testsuite
 | 
|---|
| 567 |   21. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#testoptions
 | 
|---|
| 568 |   22. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#multipletests
 | 
|---|
| 569 |   23. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#old
 | 
|---|
| 570 |   24. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#2.95sstream
 | 
|---|
| 571 |   25. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#misc
 | 
|---|
| 572 |   26. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#friend
 | 
|---|
| 573 |   27. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#dso
 | 
|---|
| 574 |   28. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#generated_files
 | 
|---|
| 575 |   29. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#picflag-needed
 | 
|---|
| 576 |   30. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#vtables
 | 
|---|
| 577 |   31. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#incremental
 | 
|---|
| 578 |   32. http://gcc.gnu.org/steering.html
 | 
|---|
| 579 |   33. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#cathedral-vs-bazaar
 | 
|---|
| 580 |   34. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html
 | 
|---|
| 581 |   35. http://gcc.gnu.org/install/specific.html
 | 
|---|
| 582 |   36. http://gcc.gnu.org/buildstat.html
 | 
|---|
| 583 |   37. http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#gas
 | 
|---|
| 584 |   38. http://gcc.gnu.org/install/specific.html
 | 
|---|
| 585 |   39. http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/libstdc++/2000-q2/msg00700/sstream
 | 
|---|
| 586 |   40. http://www.codesourcery.com/cxx-abi/
 | 
|---|
| 587 |   41. ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/
 | 
|---|
| 588 |   42. ftp://gcc.gnu.org/pub/gcc/infrastructure/
 | 
|---|