1 | This is basic information about the Macintosh(tm) MPW(tm) port of the
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2 | GNU tools. The information below applies to both native and cross
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3 | compilers.
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4 |
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5 | (Please note that there are two versions of this file; "mpw-README"
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6 | is the source form, and "Read Me for MPW" is the distribution form.
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7 | "Read Me for MPW" has 8-bit chars such as \Option-d embedded in it.)
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8 |
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9 | INSTALLING GNU TOOLS
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10 |
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11 | * System Requirements
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12 |
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13 | To use these tools, you will need a Mac with a 68020 or better or else
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14 | any PowerMac, System 7.1 or later, and MPW 3.3 or 3.4. You will *not*
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15 | need any other MPW compiler unless you want to rebuild from sources,
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16 | nor even any include files, unless you are building actual Mac
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17 | applications. For PowerMac native you will need PPCLink, however;
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18 | also the executables are PowerPC-only.
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19 |
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20 | * Automated Installation
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21 |
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22 | The simplest way to install GNU tools is to run the Install script.
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23 | The script will copy things to where you want to keep them, will build
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24 | a UserStartup file with settings corresponding to where things were
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25 | copied, and offer to put that UserStartup file in your MPW folder.
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26 |
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27 | The Install script does not alter anything in the System Folder, and
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28 | it does not take any action without confirmation.
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29 |
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30 | The Install script will be at the top level of the binary
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31 | distribution, or at the top level of the object directory if
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32 | rebuilding from source. (The sources include a file called
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33 | "mpw-install" at the top level, but it is the source to the Install
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34 | script and cannot be run directly.)
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35 |
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36 | * Manual Installation
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37 |
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38 | If you don't want to run the Install script, you can do installation
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39 | manually; this section describes the steps involved.
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40 |
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41 | The GNU tools can go in any directory that is in your {Commands} list.
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42 | We generally put all the tools somewhere like {Boot}Cygnus:latest:bin,
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43 | and then add to a UserStartup file:
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44 |
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45 | set Commands "{Boot}Cygnus:latest:bin:,{Commands}"
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46 |
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47 | However, the cpp and cc1 programs of GCC are not normally stored here.
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48 | Instead, they will be in a "lib" directory that is alongside "bin",
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49 | and organized by target and version underneath, with names like
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50 |
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51 | :lib:gcc-lib:<target>:cygnus-<version>:
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52 |
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53 | If you build and install everything yourself according to the build
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54 | instructions below, then you will not have any problems. However, you
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55 | may discover that GCC seems unable to find the right cpp and cc1;
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56 | usually this will be because directory names have changed. (Even
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57 | renaming your hard disk will make this happen.) In such cases, you
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58 | have several choices. One is just to add this directory to
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59 | {Commands}, but then you will not be able to get any other cpp or cc1,
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60 | such as those used by a different target or version. Another way is
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61 | to rename your disk and directories to match the prefix used when the
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62 | tools were compiled. Finally, you can set the variable
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63 | GCC_EXEC_PREFIX to point to the library directory:
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64 |
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65 | set GCC_EXEC_PREFIX MyDisk:Stuff:lib:gcc-lib:
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66 | export GCC_EXEC_PREFIX
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67 |
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68 | You may also want to edit MPW's HEXA 128 resource. When GCC is built
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69 | using a native GCC, it is compiled to use a special stack allocator
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70 | function alloca(). While this is very efficient, it means that GCC
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71 | will need considerable stack space to run, especially when compiling
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72 | large programs with optimization turned on. You give MPW more stack
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73 | by editing the HEXA 128 resource of the MPW Shell. A value of "0008
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74 | 0000" gives 512K of stack size, which is usually sufficient.
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75 |
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76 | USING GNU TOOLS
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77 |
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78 | * Using Native PowerMac GCC
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79 |
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80 | Using a native PowerMac GCC to produce MPW tools or MacOS applications
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81 | is more complicated than just "gC foo.c", although no more complicated
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82 | than with other Mac compilers.
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83 |
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84 | To build a native PowerMac MPW tool, use this sequence, where hello.c
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85 | is the usual "hello world" program, and genericcfrg.r is the Rez file
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86 | with the code fragment resource:
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87 |
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88 | gC -I{CIncludes} -fno-builtin -Dpascal= -c -g hello.c
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89 | PPCLink hello.o -o hello \Option-d
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90 | "{PPCLibraries}"StdCRuntime.o \Option-d
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91 | "{SharedLibraries}"InterfaceLib \Option-d
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92 | "{SharedLibraries}"StdCLib \Option-d
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93 | "{PPCLibraries}"PPCToolLibs.o \Option-d
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94 | "{PPCLibraries}"PPCCRuntime.o \Option-d
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95 | "{GCCPPCLibraries}"libgcc.xcoff
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96 | rez -d APPNAME='"'hello'"' GenericCFRG.r -o hello
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97 | setfile -t 'MPST' -c 'MPS ' hello
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98 |
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99 | The same sequence works to build a MacOS application, but you set the file
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100 | type to 'APPL' and don't link in PPCToolLibs.o. For further details on
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101 | using MPW to build Mac applications, see the general MPW documentation.
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102 |
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103 | Recent versions of PPCLink have an option to generate the code
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104 | fragment resource and automatically set creator and file type;
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105 | here is what GenericCFRG.r should look like if you have an older
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106 | PPCLink or are using GNU ld:
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107 |
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108 | #include "CodeFragmentTypes.r"
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109 |
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110 | resource 'cfrg' (0) {
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111 | {
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112 | kPowerPC,
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113 | kFullLib,
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114 | kNoVersionNum,kNoVersionNum,
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115 | 0,0,
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116 | kIsApp,kOnDiskFlat,kZeroOffset,kWholeFork,
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117 | APPNAME // must be defined on Rez command line with -d option
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118 | }
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119 | };
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120 |
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121 | In general this port of GCC supports the same option syntax and
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122 | behavior as its Unix counterpart. It also has similar compilation
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123 | rules, so it will run the assembler on .s files and so forth.
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124 |
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125 | The GCC manual includes full information on the available options.
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126 | One option that may be especially useful is "-v", which shows you what
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127 | tools and options are being used; unlike most Mac C compilers, GCC
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128 | directs assembly and linking in addition to compilation.
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129 |
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130 | MPW GCC does feature two extensions to the option syntax; '-d macro=name'
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131 | works just as '-Dmacro=name' does in Unix, and '-i directory' works the
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132 | same as '-Idirectory'.
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133 |
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134 | MPW GCC supports the usual Pascal-style strings and alignment pragmas.
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135 |
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136 | To find standard include files you can set the variable GCCIncludes:
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137 |
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138 | set GCCIncludes MyDisk:MyIncludes:
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139 | export GCCIncludes
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140 |
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141 | GCCIncludes is similar to MPW's CIncludes or CW's MWCIncludes. In
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142 | order to use MPW's usual include files, just say:
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143 |
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144 | set GCCIncludes "{CIncludes}"
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145 | export GCCIncludes
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146 |
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147 | * Using GCC as a Cross-Compiler
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148 |
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149 | If you have a cross-compiler, and you have all of the correct
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150 | target-side crt0 and libraries available, then to compile and link a
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151 | file "foo.c", you can say just
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152 |
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153 | gC foo.c
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154 |
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155 | The output file will be an MPW binary file named "a.out"; the format
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156 | of the contents will depend on which target is in use, so for instance
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157 | a MIPS-targeting GCC will produce ECOFF or ELF executables.
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158 |
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159 | Note that using MPW include files with a cross-compiler is somewhat
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160 | dangerous.
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161 |
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162 | * Using the Assembler and Friends
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163 |
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164 | The assembler ("as") and linker ("ld") are faithful ports of their
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165 | Unix counterparts. Similarly, the binutils "ar", "cplusfilt", "nm",
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166 | "objcopy", "objdump", "ranlib", "size", "strings", and "strip" are all
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167 | like they are under Unix. (Note that "cplusfilt" is usually called
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168 | "c++filt" under Unix.)
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169 |
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170 | * Using GDB
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171 |
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172 | There are two flavors of GDB. "gdb" is an MPW tool that works very
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173 | much like it does in Unix; put a command into the MPW worksheet and
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174 | type the <enter> key to send it to GDB. While "gdb" is running, you
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175 | cannot do anything else in MPW, although you can switch to other
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176 | Mac applications and use them.
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177 |
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178 | "SiowGDB" is also a Mac application, but it is GDB using the SIOW
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179 | package to provide console emulation. Commands are exactly as for the
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180 | MPW tool, but since this is its own application, you can switch
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181 | between it and MPW.
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182 |
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183 | BUILDING GNU TOOLS
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184 |
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185 | This port of the GNU tools uses a configure script similar to
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186 | that used for GNU tools under Unix, but rewritten for MPW. As with
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187 | Unix configuration, there is an "object" directory that may be
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188 | different from the "source" directory. In the example commands below,
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189 | we will assume that we are currently in the object directory, and that
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190 | the source directory is "{Boot}Cygnus:src:".
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191 |
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192 | * Requirements for Building
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193 |
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194 | In addition to the sources, you will need a set of tools that the
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195 | configure and build scripts assume to be available. These tools
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196 | (and their versions, if relevant) are as follows:
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197 |
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198 | byacc tool
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199 | flex (2.3.7) tool (and Flex.skel file)
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200 | forward-include script
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201 | MoveIfChange script
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202 | mpw-touch script
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203 | mpw-true script
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204 | NewFolderRecursive script
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205 | null-command script
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206 | open-brace script
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207 | sed (1.13) tool
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208 | tr-7to8 script
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209 | true script
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210 |
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211 | The scripts are in the sources, under utils:mpw:. You must arrange to
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212 | get the other tools yourself (they are readily available from the
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213 | "usual" net sites, and are also on many CDROMS). In addition, there
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214 | will usually be a set of these available at ftp.cygnus.com, in pub/mac.
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215 |
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216 | You may put the build tools in your usual Tools or Scripts
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217 | directories, or keep them in a separate directories. We prefer to
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218 | make a directory called "buildtools" and we put this in one of our
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219 | UserStartup files:
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220 |
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221 | set Commands "{Boot}Cygnus:buildtools:,{Commands}"
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222 |
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223 | Flex uses an environment variable FLEX_SKELETON to locate its skeleton
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224 | file, so you need to do something like this, preferably in a UserStartup:
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225 |
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226 | Set FLEX_SKELETON "{Boot}"Cygnus:buildtools:Flex.skel
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227 | Export FLEX_SKELETON
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228 |
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229 | * Configuring
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230 |
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231 | Before you can build anything, you must configure. You do this by
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232 | creating an directory where object files will be stored, setdirectory
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233 | to that directory and do a configure command:
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234 |
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235 | {Boot}Cygnus:src:mpw-configure --target <name> --cc <compiler> --srcdir {Boot}Cygnus:src: --prefix <whatever>
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236 |
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237 | If the source directory is not in your {Commands} list, then you must
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238 | supply a full pathname to mpw-configure, since mpw-configure invokes
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239 | itself after switching into each subdirectory. Using a relative
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240 | pathname, even something like ':mpw-configure', will therefore not work.
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241 |
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242 | <name> must be a known target. Valid ones include "m68k-apple-macos",
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243 | "powerpc-apple-macos", "i386-unknown-go32", "mips-idt-ecoff", and
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244 | "sh-hitachi-hms". Not all target types are accepted for all of the
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245 | tools yet.
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246 |
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247 | <compiler> must be the name of the compiler to use. It defaults to "mpwc".
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248 |
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249 | (m68k)
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250 | mpwc MPW C
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251 | sc68k Symantec C
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252 | mwc68k Metrowerks C (Codewarrior)
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253 | gcc68k GCC
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254 |
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255 | (powerpc)
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256 | ppcc PPCC
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257 | mrc Macintosh on RisC (Mister C, aka(?) Frankenstein)
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258 | scppc Symantec C
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259 | mwcppc Metrowerks C (Codewarrior)
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260 | gccppc GCC
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261 |
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262 | Not all compilers will compile all tools equally well! For m68k Macs,
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263 | MPW C has the best record so far (it has problems, but they can be
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264 | worked around), while for PowerMacs, CodeWarrior is the only compiler
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265 | that has successfully compiled everything into running code.
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266 |
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267 | <prefix> is the path that "gcc" will prepend when looking for tools
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268 | to execute. GCC_EXEC_PREFIX overrides this value, so you need not
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269 | include it if you plan to use GCC_EXEC_PREFIX.
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270 |
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271 | As an example, here is the configure line that you could use to build
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272 | native PowerMac GCC:
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273 |
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274 | "{Boot}"Cygnus:src:mpw-configure --cc mwcppc --target powerpc-apple-macos --srcdir "{Boot}"Cygnus:src: --prefix "{Boot}"GNUTools:
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275 |
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276 | * Building
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277 |
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278 | If you use CodeWarrior, you *must* first set MWCIncludes to
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279 | {CIncludes}. This is because you will be building MPW tools, and
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280 | their standard I/O works by making references to data that is part of
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281 | the MPW Shell, which means that the code must be compiled and linked
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282 | with macros that refer to that data, and those macros are in
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283 | {CIncludes}, not the default {MWCIncludes}. Without this change, you
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284 | will encounter problems compiling libiberty/mpw.c, but tweaking that
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285 | file only masks the real problem, and does not fix it.
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286 |
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287 | The command
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288 |
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289 | mpw-build
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290 |
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291 | will build everything. Building will take over an hour on a Quadra 800
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292 | or PowerMac 8100/110, longer if the sources are on a shared volume.
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293 |
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294 | You may see some warnings; these are mostly likely benign, typically
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295 | disagreements about declarations of library and system functions.
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296 |
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297 | * Installing
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298 |
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299 | To install the just-built tools, use the command
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300 |
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301 | mpw-build install
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302 |
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303 | This part of the installation procedure just copies files to the
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304 | location specified at configure time by <prefix>, and, in some cases,
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305 | renames them from temporary internal names to their usual names. This
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306 | install process is *not* the same as what the Install script does;
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307 | Install can copy tools from the installation location chosen at
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308 | configuration time to a user-chosen place, and sets up a UserStartup
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309 | file. Note that while the Install script is optional, the install
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310 | build action performs some tasks would be very hard to replicate
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311 | manually, so you should always do it before using the tools.
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312 |
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313 | * Known Problems With Using Various Compilers to Build
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314 |
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315 | Most versions of MPW C have problems with compiling GNU software.
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316 |
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317 | MPW C 3.2.x has preprocessing bugs that render it incapable of
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318 | compiling the BFD library, so it can't be used at all for building BFD.
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319 |
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320 | MPW C 3.3, 3.3.1, and 3.3.2 will spontaneously claim to have found
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321 | errors in the source code, but in fact the code is perfectly fine. If
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322 | this happens, just set the working directory back to the top-level
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323 | objdir (where the configure command above was performed), and type
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324 | "mpw-build all" again. If it goes on through the supposed error, then
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325 | you got one of the spurious errors. A full build may require a number
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326 | of these restarts.
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327 |
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328 | MPW C 3.3.3 seems to work OK, at least with the aid of a number of
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329 | workarounds that are in the sources (look for #ifdef MPW_C).
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330 |
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331 | Versions of MPW Make earlier than 4.0d2 have exhibited bizarre behavior,
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332 | failure to substitute variables and the like.
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333 |
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334 | Metrowerks CW6 PPC linker (MWLinkPPC) seems to do bad things with memory
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335 | if the "Modern Memory Manager" is turned on (in the Memory control panel),
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336 | but works OK if it is turned off.
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337 |
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338 | Metrowerks CW6 loses bigtime compiling opcodes:ppc-opc.c, which has
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339 | some deeply nested macros. (CW7 is OK.) There is a way to patch the
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340 | file, by substituting constant values. If you need to do this,
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341 | contact shebs@cygnus.com for details.
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342 |
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343 | <Gestalt.h> is missing from {CIncludes} in the MPW version that comes
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344 | with CW7. You can just copy the one in CW7's {MWCIncludes}.
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345 |
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346 | CW8 and later have changes to headers and such that will require changes
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347 | to the source in order to be able to use them to rebuild.
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348 |
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349 | KNOWN BUGS
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350 |
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351 | The declarations for memcpy and memcmp in some versions of header files
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352 | may conflict with GCC's builtin definition. Either use -fno-builtin
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353 | or ignore the warnings.
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354 |
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355 | This is not a bug, but - watch out for cr/nl translation! For instance,
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356 | if config/mpw-mh-mpw is not properly translated because it has been
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357 | copied or updated separately, then everything will almost build, but
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358 | you will get puzzling error messages from make or the compiler.
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359 |
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360 | '/' or ' ' embedded in any device, directory, or file name may or may
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361 | not work.
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362 |
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363 | objcopy -O srec foo.o makes random output filenames.
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364 |
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365 | Mac-x-mips requires -mgas but Unix hosts don't.
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366 |
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367 | GDB will frequently require a '/' on the front of a device name in order
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368 | to recognize it as an absolute rather than a relative pathname.
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369 |
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370 | GDB doesn't seem to use the printer port correctly, although it tries.
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371 |
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372 | The cursor doesn't always spin as much as it should. To get elaborate
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373 | statistics and warnings about spin rates, add this to UserStartup:
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374 |
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375 | set MEASURE_SPIN all
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376 | export MEASURE_SPIN
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