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219 KiB
Plaintext
4996 lines
219 KiB
Plaintext
This is gccinstall.info, produced by makeinfo version 7.0.3 from
|
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install.texi.
|
||
|
||
Copyright © 1988-2023 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
|
||
|
||
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
|
||
under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or
|
||
any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
|
||
Invariant Sections, the Front-Cover texts being (a) (see below), and
|
||
with the Back-Cover Texts being (b) (see below). A copy of the license
|
||
is included in the section entitled “GNU Free Documentation License”.
|
||
|
||
(a) The FSF’s Front-Cover Text is:
|
||
|
||
A GNU Manual
|
||
|
||
(b) The FSF’s Back-Cover Text is:
|
||
|
||
You have freedom to copy and modify this GNU Manual, like GNU
|
||
software. Copies published by the Free Software Foundation raise funds
|
||
for GNU development.
|
||
INFO-DIR-SECTION Software development
|
||
START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
|
||
* gccinstall: (gccinstall). Installing the GNU Compiler Collection.
|
||
END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
|
||
|
||
Copyright © 1988-2023 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
|
||
|
||
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
|
||
under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or
|
||
any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
|
||
Invariant Sections, the Front-Cover texts being (a) (see below), and
|
||
with the Back-Cover Texts being (b) (see below). A copy of the license
|
||
is included in the section entitled “GNU Free Documentation License”.
|
||
|
||
(a) The FSF’s Front-Cover Text is:
|
||
|
||
A GNU Manual
|
||
|
||
(b) The FSF’s Back-Cover Text is:
|
||
|
||
You have freedom to copy and modify this GNU Manual, like GNU
|
||
software. Copies published by the Free Software Foundation raise funds
|
||
for GNU development.
|
||
|
||
|
||
File: gccinstall.info, Node: Top, Up: (dir)
|
||
|
||
* Menu:
|
||
|
||
* Installing GCC:: This document describes the generic installation
|
||
procedure for GCC as well as detailing some target
|
||
specific installation instructions.
|
||
|
||
* Specific:: Host/target specific installation notes for GCC.
|
||
* Binaries:: Where to get pre-compiled binaries.
|
||
|
||
* GNU Free Documentation License:: How you can copy and share this manual.
|
||
* Concept Index:: This index has two entries.
|
||
|
||
|
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File: gccinstall.info, Node: Installing GCC, Next: Binaries, Up: Top
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||
|
||
1 Installing GCC
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||
****************
|
||
|
||
The latest version of this document is always available at
|
||
https://gcc.gnu.org/install/. It refers to the current development
|
||
sources, instructions for specific released versions are included with
|
||
the sources.
|
||
|
||
This document describes the generic installation procedure for GCC as
|
||
well as detailing some target specific installation instructions.
|
||
|
||
GCC includes several components that previously were separate
|
||
distributions with their own installation instructions. This document
|
||
supersedes all package-specific installation instructions.
|
||
|
||
_Before_ starting the build/install procedure please check the *note
|
||
host/target specific installation notes: Specific. We recommend you
|
||
browse the entire generic installation instructions before you proceed.
|
||
|
||
Lists of successful builds for released versions of GCC are available
|
||
at <https://gcc.gnu.org/buildstat.html>. These lists are updated as new
|
||
information becomes available.
|
||
|
||
The installation procedure itself is broken into five steps.
|
||
|
||
* Menu:
|
||
|
||
* Prerequisites::
|
||
* Downloading the source::
|
||
* Configuration::
|
||
* Building::
|
||
* Testing:: (optional)
|
||
* Final install::
|
||
|
||
Please note that GCC does not support ‘make uninstall’ and probably
|
||
won’t do so in the near future as this would open a can of worms.
|
||
Instead, we suggest that you install GCC into a directory of its own and
|
||
simply remove that directory when you do not need that specific version
|
||
of GCC any longer, and, if shared libraries are installed there as well,
|
||
no more binaries exist that use them.
|
||
|
||
|
||
File: gccinstall.info, Node: Prerequisites, Next: Downloading the source, Up: Installing GCC
|
||
|
||
2 Prerequisites
|
||
***************
|
||
|
||
GCC requires that various tools and packages be available for use in the
|
||
build procedure. Modifying GCC sources requires additional tools
|
||
described below.
|
||
|
||
Tools/packages necessary for building GCC
|
||
=========================================
|
||
|
||
ISO C++11 compiler
|
||
Necessary to bootstrap GCC. GCC 4.8.3 or newer has sufficient
|
||
support for used C++11 features, with earlier GCC versions you
|
||
might run into implementation bugs.
|
||
|
||
Versions of GCC prior to 11 also allow bootstrapping with an ISO
|
||
C++98 compiler, versions of GCC prior to 4.8 also allow
|
||
bootstrapping with a ISO C89 compiler, and versions of GCC prior to
|
||
3.4 also allow bootstrapping with a traditional (K&R) C compiler.
|
||
|
||
To build all languages in a cross-compiler or other configuration
|
||
where 3-stage bootstrap is not performed, you need to start with an
|
||
existing GCC binary (version 4.8.3 or later) because source code
|
||
for language frontends other than C might use GCC extensions.
|
||
|
||
C standard library and headers
|
||
|
||
In order to build GCC, the C standard library and headers must be
|
||
present for all target variants for which target libraries will be
|
||
built (and not only the variant of the host C++ compiler).
|
||
|
||
This affects the popular ‘x86_64-pc-linux-gnu’ platform (among
|
||
other multilib targets), for which 64-bit (‘x86_64’) and 32-bit
|
||
(‘i386’) libc headers are usually packaged separately. If you do a
|
||
build of a native compiler on ‘x86_64-pc-linux-gnu’, make sure you
|
||
either have the 32-bit libc developer package properly installed
|
||
(the exact name of the package depends on your distro) or you must
|
||
build GCC as a 64-bit only compiler by configuring with the option
|
||
‘--disable-multilib’. Otherwise, you may encounter an error such
|
||
as ‘fatal error: gnu/stubs-32.h: No such file’
|
||
|
||
GNAT
|
||
|
||
In order to build GNAT, the Ada compiler, you need a working GNAT
|
||
compiler (GCC version 5.1 or later).
|
||
|
||
This includes GNAT tools such as ‘gnatmake’ and ‘gnatlink’, since
|
||
the Ada front end is written in Ada and uses some GNAT-specific
|
||
extensions.
|
||
|
||
In order to build a cross compiler, it is strongly recommended to
|
||
install the new compiler as native first, and then use it to build
|
||
the cross compiler. Other native compiler versions may work but
|
||
this is not guaranteed and will typically fail with hard to
|
||
understand compilation errors during the build.
|
||
|
||
Similarly, it is strongly recommended to use an older version of
|
||
GNAT to build GNAT. More recent versions of GNAT than the version
|
||
built are not guaranteed to work and will often fail during the
|
||
build with compilation errors.
|
||
|
||
Note that ‘configure’ does not test whether the GNAT installation
|
||
works and has a sufficiently recent version; if too old a GNAT
|
||
version is installed and ‘--enable-languages=ada’ is used, the
|
||
build will fail.
|
||
|
||
‘ADA_INCLUDE_PATH’ and ‘ADA_OBJECT_PATH’ environment variables must
|
||
not be set when building the Ada compiler, the Ada tools, or the
|
||
Ada runtime libraries. You can check that your build environment
|
||
is clean by verifying that ‘gnatls -v’ lists only one explicit path
|
||
in each section.
|
||
|
||
GDC
|
||
|
||
In order to build GDC, the D compiler, you need a working GDC
|
||
compiler (GCC version 9.4 or later) and D runtime library,
|
||
‘libphobos’, as the D front end is written in D.
|
||
|
||
Versions of GDC prior to 12 can be built with an ISO C++11
|
||
compiler, which can then be installed and used to bootstrap newer
|
||
versions of the D front end.
|
||
|
||
It is strongly recommended to use an older version of GDC to build
|
||
GDC. More recent versions of GDC than the version built are not
|
||
guaranteed to work and will often fail during the build with
|
||
compilation errors relating to deprecations or removed features.
|
||
|
||
Note that ‘configure’ does not test whether the GDC installation
|
||
works and has a sufficiently recent version. Though the
|
||
implementation of the D front end does not make use of any
|
||
GDC-specific extensions, or novel features of the D language, if
|
||
too old a GDC version is installed and ‘--enable-languages=d’ is
|
||
used, the build will fail.
|
||
|
||
On some targets, ‘libphobos’ isn’t enabled by default, but compiles
|
||
and works if ‘--enable-libphobos’ is used. Specifics are
|
||
documented for affected targets.
|
||
|
||
GM2
|
||
|
||
Python3 is required if you want to build the complete Modula-2
|
||
documentation including the target ‘SYSTEM’ definition module. If
|
||
Python3 is unavailable Modula-2 documentation will include a target
|
||
independent version of the SYSTEM modules.
|
||
|
||
A “working” POSIX compatible shell, or GNU bash
|
||
|
||
Necessary when running ‘configure’ because some ‘/bin/sh’ shells
|
||
have bugs and may crash when configuring the target libraries. In
|
||
other cases, ‘/bin/sh’ or ‘ksh’ have disastrous corner-case
|
||
performance problems. This can cause target ‘configure’ runs to
|
||
literally take days to complete in some cases.
|
||
|
||
So on some platforms ‘/bin/ksh’ is sufficient, on others it isn’t.
|
||
See the host/target specific instructions for your platform, or use
|
||
‘bash’ to be sure. Then set ‘CONFIG_SHELL’ in your environment to
|
||
your “good” shell prior to running ‘configure’/‘make’.
|
||
|
||
‘zsh’ is not a fully compliant POSIX shell and will not work when
|
||
configuring GCC.
|
||
|
||
A POSIX or SVR4 awk
|
||
|
||
Necessary for creating some of the generated source files for GCC.
|
||
If in doubt, use a recent GNU awk version, as some of the older
|
||
ones are broken. GNU awk version 3.1.5 is known to work.
|
||
|
||
GNU binutils
|
||
|
||
Necessary in some circumstances, optional in others. See the
|
||
host/target specific instructions for your platform for the exact
|
||
requirements.
|
||
|
||
Note binutils 2.35 or newer is required for LTO to work correctly
|
||
with GNU libtool that includes doing a bootstrap with LTO enabled.
|
||
|
||
gzip version 1.2.4 (or later) or
|
||
bzip2 version 1.0.2 (or later)
|
||
|
||
Necessary to uncompress GCC ‘tar’ files when source code is
|
||
obtained via HTTPS mirror sites.
|
||
|
||
GNU make version 3.80 (or later)
|
||
|
||
You must have GNU make installed to build GCC.
|
||
|
||
GNU tar version 1.14 (or later)
|
||
|
||
Necessary (only on some platforms) to untar the source code. Many
|
||
systems’ ‘tar’ programs will also work, only try GNU ‘tar’ if you
|
||
have problems.
|
||
|
||
Perl version between 5.6.1 and 5.6.24
|
||
|
||
Necessary when targeting Darwin, building ‘libstdc++’, and not
|
||
using ‘--disable-symvers’. Necessary when targeting Solaris with
|
||
Solaris ‘ld’ and not using ‘--disable-symvers’.
|
||
|
||
Necessary when regenerating ‘Makefile’ dependencies in libiberty.
|
||
Necessary when regenerating ‘libiberty/functions.texi’. Necessary
|
||
when generating manpages from Texinfo manuals. Used by various
|
||
scripts to generate some files included in the source repository
|
||
(mainly Unicode-related and rarely changing) from source tables.
|
||
|
||
Used by ‘automake’.
|
||
|
||
If available, enables parallel testing of ‘libgomp’ in case that
|
||
‘flock’ is not available.
|
||
|
||
Several support libraries are necessary to build GCC, some are
|
||
required, others optional. While any sufficiently new version of
|
||
required tools usually work, library requirements are generally
|
||
stricter. Newer versions may work in some cases, but it’s safer to use
|
||
the exact versions documented. We appreciate bug reports about problems
|
||
with newer versions, though. If your OS vendor provides packages for
|
||
the support libraries then using those packages may be the simplest way
|
||
to install the libraries.
|
||
|
||
GNU Multiple Precision Library (GMP) version 4.3.2 (or later)
|
||
|
||
Necessary to build GCC. It can be downloaded from
|
||
<https://gmplib.org/>. If a GMP source distribution is found in a
|
||
subdirectory of your GCC sources named ‘gmp’, it will be built
|
||
together with GCC. Alternatively, if GMP is already installed but
|
||
it is not in your library search path, you will have to configure
|
||
with the ‘--with-gmp’ configure option. See also ‘--with-gmp-lib’
|
||
and ‘--with-gmp-include’. The in-tree build is only supported with
|
||
the GMP version that download_prerequisites installs.
|
||
|
||
MPFR Library version 3.1.0 (or later)
|
||
|
||
Necessary to build GCC. It can be downloaded from
|
||
<https://www.mpfr.org>. If an MPFR source distribution is found in
|
||
a subdirectory of your GCC sources named ‘mpfr’, it will be built
|
||
together with GCC. Alternatively, if MPFR is already installed but
|
||
it is not in your default library search path, the ‘--with-mpfr’
|
||
configure option should be used. See also ‘--with-mpfr-lib’ and
|
||
‘--with-mpfr-include’. The in-tree build is only supported with
|
||
the MPFR version that download_prerequisites installs.
|
||
|
||
MPC Library version 1.0.1 (or later)
|
||
|
||
Necessary to build GCC. It can be downloaded from
|
||
<https://www.multiprecision.org/mpc/>. If an MPC source
|
||
distribution is found in a subdirectory of your GCC sources named
|
||
‘mpc’, it will be built together with GCC. Alternatively, if MPC is
|
||
already installed but it is not in your default library search
|
||
path, the ‘--with-mpc’ configure option should be used. See also
|
||
‘--with-mpc-lib’ and ‘--with-mpc-include’. The in-tree build is
|
||
only supported with the MPC version that download_prerequisites
|
||
installs.
|
||
|
||
isl Library version 0.15 or later.
|
||
|
||
Necessary to build GCC with the Graphite loop optimizations. It
|
||
can be downloaded from
|
||
<https://gcc.gnu.org/pub/gcc/infrastructure/>. If an isl source
|
||
distribution is found in a subdirectory of your GCC sources named
|
||
‘isl’, it will be built together with GCC. Alternatively, the
|
||
‘--with-isl’ configure option should be used if isl is not
|
||
installed in your default library search path.
|
||
|
||
zstd Library.
|
||
|
||
Necessary to build GCC with zstd compression used for LTO bytecode.
|
||
The library is searched in your default library patch search.
|
||
Alternatively, the ‘--with-zstd’ configure option should be used.
|
||
|
||
Python3 modules
|
||
|
||
The complete list of Python3 modules broken down by GCC
|
||
subcomponent is shown below:
|
||
|
||
internal debugging in gdbhooks
|
||
‘gdb’, ‘gdb.printing’, ‘gdb.types’, ‘os.path’, ‘re’, ‘sys’ and
|
||
‘tempfile’,
|
||
|
||
g++ testsuite
|
||
‘gcov’, ‘gzip’, ‘json’, ‘os’ and ‘pytest’.
|
||
|
||
c++ cxx api generation
|
||
‘csv’, ‘os’, ‘sys’ and ‘time’.
|
||
|
||
modula-2 documentation
|
||
‘argparse’, ‘os’, ‘pathlib’, ‘shutil’ and ‘sys’.
|
||
|
||
git developer tools
|
||
‘os’ and ‘sys’.
|
||
|
||
ada documentation
|
||
‘latex_elements’, ‘os’, ‘pygments’, ‘re’, ‘sys’ and ‘time’.
|
||
|
||
Tools/packages necessary for modifying GCC
|
||
==========================================
|
||
|
||
autoconf version 2.69
|
||
GNU m4 version 1.4.6 (or later)
|
||
|
||
Necessary when modifying ‘configure.ac’, ‘aclocal.m4’, etc. to
|
||
regenerate ‘configure’ and ‘config.in’ files.
|
||
|
||
automake version 1.15.1
|
||
|
||
Necessary when modifying a ‘Makefile.am’ file to regenerate its
|
||
associated ‘Makefile.in’.
|
||
|
||
Much of GCC does not use automake, so directly edit the
|
||
‘Makefile.in’ file. Specifically this applies to the ‘gcc’,
|
||
‘intl’, ‘libcpp’, ‘libiberty’, ‘libobjc’ directories as well as any
|
||
of their subdirectories.
|
||
|
||
For directories that use automake, GCC requires the latest release
|
||
in the 1.15 series, which is currently 1.15.1. When regenerating a
|
||
directory to a newer version, please update all the directories
|
||
using an older 1.15 to the latest released version.
|
||
|
||
gettext version 0.14.5 (or later)
|
||
|
||
Needed to regenerate ‘gcc.pot’.
|
||
|
||
gperf version 2.7.2 (or later)
|
||
|
||
Necessary when modifying ‘gperf’ input files, e.g.
|
||
‘gcc/cp/cfns.gperf’ to regenerate its associated header file, e.g.
|
||
‘gcc/cp/cfns.h’.
|
||
|
||
DejaGnu version 1.5.3 (or later)
|
||
Expect
|
||
Tcl
|
||
|
||
Necessary to run the GCC testsuite; see the section on testing for
|
||
details.
|
||
|
||
autogen version 5.5.4 (or later) and
|
||
guile version 1.4.1 (or later)
|
||
|
||
Necessary to regenerate ‘fixinc/fixincl.x’ from
|
||
‘fixinc/inclhack.def’ and ‘fixinc/*.tpl’.
|
||
|
||
Necessary to run ‘make check’ for ‘fixinc’.
|
||
|
||
Necessary to regenerate the top level ‘Makefile.in’ file from
|
||
‘Makefile.tpl’ and ‘Makefile.def’.
|
||
|
||
Flex version 2.5.4 (or later)
|
||
|
||
Necessary when modifying ‘*.l’ files.
|
||
|
||
Necessary to build GCC during development because the generated
|
||
output files are not included in the version-controlled source
|
||
repository. They are included in releases.
|
||
|
||
Texinfo version 4.7 (or later)
|
||
|
||
Necessary for running ‘makeinfo’ when modifying ‘*.texi’ files to
|
||
test your changes.
|
||
|
||
Necessary for running ‘make dvi’, ‘make pdf’, or ‘make html’ to
|
||
create formatted documentation. Texinfo version 4.8 or later is
|
||
required for ‘make pdf’.
|
||
|
||
Necessary to build GCC documentation in info format during
|
||
development because the generated output files are not included in
|
||
the repository. (They are included in release tarballs.)
|
||
|
||
Note that the minimum requirement is for a very old version of
|
||
Texinfo, but recent versions of Texinfo produce better-quality
|
||
output, especially for HTML format. The version of Texinfo
|
||
packaged with any current operating system distribution is likely
|
||
to be adequate for building the documentation without error, but
|
||
you may still want to install a newer release to get the best
|
||
appearance and usability of the generated manuals.
|
||
|
||
TeX (any working version)
|
||
|
||
Necessary for running ‘texi2dvi’ and ‘texi2pdf’, which are used
|
||
when running ‘make dvi’ or ‘make pdf’ to create DVI or PDF files,
|
||
respectively.
|
||
|
||
Sphinx version 1.0 (or later)
|
||
|
||
Necessary to regenerate ‘jit/docs/_build/texinfo’ from the ‘.rst’
|
||
files in the directories below ‘jit/docs’.
|
||
|
||
git (any version)
|
||
SSH (any version)
|
||
|
||
Necessary to access the source repository. Public releases and
|
||
weekly snapshots of the development sources are also available via
|
||
HTTPS.
|
||
|
||
GNU diffutils version 2.7 (or later)
|
||
|
||
Useful when submitting patches for the GCC source code.
|
||
|
||
patch version 2.5.4 (or later)
|
||
|
||
Necessary when applying patches, created with ‘diff’, to one’s own
|
||
sources.
|
||
|
||
|
||
File: gccinstall.info, Node: Downloading the source, Next: Configuration, Prev: Prerequisites, Up: Installing GCC
|
||
|
||
3 Downloading GCC
|
||
*****************
|
||
|
||
GCC is distributed via git and via HTTPS as tarballs compressed with
|
||
‘gzip’ or ‘bzip2’.
|
||
|
||
Please refer to the releases web page for information on how to
|
||
obtain GCC.
|
||
|
||
The source distribution includes the C, C++, Objective-C, Fortran,
|
||
and Ada (in the case of GCC 3.1 and later) compilers, as well as runtime
|
||
libraries for C++, Objective-C, and Fortran. For previous versions
|
||
these were downloadable as separate components such as the core GCC
|
||
distribution, which included the C language front end and shared
|
||
components, and language-specific distributions including the language
|
||
front end and the language runtime (where appropriate).
|
||
|
||
If you also intend to build binutils (either to upgrade an existing
|
||
installation or for use in place of the corresponding tools of your OS),
|
||
unpack the binutils distribution either in the same directory or a
|
||
separate one. In the latter case, add symbolic links to any components
|
||
of the binutils you intend to build alongside the compiler (‘bfd’,
|
||
‘binutils’, ‘gas’, ‘gprof’, ‘ld’, ‘opcodes’, ...) to the directory
|
||
containing the GCC sources.
|
||
|
||
Likewise the GMP, MPFR and MPC libraries can be automatically built
|
||
together with GCC. You may simply run the
|
||
‘contrib/download_prerequisites’ script in the GCC source directory to
|
||
set up everything. Otherwise unpack the GMP, MPFR and/or MPC source
|
||
distributions in the directory containing the GCC sources and rename
|
||
their directories to ‘gmp’, ‘mpfr’ and ‘mpc’, respectively (or use
|
||
symbolic links with the same name).
|
||
|
||
|
||
File: gccinstall.info, Node: Configuration, Next: Building, Prev: Downloading the source, Up: Installing GCC
|
||
|
||
4 Installing GCC: Configuration
|
||
*******************************
|
||
|
||
Like most GNU software, GCC must be configured before it can be built.
|
||
This document describes the recommended configuration procedure for both
|
||
native and cross targets.
|
||
|
||
We use SRCDIR to refer to the toplevel source directory for GCC; we
|
||
use OBJDIR to refer to the toplevel build/object directory.
|
||
|
||
If you obtained the sources by cloning the repository, SRCDIR must
|
||
refer to the top ‘gcc’ directory, the one where the ‘MAINTAINERS’ file
|
||
can be found, and not its ‘gcc’ subdirectory, otherwise the build will
|
||
fail.
|
||
|
||
If either SRCDIR or OBJDIR is located on an automounted NFS file
|
||
system, the shell’s built-in ‘pwd’ command will return temporary
|
||
pathnames. Using these can lead to various sorts of build problems. To
|
||
avoid this issue, set the ‘PWDCMD’ environment variable to an
|
||
automounter-aware ‘pwd’ command, e.g., ‘pawd’ or ‘amq -w’, during the
|
||
configuration and build phases.
|
||
|
||
First, we *highly* recommend that GCC be built into a separate
|
||
directory from the sources which does *not* reside within the source
|
||
tree. This is how we generally build GCC; building where SRCDIR ==
|
||
OBJDIR should still work, but doesn’t get extensive testing; building
|
||
where OBJDIR is a subdirectory of SRCDIR is unsupported.
|
||
|
||
If you have previously built GCC in the same directory for a
|
||
different target machine, do ‘make distclean’ to delete all files that
|
||
might be invalid. One of the files this deletes is ‘Makefile’; if ‘make
|
||
distclean’ complains that ‘Makefile’ does not exist or issues a message
|
||
like “don’t know how to make distclean” it probably means that the
|
||
directory is already suitably clean. However, with the recommended
|
||
method of building in a separate OBJDIR, you should simply use a
|
||
different OBJDIR for each target.
|
||
|
||
Second, when configuring a native system, either ‘cc’ or ‘gcc’ must
|
||
be in your path or you must set ‘CC’ in your environment before running
|
||
configure. Otherwise the configuration scripts may fail.
|
||
|
||
To configure GCC:
|
||
|
||
% mkdir OBJDIR
|
||
% cd OBJDIR
|
||
% SRCDIR/configure [OPTIONS] [TARGET]
|
||
|
||
Distributor options
|
||
===================
|
||
|
||
If you will be distributing binary versions of GCC, with modifications
|
||
to the source code, you should use the options described in this section
|
||
to make clear that your version contains modifications.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-pkgversion=VERSION’
|
||
Specify a string that identifies your package. You may wish to
|
||
include a build number or build date. This version string will be
|
||
included in the output of ‘gcc --version’. This suffix does not
|
||
replace the default version string, only the ‘GCC’ part.
|
||
|
||
The default value is ‘GCC’.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-bugurl=URL’
|
||
Specify the URL that users should visit if they wish to report a
|
||
bug. You are of course welcome to forward bugs reported to you to
|
||
the FSF, if you determine that they are not bugs in your
|
||
modifications.
|
||
|
||
The default value refers to the FSF’s GCC bug tracker.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-documentation-root-url=URL’
|
||
Specify the URL root that contains GCC option documentation. The
|
||
URL should end with a ‘/’ character.
|
||
|
||
The default value is https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-changes-root-url=URL’
|
||
Specify the URL root that contains information about changes in GCC
|
||
releases like ‘gcc-VERSION/changes.html’. The URL should end with
|
||
a ‘/’ character.
|
||
|
||
The default value is https://gcc.gnu.org/.
|
||
|
||
Host, Build and Target specification
|
||
====================================
|
||
|
||
Specify the host, build and target machine configurations. You do this
|
||
when you run the ‘configure’ script.
|
||
|
||
The “build” machine is the system which you are using, the “host”
|
||
machine is the system where you want to run the resulting compiler
|
||
(normally the build machine), and the “target” machine is the system for
|
||
which you want the compiler to generate code.
|
||
|
||
If you are building a compiler to produce code for the machine it
|
||
runs on (a native compiler), you normally do not need to specify any
|
||
operands to ‘configure’; it will try to guess the type of machine you
|
||
are on and use that as the build, host and target machines. So you
|
||
don’t need to specify a configuration when building a native compiler
|
||
unless ‘configure’ cannot figure out what your configuration is or
|
||
guesses wrong.
|
||
|
||
In those cases, specify the build machine’s “configuration name” with
|
||
the ‘--host’ option; the host and target will default to be the same as
|
||
the host machine.
|
||
|
||
Here is an example:
|
||
|
||
./configure --host=x86_64-pc-linux-gnu
|
||
|
||
A configuration name may be canonical or it may be more or less
|
||
abbreviated (‘config.sub’ script produces canonical versions).
|
||
|
||
A canonical configuration name has three parts, separated by dashes.
|
||
It looks like this: ‘CPU-COMPANY-SYSTEM’.
|
||
|
||
Here are the possible CPU types:
|
||
|
||
aarch64, aarch64_be, alpha, alpha64, amdgcn, arc, arceb, arm,
|
||
armeb, avr, bfin, bpf, cris, csky, epiphany, fido, fr30, frv, ft32,
|
||
h8300, hppa, hppa2.0, hppa64, i486, i686, ia64, iq2000, lm32,
|
||
loongarch64, m32c, m32r, m32rle, m68k, mcore, microblaze,
|
||
microblazeel, mips, mips64, mips64el, mips64octeon, mips64orion,
|
||
mips64vr, mipsel, mipsisa32, mipsisa32r2, mipsisa64, mipsisa64r2,
|
||
mipsisa64r2el, mipsisa64sb1, mipsisa64sr71k, mipstx39, mmix,
|
||
mn10300, moxie, msp430, nds32be, nds32le, nios2, nvptx, or1k,
|
||
pdp11, powerpc, powerpc64, powerpc64le, powerpcle, pru, riscv32,
|
||
riscv32be, riscv64, riscv64be, rl78, rx, s390, s390x, sh, shle,
|
||
sparc, sparc64, tic6x, v850, v850e, v850e1, vax, visium, x86_64,
|
||
xstormy16, xtensa
|
||
|
||
Here is a list of system types:
|
||
|
||
aixVERSION, amdhsa, aout, cygwin, darwinVERSION, eabi, eabialtivec,
|
||
eabisim, eabisimaltivec, elf, elf32, elfbare, elfoabi,
|
||
freebsdVERSION, gnu, hpux, hpuxVERSION, kfreebsd-gnu,
|
||
kopensolaris-gnu, linux-androideabi, linux-gnu, linux-gnu_altivec,
|
||
linux-musl, linux-uclibc, lynxos, mingw32, mingw32crt, mmixware,
|
||
msdosdjgpp, netbsd, netbsdelfVERSION, nto-qnx, openbsd, rtems,
|
||
solarisVERSION, symbianelf, tpf, uclinux, uclinux_eabi, vms,
|
||
vxworks, vxworksae, vxworksmils
|
||
|
||
Options specification
|
||
=====================
|
||
|
||
Use OPTIONS to override several configure time options for GCC. A list
|
||
of supported OPTIONS follows; ‘configure --help’ may list other options,
|
||
but those not listed below may not work and should not normally be used.
|
||
|
||
Note that each ‘--enable’ option has a corresponding ‘--disable’
|
||
option and that each ‘--with’ option has a corresponding ‘--without’
|
||
option.
|
||
|
||
‘--prefix=DIRNAME’
|
||
Specify the toplevel installation directory. This is the
|
||
recommended way to install the tools into a directory other than
|
||
the default. The toplevel installation directory defaults to
|
||
‘/usr/local’.
|
||
|
||
We *highly* recommend against DIRNAME being the same or a
|
||
subdirectory of OBJDIR or vice versa. If specifying a directory
|
||
beneath a user’s home directory tree, some shells will not expand
|
||
DIRNAME correctly if it contains the ‘~’ metacharacter; use ‘$HOME’
|
||
instead.
|
||
|
||
The following standard ‘autoconf’ options are supported. Normally
|
||
you should not need to use these options.
|
||
‘--exec-prefix=DIRNAME’
|
||
Specify the toplevel installation directory for
|
||
architecture-dependent files. The default is ‘PREFIX’.
|
||
|
||
‘--bindir=DIRNAME’
|
||
Specify the installation directory for the executables called
|
||
by users (such as ‘gcc’ and ‘g++’). The default is
|
||
‘EXEC-PREFIX/bin’.
|
||
|
||
‘--libdir=DIRNAME’
|
||
Specify the installation directory for object code libraries
|
||
and internal data files of GCC. The default is
|
||
‘EXEC-PREFIX/lib’.
|
||
|
||
‘--libexecdir=DIRNAME’
|
||
Specify the installation directory for internal executables of
|
||
GCC. The default is ‘EXEC-PREFIX/libexec’.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-slibdir=DIRNAME’
|
||
Specify the installation directory for the shared libgcc
|
||
library. The default is ‘LIBDIR’.
|
||
|
||
‘--datarootdir=DIRNAME’
|
||
Specify the root of the directory tree for read-only
|
||
architecture-independent data files referenced by GCC. The
|
||
default is ‘PREFIX/share’.
|
||
|
||
‘--infodir=DIRNAME’
|
||
Specify the installation directory for documentation in info
|
||
format. The default is ‘DATAROOTDIR/info’.
|
||
|
||
‘--datadir=DIRNAME’
|
||
Specify the installation directory for some
|
||
architecture-independent data files referenced by GCC. The
|
||
default is ‘DATAROOTDIR’.
|
||
|
||
‘--docdir=DIRNAME’
|
||
Specify the installation directory for documentation files
|
||
(other than Info) for GCC. The default is ‘DATAROOTDIR/doc’.
|
||
|
||
‘--htmldir=DIRNAME’
|
||
Specify the installation directory for HTML documentation
|
||
files. The default is ‘DOCDIR’.
|
||
|
||
‘--pdfdir=DIRNAME’
|
||
Specify the installation directory for PDF documentation
|
||
files. The default is ‘DOCDIR’.
|
||
|
||
‘--mandir=DIRNAME’
|
||
Specify the installation directory for manual pages. The
|
||
default is ‘DATAROOTDIR/man’. (Note that the manual pages are
|
||
only extracts from the full GCC manuals, which are provided in
|
||
Texinfo format. The manpages are derived by an automatic
|
||
conversion process from parts of the full manual.)
|
||
|
||
‘--with-gxx-include-dir=DIRNAME’
|
||
Specify the installation directory for G++ header files. The
|
||
default depends on other configuration options, and differs
|
||
between cross and native configurations.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-specs=SPECS’
|
||
Specify additional command line driver SPECS. This can be
|
||
useful if you need to turn on a non-standard feature by
|
||
default without modifying the compiler’s source code, for
|
||
instance
|
||
‘--with-specs=%{!fcommon:%{!fno-common:-fno-common}}’. *Note
|
||
Specifying subprocesses and the switches to pass to them:
|
||
(gcc)Spec Files,
|
||
|
||
‘--program-prefix=PREFIX’
|
||
GCC supports some transformations of the names of its programs when
|
||
installing them. This option prepends PREFIX to the names of
|
||
programs to install in BINDIR (see above). For example, specifying
|
||
‘--program-prefix=foo-’ would result in ‘gcc’ being installed as
|
||
‘/usr/local/bin/foo-gcc’.
|
||
|
||
‘--program-suffix=SUFFIX’
|
||
Appends SUFFIX to the names of programs to install in BINDIR (see
|
||
above). For example, specifying ‘--program-suffix=-3.1’ would
|
||
result in ‘gcc’ being installed as ‘/usr/local/bin/gcc-3.1’.
|
||
|
||
‘--program-transform-name=PATTERN’
|
||
Applies the ‘sed’ script PATTERN to be applied to the names of
|
||
programs to install in BINDIR (see above). PATTERN has to consist
|
||
of one or more basic ‘sed’ editing commands, separated by
|
||
semicolons. For example, if you want the ‘gcc’ program name to be
|
||
transformed to the installed program ‘/usr/local/bin/myowngcc’ and
|
||
the ‘g++’ program name to be transformed to
|
||
‘/usr/local/bin/gspecial++’ without changing other program names,
|
||
you could use the pattern
|
||
‘--program-transform-name='s/^gcc$/myowngcc/; s/^g++$/gspecial++/'’
|
||
to achieve this effect.
|
||
|
||
All three options can be combined and used together, resulting in
|
||
more complex conversion patterns. As a basic rule, PREFIX (and
|
||
SUFFIX) are prepended (appended) before further transformations can
|
||
happen with a special transformation script PATTERN.
|
||
|
||
As currently implemented, this option only takes effect for native
|
||
builds; cross compiler binaries’ names are not transformed even
|
||
when a transformation is explicitly asked for by one of these
|
||
options.
|
||
|
||
For native builds, some of the installed programs are also
|
||
installed with the target alias in front of their name, as in
|
||
‘i686-pc-linux-gnu-gcc’. All of the above transformations happen
|
||
before the target alias is prepended to the name—so, specifying
|
||
‘--program-prefix=foo-’ and ‘program-suffix=-3.1’, the resulting
|
||
binary would be installed as
|
||
‘/usr/local/bin/i686-pc-linux-gnu-foo-gcc-3.1’.
|
||
|
||
As a last shortcoming, none of the installed Ada programs are
|
||
transformed yet, which will be fixed in some time.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-local-prefix=DIRNAME’
|
||
Specify the installation directory for local include files. The
|
||
default is ‘/usr/local’. Specify this option if you want the
|
||
compiler to search directory ‘DIRNAME/include’ for locally
|
||
installed header files _instead_ of ‘/usr/local/include’.
|
||
|
||
You should specify ‘--with-local-prefix’ *only* if your site has a
|
||
different convention (not ‘/usr/local’) for where to put
|
||
site-specific files.
|
||
|
||
The default value for ‘--with-local-prefix’ is ‘/usr/local’
|
||
regardless of the value of ‘--prefix’. Specifying ‘--prefix’ has
|
||
no effect on which directory GCC searches for local header files.
|
||
This may seem counterintuitive, but actually it is logical.
|
||
|
||
The purpose of ‘--prefix’ is to specify where to _install GCC_. The
|
||
local header files in ‘/usr/local/include’—if you put any in that
|
||
directory—are not part of GCC. They are part of other
|
||
programs—perhaps many others. (GCC installs its own header files
|
||
in another directory which is based on the ‘--prefix’ value.)
|
||
|
||
Both the local-prefix include directory and the GCC-prefix include
|
||
directory are part of GCC’s “system include” directories. Although
|
||
these two directories are not fixed, they need to be searched in
|
||
the proper order for the correct processing of the include_next
|
||
directive. The local-prefix include directory is searched before
|
||
the GCC-prefix include directory. Another characteristic of system
|
||
include directories is that pedantic warnings are turned off for
|
||
headers in these directories.
|
||
|
||
Some autoconf macros add ‘-I DIRECTORY’ options to the compiler
|
||
command line, to ensure that directories containing installed
|
||
packages’ headers are searched. When DIRECTORY is one of GCC’s
|
||
system include directories, GCC will ignore the option so that
|
||
system directories continue to be processed in the correct order.
|
||
This may result in a search order different from what was specified
|
||
but the directory will still be searched.
|
||
|
||
GCC automatically searches for ordinary libraries using
|
||
‘GCC_EXEC_PREFIX’. Thus, when the same installation prefix is used
|
||
for both GCC and packages, GCC will automatically search for both
|
||
headers and libraries. This provides a configuration that is easy
|
||
to use. GCC behaves in a manner similar to that when it is
|
||
installed as a system compiler in ‘/usr’.
|
||
|
||
Sites that need to install multiple versions of GCC may not want to
|
||
use the above simple configuration. It is possible to use the
|
||
‘--program-prefix’, ‘--program-suffix’ and
|
||
‘--program-transform-name’ options to install multiple versions
|
||
into a single directory, but it may be simpler to use different
|
||
prefixes and the ‘--with-local-prefix’ option to specify the
|
||
location of the site-specific files for each version. It will then
|
||
be necessary for users to specify explicitly the location of local
|
||
site libraries (e.g., with ‘LIBRARY_PATH’).
|
||
|
||
The same value can be used for both ‘--with-local-prefix’ and
|
||
‘--prefix’ provided it is not ‘/usr’. This can be used to avoid
|
||
the default search of ‘/usr/local/include’.
|
||
|
||
*Do not* specify ‘/usr’ as the ‘--with-local-prefix’! The
|
||
directory you use for ‘--with-local-prefix’ *must not* contain any
|
||
of the system’s standard header files. If it did contain them,
|
||
certain programs would be miscompiled (including GNU Emacs, on
|
||
certain targets), because this would override and nullify the
|
||
header file corrections made by the ‘fixincludes’ script.
|
||
|
||
Indications are that people who use this option use it based on
|
||
mistaken ideas of what it is for. People use it as if it specified
|
||
where to install part of GCC. Perhaps they make this assumption
|
||
because installing GCC creates the directory.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-gcc-major-version-only’
|
||
Specifies that GCC should use only the major number rather than
|
||
MAJOR.MINOR.PATCHLEVEL in filesystem paths.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-native-system-header-dir=DIRNAME’
|
||
Specifies that DIRNAME is the directory that contains native system
|
||
header files, rather than ‘/usr/include’. This option is most
|
||
useful if you are creating a compiler that should be isolated from
|
||
the system as much as possible. It is most commonly used with the
|
||
‘--with-sysroot’ option and will cause GCC to search DIRNAME inside
|
||
the system root specified by that option.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-shared[=PACKAGE[,...]]’
|
||
Build shared versions of libraries, if shared libraries are
|
||
supported on the target platform. Unlike GCC 2.95.x and earlier,
|
||
shared libraries are enabled by default on all platforms that
|
||
support shared libraries.
|
||
|
||
If a list of packages is given as an argument, build shared
|
||
libraries only for the listed packages. For other packages, only
|
||
static libraries will be built. Package names currently recognized
|
||
in the GCC tree are ‘libgcc’ (also known as ‘gcc’), ‘libstdc++’
|
||
(not ‘libstdc++-v3’), ‘libffi’, ‘zlib’, ‘boehm-gc’, ‘ada’,
|
||
‘libada’, ‘libgo’, ‘libobjc’, and ‘libphobos’. Note ‘libiberty’
|
||
does not support shared libraries at all.
|
||
|
||
Use ‘--disable-shared’ to build only static libraries. Note that
|
||
‘--disable-shared’ does not accept a list of package names as
|
||
argument, only ‘--enable-shared’ does.
|
||
|
||
Contrast with ‘--enable-host-shared’, which affects _host_ code.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-host-shared’
|
||
Specify that the _host_ code should be built into
|
||
position-independent machine code (with -fPIC), allowing it to be
|
||
used within shared libraries, but yielding a slightly slower
|
||
compiler.
|
||
|
||
This option is required when building the libgccjit.so library.
|
||
|
||
Contrast with ‘--enable-shared’, which affects _target_ libraries.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-gnu-as’
|
||
Specify that the compiler should assume that the assembler it finds
|
||
is the GNU assembler. However, this does not modify the rules to
|
||
find an assembler and will result in confusion if the assembler
|
||
found is not actually the GNU assembler. (Confusion may also
|
||
result if the compiler finds the GNU assembler but has not been
|
||
configured with ‘--with-gnu-as’.) If you have more than one
|
||
assembler installed on your system, you may want to use this option
|
||
in connection with ‘--with-as=PATHNAME’ or
|
||
‘--with-build-time-tools=PATHNAME’.
|
||
|
||
The following systems are the only ones where it makes a difference
|
||
whether you use the GNU assembler. On any other system,
|
||
‘--with-gnu-as’ has no effect.
|
||
|
||
• ‘hppa1.0-ANY-ANY’
|
||
• ‘hppa1.1-ANY-ANY’
|
||
• ‘*-*-solaris2.11’
|
||
|
||
‘--with-as=PATHNAME’
|
||
Specify that the compiler should use the assembler pointed to by
|
||
PATHNAME, rather than the one found by the standard rules to find
|
||
an assembler, which are:
|
||
• Unless GCC is being built with a cross compiler, check the
|
||
‘LIBEXEC/gcc/TARGET/VERSION’ directory. LIBEXEC defaults to
|
||
‘EXEC-PREFIX/libexec’; EXEC-PREFIX defaults to PREFIX, which
|
||
defaults to ‘/usr/local’ unless overridden by the
|
||
‘--prefix=PATHNAME’ switch described above. TARGET is the
|
||
target system triple, such as ‘sparc-sun-solaris2.11’, and
|
||
VERSION denotes the GCC version, such as 3.0.
|
||
|
||
• If the target system is the same that you are building on,
|
||
check operating system specific directories.
|
||
|
||
• Check in the ‘PATH’ for a tool whose name is prefixed by the
|
||
target system triple.
|
||
|
||
• Check in the ‘PATH’ for a tool whose name is not prefixed by
|
||
the target system triple, if the host and target system triple
|
||
are the same (in other words, we use a host tool if it can be
|
||
used for the target as well).
|
||
|
||
You may want to use ‘--with-as’ if no assembler is installed in the
|
||
directories listed above, or if you have multiple assemblers
|
||
installed and want to choose one that is not found by the above
|
||
rules.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-gnu-ld’
|
||
Same as ‘--with-gnu-as’ but for the linker.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-ld=PATHNAME’
|
||
Same as ‘--with-as’ but for the linker.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-dsymutil=PATHNAME’
|
||
Same as ‘--with-as’ but for the debug linker (only used on Darwin
|
||
platforms so far).
|
||
|
||
‘--with-tls=DIALECT’
|
||
Specify the default TLS dialect, for systems were there is a
|
||
choice. For ARM targets, possible values for DIALECT are ‘gnu’ or
|
||
‘gnu2’, which select between the original GNU dialect and the GNU
|
||
TLS descriptor-based dialect.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-multiarch’
|
||
Specify whether to enable or disable multiarch support. The
|
||
default is to check for glibc start files in a multiarch location,
|
||
and enable it if the files are found. The auto detection is
|
||
enabled for native builds, and for cross builds configured with
|
||
‘--with-sysroot’, and without ‘--with-native-system-header-dir’.
|
||
More documentation about multiarch can be found at
|
||
<https://wiki.debian.org/Multiarch>.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-sjlj-exceptions’
|
||
Force use of the ‘setjmp’/‘longjmp’-based scheme for exceptions.
|
||
‘configure’ ordinarily picks the correct value based on the
|
||
platform. Only use this option if you are sure you need a
|
||
different setting.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-vtable-verify’
|
||
Specify whether to enable or disable the vtable verification
|
||
feature. Enabling this feature causes libstdc++ to be built with
|
||
its virtual calls in verifiable mode. This means that, when linked
|
||
with libvtv, every virtual call in libstdc++ will verify the vtable
|
||
pointer through which the call will be made before actually making
|
||
the call. If not linked with libvtv, the verifier will call stub
|
||
functions (in libstdc++ itself) and do nothing. If vtable
|
||
verification is disabled, then libstdc++ is not built with its
|
||
virtual calls in verifiable mode at all. However the libvtv
|
||
library will still be built (see ‘--disable-libvtv’ to turn off
|
||
building libvtv). ‘--disable-vtable-verify’ is the default.
|
||
|
||
‘--disable-gcov’
|
||
Specify that the run-time library used for coverage analysis and
|
||
associated host tools should not be built.
|
||
|
||
‘--disable-multilib’
|
||
Specify that multiple target libraries to support different target
|
||
variants, calling conventions, etc. should not be built. The
|
||
default is to build a predefined set of them.
|
||
|
||
Some targets provide finer-grained control over which multilibs are
|
||
built (e.g., ‘--disable-softfloat’):
|
||
‘arm-*-*’
|
||
fpu, 26bit, underscore, interwork, biendian, nofmult.
|
||
|
||
‘m68*-*-*’
|
||
softfloat, m68881, m68000, m68020.
|
||
|
||
‘mips*-*-*’
|
||
single-float, biendian, softfloat.
|
||
|
||
‘msp430-*-*’
|
||
no-exceptions
|
||
|
||
‘powerpc*-*-*, rs6000*-*-*’
|
||
aix64, pthread, softfloat, powercpu, powerpccpu, powerpcos,
|
||
biendian, sysv, aix.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-multilib-list=LIST’
|
||
‘--without-multilib-list’
|
||
Specify what multilibs to build. LIST is a comma separated list of
|
||
values, possibly consisting of a single value. Currently only
|
||
implemented for aarch64*-*-*, arm*-*-*, loongarch64-*-*,
|
||
riscv*-*-*, sh*-*-* and x86-64-*-linux*. The accepted values and
|
||
meaning for each target is given below.
|
||
|
||
‘aarch64*-*-*’
|
||
LIST is a comma separated list of ‘ilp32’, and ‘lp64’ to
|
||
enable ILP32 and LP64 run-time libraries, respectively. If
|
||
LIST is empty, then there will be no multilibs and only the
|
||
default run-time library will be built. If LIST is ‘default’
|
||
or –with-multilib-list= is not specified, then the default set
|
||
of libraries is selected based on the value of ‘--target’.
|
||
|
||
‘arm*-*-*’
|
||
LIST is a comma separated list of ‘aprofile’ and ‘rmprofile’
|
||
to build multilibs for A or R and M architecture profiles
|
||
respectively. Note that, due to some limitation of the
|
||
current multilib framework, using the combined
|
||
‘aprofile,rmprofile’ multilibs selects in some cases a less
|
||
optimal multilib than when using the multilib profile for the
|
||
architecture targetted. The special value ‘default’ is also
|
||
accepted and is equivalent to omitting the option, i.e., only
|
||
the default run-time library will be enabled.
|
||
|
||
LIST may instead contain ‘@name’, to use the multilib
|
||
configuration Makefile fragment ‘name’ in ‘gcc/config/arm’ in
|
||
the source tree (it is part of the corresponding sources,
|
||
after all). It is recommended, but not required, that files
|
||
used for this purpose to be named starting with ‘t-ml-’, to
|
||
make their intended purpose self-evident, in line with GCC
|
||
conventions. Such files enable custom, user-chosen multilib
|
||
lists to be configured. Whether multiple such files can be
|
||
used together depends on the contents of the supplied files.
|
||
See ‘gcc/config/arm/t-multilib’ and its supplementary
|
||
‘gcc/config/arm/t-*profile’ files for an example of what such
|
||
Makefile fragments might look like for this version of GCC.
|
||
The macros expected to be defined in these fragments are not
|
||
stable across GCC releases, so make sure they define the
|
||
‘MULTILIB’-related macros expected by the version of GCC you
|
||
are building. *Note Target Makefile Fragments: (gccint)Target
|
||
Fragment.
|
||
|
||
The table below gives the combination of ISAs, architectures,
|
||
FPUs and floating-point ABIs for which multilibs are built for
|
||
each predefined profile. The union of these options is
|
||
considered when specifying both ‘aprofile’ and ‘rmprofile’.
|
||
|
||
Option aprofile rmprofile
|
||
ISAs ‘-marm’ and ‘-mthumb’
|
||
‘-mthumb’
|
||
Architecturesdefault default architecture
|
||
architecture ‘-march=armv6s-m’
|
||
‘-march=armv7-a’ ‘-march=armv7-m’
|
||
‘-march=armv7ve’ ‘-march=armv7e-m’
|
||
‘-march=armv8-a’ ‘-march=armv8-m.base’
|
||
‘-march=armv8-m.main’
|
||
‘-march=armv7’
|
||
FPUs none none
|
||
‘-mfpu=vfpv3-d16’ ‘-mfpu=vfpv3-d16’
|
||
‘-mfpu=neon’ ‘-mfpu=fpv4-sp-d16’
|
||
‘-mfpu=vfpv4-d16’ ‘-mfpu=fpv5-sp-d16’
|
||
‘-mfpu=neon-vfpv4’ ‘-mfpu=fpv5-d16’
|
||
‘-mfpu=neon-fp-armv8’
|
||
floating-point‘-mfloat-abi=soft’ ‘-mfloat-abi=soft’
|
||
ABIs ‘-mfloat-abi=softfp’ ‘-mfloat-abi=softfp’
|
||
‘-mfloat-abi=hard’ ‘-mfloat-abi=hard’
|
||
|
||
‘loongarch*-*-*’
|
||
LIST is a comma-separated list of the following ABI
|
||
identifiers: ‘lp64d[/base]’ ‘lp64f[/base]’ ‘lp64d[/base]’,
|
||
where the ‘/base’ suffix may be omitted, to enable their
|
||
respective run-time libraries. If LIST is empty or ‘default’,
|
||
or if ‘--with-multilib-list’ is not specified, then the
|
||
default ABI as specified by ‘--with-abi’ or implied by
|
||
‘--target’ is selected.
|
||
|
||
‘riscv*-*-*’
|
||
LIST is a single ABI name. The target architecture must be
|
||
either ‘rv32gc’ or ‘rv64gc’. This will build a single
|
||
multilib for the specified architecture and ABI pair. If
|
||
‘--with-multilib-list’ is not given, then a default set of
|
||
multilibs is selected based on the value of ‘--target’. This
|
||
is usually a large set of multilibs.
|
||
|
||
‘sh*-*-*’
|
||
LIST is a comma separated list of CPU names. These must be of
|
||
the form ‘sh*’ or ‘m*’ (in which case they match the compiler
|
||
option for that processor). The list should not contain any
|
||
endian options - these are handled by ‘--with-endian’.
|
||
|
||
If LIST is empty, then there will be no multilibs for extra
|
||
processors. The multilib for the secondary endian remains
|
||
enabled.
|
||
|
||
As a special case, if an entry in the list starts with a ‘!’
|
||
(exclamation point), then it is added to the list of excluded
|
||
multilibs. Entries of this sort should be compatible with
|
||
‘MULTILIB_EXCLUDES’ (once the leading ‘!’ has been stripped).
|
||
|
||
If ‘--with-multilib-list’ is not given, then a default set of
|
||
multilibs is selected based on the value of ‘--target’. This
|
||
is usually the complete set of libraries, but some targets
|
||
imply a more specialized subset.
|
||
|
||
Example 1: to configure a compiler for SH4A only, but
|
||
supporting both endians, with little endian being the default:
|
||
--with-cpu=sh4a --with-endian=little,big --with-multilib-list=
|
||
|
||
Example 2: to configure a compiler for both SH4A and
|
||
SH4AL-DSP, but with only little endian SH4AL:
|
||
--with-cpu=sh4a --with-endian=little,big \
|
||
--with-multilib-list=sh4al,!mb/m4al
|
||
|
||
‘x86-64-*-linux*’
|
||
LIST is a comma separated list of ‘m32’, ‘m64’ and ‘mx32’ to
|
||
enable 32-bit, 64-bit and x32 run-time libraries,
|
||
respectively. If LIST is empty, then there will be no
|
||
multilibs and only the default run-time library will be
|
||
enabled.
|
||
|
||
If ‘--with-multilib-list’ is not given, then only 32-bit and
|
||
64-bit run-time libraries will be enabled.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-multilib-generator=CONFIG’
|
||
Specify what multilibs to build. CONFIG is a semicolon separated
|
||
list of values, possibly consisting of a single value. Currently
|
||
only implemented for riscv*-*-elf*. The accepted values and
|
||
meanings are given below.
|
||
|
||
Every config is constructed with four components: architecture
|
||
string, ABI, reuse rule with architecture string and reuse rule
|
||
with sub-extension.
|
||
|
||
Example 1: Add multi-lib suppport for rv32i with ilp32.
|
||
rv32i-ilp32--
|
||
|
||
Example 2: Add multi-lib suppport for rv32i with ilp32 and
|
||
rv32imafd with ilp32.
|
||
rv32i-ilp32--;rv32imafd-ilp32--
|
||
|
||
Example 3: Add multi-lib suppport for rv32i with ilp32; rv32im with
|
||
ilp32 and rv32ic with ilp32 will reuse this multi-lib set.
|
||
rv32i-ilp32-rv32im-c
|
||
|
||
Example 4: Add multi-lib suppport for rv64ima with lp64; rv64imaf
|
||
with lp64, rv64imac with lp64 and rv64imafc with lp64 will reuse
|
||
this multi-lib set.
|
||
rv64ima-lp64--f,c,fc
|
||
|
||
‘--with-multilib-generator’ have an optional configuration argument
|
||
‘--cmodel=val’ for code model, this option will expand with other
|
||
config options, VAL is a comma separated list of possible code
|
||
model, currently we support medlow and medany.
|
||
|
||
Example 5: Add multi-lib suppport for rv64ima with lp64; rv64ima
|
||
with lp64 and medlow code model
|
||
rv64ima-lp64--;--cmodel=medlow
|
||
|
||
Example 6: Add multi-lib suppport for rv64ima with lp64; rv64ima
|
||
with lp64 and medlow code model; rv64ima with lp64 and medany code
|
||
model
|
||
rv64ima-lp64--;--cmodel=medlow,medany
|
||
|
||
‘--with-endian=ENDIANS’
|
||
Specify what endians to use. Currently only implemented for
|
||
sh*-*-*.
|
||
|
||
ENDIANS may be one of the following:
|
||
‘big’
|
||
Use big endian exclusively.
|
||
‘little’
|
||
Use little endian exclusively.
|
||
‘big,little’
|
||
Use big endian by default. Provide a multilib for little
|
||
endian.
|
||
‘little,big’
|
||
Use little endian by default. Provide a multilib for big
|
||
endian.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-threads’
|
||
Specify that the target supports threads. This affects the
|
||
Objective-C compiler and runtime library, and exception handling
|
||
for other languages like C++. On some systems, this is the
|
||
default.
|
||
|
||
In general, the best (and, in many cases, the only known) threading
|
||
model available will be configured for use. Beware that on some
|
||
systems, GCC has not been taught what threading models are
|
||
generally available for the system. In this case,
|
||
‘--enable-threads’ is an alias for ‘--enable-threads=single’.
|
||
|
||
‘--disable-threads’
|
||
Specify that threading support should be disabled for the system.
|
||
This is an alias for ‘--enable-threads=single’.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-threads=LIB’
|
||
Specify that LIB is the thread support library. This affects the
|
||
Objective-C compiler and runtime library, and exception handling
|
||
for other languages like C++. The possibilities for LIB are:
|
||
|
||
‘aix’
|
||
AIX thread support.
|
||
‘dce’
|
||
DCE thread support.
|
||
‘lynx’
|
||
LynxOS thread support.
|
||
‘mipssde’
|
||
MIPS SDE thread support.
|
||
‘no’
|
||
This is an alias for ‘single’.
|
||
‘posix’
|
||
Generic POSIX/Unix98 thread support.
|
||
‘rtems’
|
||
RTEMS thread support.
|
||
‘single’
|
||
Disable thread support, should work for all platforms.
|
||
‘tpf’
|
||
TPF thread support.
|
||
‘vxworks’
|
||
VxWorks thread support.
|
||
‘win32’
|
||
Microsoft Win32 API thread support.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-tls’
|
||
Specify that the target supports TLS (Thread Local Storage).
|
||
Usually configure can correctly determine if TLS is supported. In
|
||
cases where it guesses incorrectly, TLS can be explicitly enabled
|
||
or disabled with ‘--enable-tls’ or ‘--disable-tls’. This can
|
||
happen if the assembler supports TLS but the C library does not, or
|
||
if the assumptions made by the configure test are incorrect.
|
||
|
||
‘--disable-tls’
|
||
Specify that the target does not support TLS. This is an alias for
|
||
‘--enable-tls=no’.
|
||
|
||
‘--disable-tm-clone-registry’
|
||
Disable TM clone registry in libgcc. It is enabled in libgcc by
|
||
default. This option helps to reduce code size for embedded
|
||
targets which do not use transactional memory.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-cpu=CPU’
|
||
‘--with-cpu-32=CPU’
|
||
‘--with-cpu-64=CPU’
|
||
Specify which cpu variant the compiler should generate code for by
|
||
default. CPU will be used as the default value of the ‘-mcpu=’
|
||
switch. This option is only supported on some targets, including
|
||
ARC, ARM, i386, M68k, PowerPC, and SPARC. It is mandatory for ARC.
|
||
The ‘--with-cpu-32’ and ‘--with-cpu-64’ options specify separate
|
||
default CPUs for 32-bit and 64-bit modes; these options are only
|
||
supported for aarch64, i386, x86-64, PowerPC, and SPARC.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-schedule=CPU’
|
||
‘--with-arch=CPU’
|
||
‘--with-arch-32=CPU’
|
||
‘--with-arch-64=CPU’
|
||
‘--with-tune=CPU’
|
||
‘--with-tune-32=CPU’
|
||
‘--with-tune-64=CPU’
|
||
‘--with-abi=ABI’
|
||
‘--with-fpu=TYPE’
|
||
‘--with-float=TYPE’
|
||
These configure options provide default values for the
|
||
‘-mschedule=’, ‘-march=’, ‘-mtune=’, ‘-mabi=’, and ‘-mfpu=’ options
|
||
and for ‘-mhard-float’ or ‘-msoft-float’. As with ‘--with-cpu’,
|
||
which switches will be accepted and acceptable values of the
|
||
arguments depend on the target.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-mode=MODE’
|
||
Specify if the compiler should default to ‘-marm’ or ‘-mthumb’.
|
||
This option is only supported on ARM targets.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-stack-offset=NUM’
|
||
This option sets the default for the -mstack-offset=NUM option, and
|
||
will thus generally also control the setting of this option for
|
||
libraries. This option is only supported on Epiphany targets.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-fpmath=ISA’
|
||
This options sets ‘-mfpmath=sse’ by default and specifies the
|
||
default ISA for floating-point arithmetics. You can select either
|
||
‘sse’ which enables ‘-msse2’ or ‘avx’ which enables ‘-mavx’ by
|
||
default. This option is only supported on i386 and x86-64 targets.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-fp-32=MODE’
|
||
On MIPS targets, set the default value for the ‘-mfp’ option when
|
||
using the o32 ABI. The possibilities for MODE are:
|
||
‘32’
|
||
Use the o32 FP32 ABI extension, as with the ‘-mfp32’
|
||
command-line option.
|
||
‘xx’
|
||
Use the o32 FPXX ABI extension, as with the ‘-mfpxx’
|
||
command-line option.
|
||
‘64’
|
||
Use the o32 FP64 ABI extension, as with the ‘-mfp64’
|
||
command-line option.
|
||
In the absence of this configuration option the default is to use
|
||
the o32 FP32 ABI extension.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-odd-spreg-32’
|
||
On MIPS targets, set the ‘-modd-spreg’ option by default when using
|
||
the o32 ABI.
|
||
|
||
‘--without-odd-spreg-32’
|
||
On MIPS targets, set the ‘-mno-odd-spreg’ option by default when
|
||
using the o32 ABI. This is normally used in conjunction with
|
||
‘--with-fp-32=64’ in order to target the o32 FP64A ABI extension.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-nan=ENCODING’
|
||
On MIPS targets, set the default encoding convention to use for the
|
||
special not-a-number (NaN) IEEE 754 floating-point data. The
|
||
possibilities for ENCODING are:
|
||
‘legacy’
|
||
Use the legacy encoding, as with the ‘-mnan=legacy’
|
||
command-line option.
|
||
‘2008’
|
||
Use the 754-2008 encoding, as with the ‘-mnan=2008’
|
||
command-line option.
|
||
To use this configuration option you must have an assembler version
|
||
installed that supports the ‘-mnan=’ command-line option too. In
|
||
the absence of this configuration option the default convention is
|
||
the legacy encoding, as when neither of the ‘-mnan=2008’ and
|
||
‘-mnan=legacy’ command-line options has been used.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-divide=TYPE’
|
||
Specify how the compiler should generate code for checking for
|
||
division by zero. This option is only supported on the MIPS
|
||
target. The possibilities for TYPE are:
|
||
‘traps’
|
||
Division by zero checks use conditional traps (this is the
|
||
default on systems that support conditional traps).
|
||
‘breaks’
|
||
Division by zero checks use the break instruction.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-compact-branches=POLICY’
|
||
Specify how the compiler should generate branch instructions. This
|
||
option is only supported on the MIPS target. The possibilities for
|
||
TYPE are:
|
||
‘optimal’
|
||
Cause a delay slot branch to be used if one is available in
|
||
the current ISA and the delay slot is successfully filled. If
|
||
the delay slot is not filled, a compact branch will be chosen
|
||
if one is available.
|
||
‘never’
|
||
Ensures that compact branch instructions will never be
|
||
generated.
|
||
‘always’
|
||
Ensures that a compact branch instruction will be generated if
|
||
available. If a compact branch instruction is not available,
|
||
a delay slot form of the branch will be used instead. This
|
||
option is supported from MIPS Release 6 onwards. For
|
||
pre-R6/microMIPS/MIPS16, this option is just same as
|
||
never/optimal.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-llsc’
|
||
On MIPS targets, make ‘-mllsc’ the default when no ‘-mno-llsc’
|
||
option is passed. This is the default for Linux-based targets, as
|
||
the kernel will emulate them if the ISA does not provide them.
|
||
|
||
‘--without-llsc’
|
||
On MIPS targets, make ‘-mno-llsc’ the default when no ‘-mllsc’
|
||
option is passed.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-synci’
|
||
On MIPS targets, make ‘-msynci’ the default when no ‘-mno-synci’
|
||
option is passed.
|
||
|
||
‘--without-synci’
|
||
On MIPS targets, make ‘-mno-synci’ the default when no ‘-msynci’
|
||
option is passed. This is the default.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-lxc1-sxc1’
|
||
On MIPS targets, make ‘-mlxc1-sxc1’ the default when no
|
||
‘-mno-lxc1-sxc1’ option is passed. This is the default.
|
||
|
||
‘--without-lxc1-sxc1’
|
||
On MIPS targets, make ‘-mno-lxc1-sxc1’ the default when no
|
||
‘-mlxc1-sxc1’ option is passed. The indexed load/store
|
||
instructions are not directly a problem but can lead to unexpected
|
||
behaviour when deployed in an application intended for a 32-bit
|
||
address space but run on a 64-bit processor. The issue is seen
|
||
because all known MIPS 64-bit Linux kernels execute o32 and n32
|
||
applications with 64-bit addressing enabled which affects the
|
||
overflow behaviour of the indexed addressing mode. GCC will assume
|
||
that ordinary 32-bit arithmetic overflow behaviour is the same
|
||
whether performed as an ‘addu’ instruction or as part of the
|
||
address calculation in ‘lwxc1’ type instructions. This assumption
|
||
holds true in a pure 32-bit environment and can hold true in a
|
||
64-bit environment if the address space is accurately set to be
|
||
32-bit for o32 and n32.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-madd4’
|
||
On MIPS targets, make ‘-mmadd4’ the default when no ‘-mno-madd4’
|
||
option is passed. This is the default.
|
||
|
||
‘--without-madd4’
|
||
On MIPS targets, make ‘-mno-madd4’ the default when no ‘-mmadd4’
|
||
option is passed. The ‘madd4’ instruction family can be
|
||
problematic when targeting a combination of cores that implement
|
||
these instructions differently. There are two known cores that
|
||
implement these as fused operations instead of unfused (where
|
||
unfused is normally expected). Disabling these instructions is the
|
||
only way to ensure compatible code is generated; this will incur a
|
||
performance penalty.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-msa’
|
||
On MIPS targets, make ‘-mmsa’ the default when no ‘-mno-msa’ option
|
||
is passed.
|
||
|
||
‘--without-msa’
|
||
On MIPS targets, make ‘-mno-msa’ the default when no ‘-mmsa’ option
|
||
is passed. This is the default.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-mips-plt’
|
||
On MIPS targets, make use of copy relocations and PLTs. These
|
||
features are extensions to the traditional SVR4-based MIPS ABIs and
|
||
require support from GNU binutils and the runtime C library.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-stack-clash-protection-guard-size=SIZE’
|
||
On certain targets this option sets the default stack clash
|
||
protection guard size as a power of two in bytes. On AArch64 SIZE
|
||
is required to be either 12 (4KB) or 16 (64KB).
|
||
|
||
‘--with-isa-spec=ISA-SPEC-STRING’
|
||
On RISC-V targets specify the default version of the RISC-V
|
||
Unprivileged (formerly User-Level) ISA specification to produce
|
||
code conforming to. The possibilities for ISA-SPEC-STRING are:
|
||
‘2.2’
|
||
Produce code conforming to version 2.2.
|
||
‘20190608’
|
||
Produce code conforming to version 20190608.
|
||
‘20191213’
|
||
Produce code conforming to version 20191213.
|
||
In the absence of this configuration option the default version is
|
||
20191213.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-__cxa_atexit’
|
||
Define if you want to use __cxa_atexit, rather than atexit, to
|
||
register C++ destructors for local statics and global objects.
|
||
This is essential for fully standards-compliant handling of
|
||
destructors, but requires __cxa_atexit in libc. This option is
|
||
currently only available on systems with GNU libc. When enabled,
|
||
this will cause ‘-fuse-cxa-atexit’ to be passed by default.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-gnu-indirect-function’
|
||
Define if you want to enable the ‘ifunc’ attribute. This option is
|
||
currently only available on systems with GNU libc on certain
|
||
targets.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-target-optspace’
|
||
Specify that target libraries should be optimized for code space
|
||
instead of code speed. This is the default for the m32r platform.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-cpp-install-dir=DIRNAME’
|
||
Specify that the user visible ‘cpp’ program should be installed in
|
||
‘PREFIX/DIRNAME/cpp’, in addition to BINDIR.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-comdat’
|
||
Enable COMDAT group support. This is primarily used to override
|
||
the automatically detected value.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-initfini-array’
|
||
Force the use of sections ‘.init_array’ and ‘.fini_array’ (instead
|
||
of ‘.init’ and ‘.fini’) for constructors and destructors. Option
|
||
‘--disable-initfini-array’ has the opposite effect. If neither
|
||
option is specified, the configure script will try to guess whether
|
||
the ‘.init_array’ and ‘.fini_array’ sections are supported and, if
|
||
they are, use them.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-link-mutex’
|
||
When building GCC, use a mutex to avoid linking the compilers for
|
||
multiple languages at the same time, to avoid thrashing on build
|
||
systems with limited free memory. The default is not to use such a
|
||
mutex.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-link-serialization’
|
||
When building GCC, use make dependencies to serialize linking the
|
||
compilers for multiple languages, to avoid thrashing on build
|
||
systems with limited free memory. The default is not to add such
|
||
dependencies and thus with parallel make potentially link different
|
||
compilers concurrently. If the argument is a positive integer,
|
||
allow that number of concurrent link processes for the large
|
||
binaries.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-maintainer-mode’
|
||
The build rules that regenerate the Autoconf and Automake output
|
||
files as well as the GCC master message catalog ‘gcc.pot’ are
|
||
normally disabled. This is because it can only be rebuilt if the
|
||
complete source tree is present. If you have changed the sources
|
||
and want to rebuild the catalog, configuring with
|
||
‘--enable-maintainer-mode’ will enable this. Note that you need a
|
||
recent version of the ‘gettext’ tools to do so.
|
||
|
||
‘--disable-bootstrap’
|
||
For a native build, the default configuration is to perform a
|
||
3-stage bootstrap of the compiler when ‘make’ is invoked, testing
|
||
that GCC can compile itself correctly. If you want to disable this
|
||
process, you can configure with ‘--disable-bootstrap’.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-bootstrap’
|
||
In special cases, you may want to perform a 3-stage build even if
|
||
the target and host triplets are different. This is possible when
|
||
the host can run code compiled for the target (e.g. host is
|
||
i686-linux, target is i486-linux). Starting from GCC 4.2, to do
|
||
this you have to configure explicitly with ‘--enable-bootstrap’.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-generated-files-in-srcdir’
|
||
Neither the .c and .h files that are generated from Bison and flex
|
||
nor the info manuals and man pages that are built from the .texi
|
||
files are present in the repository development tree. When
|
||
building GCC from that development tree, or from one of our
|
||
snapshots, those generated files are placed in your build
|
||
directory, which allows for the source to be in a readonly
|
||
directory.
|
||
|
||
If you configure with ‘--enable-generated-files-in-srcdir’ then
|
||
those generated files will go into the source directory. This is
|
||
mainly intended for generating release or prerelease tarballs of
|
||
the GCC sources, since it is not a requirement that the users of
|
||
source releases to have flex, Bison, or makeinfo.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-version-specific-runtime-libs’
|
||
Specify that runtime libraries should be installed in the compiler
|
||
specific subdirectory (‘LIBDIR/gcc’) rather than the usual places.
|
||
In addition, ‘libstdc++’’s include files will be installed into
|
||
‘LIBDIR’ unless you overruled it by using
|
||
‘--with-gxx-include-dir=DIRNAME’. Using this option is
|
||
particularly useful if you intend to use several versions of GCC in
|
||
parallel. The default is ‘yes’ for ‘libada’, and ‘no’ for the
|
||
remaining libraries.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-aix-soname=‘aix’, ‘svr4’ or ‘both’’
|
||
Traditional AIX shared library versioning (versioned ‘Shared
|
||
Object’ files as members of unversioned ‘Archive Library’ files
|
||
named ‘lib.a’) causes numerous headaches for package managers.
|
||
However, ‘Import Files’ as members of ‘Archive Library’ files allow
|
||
for *filename-based versioning* of shared libraries as seen on
|
||
Linux/SVR4, where this is called the "SONAME". But as they prevent
|
||
static linking, ‘Import Files’ may be used with ‘Runtime Linking’
|
||
only, where the linker does search for ‘libNAME.so’ before
|
||
‘libNAME.a’ library filenames with the ‘-lNAME’ linker flag.
|
||
|
||
For detailed information please refer to the AIX ld Command
|
||
reference.
|
||
|
||
As long as shared library creation is enabled, upon:
|
||
‘--with-aix-soname=aix’
|
||
‘--with-aix-soname=both’
|
||
A (traditional AIX) ‘Shared Archive Library’ file is created:
|
||
• using the ‘libNAME.a’ filename scheme
|
||
• with the ‘Shared Object’ file as archive member named
|
||
‘libNAME.so.V’ (except for ‘libgcc_s’, where the ‘Shared
|
||
Object’ file is named ‘shr.o’ for backwards
|
||
compatibility), which
|
||
− is used for runtime loading from inside the
|
||
‘libNAME.a’ file
|
||
− is used for dynamic loading via
|
||
‘dlopen("libNAME.a(libNAME.so.V)", RTLD_MEMBER)’
|
||
− is used for shared linking
|
||
− is used for static linking, so no separate ‘Static
|
||
Archive Library’ file is needed
|
||
‘--with-aix-soname=both’
|
||
‘--with-aix-soname=svr4’
|
||
A (second) ‘Shared Archive Library’ file is created:
|
||
• using the ‘libNAME.so.V’ filename scheme
|
||
• with the ‘Shared Object’ file as archive member named
|
||
‘shr.o’, which
|
||
− is created with the ‘-G linker flag’
|
||
− has the ‘F_LOADONLY’ flag set
|
||
− is used for runtime loading from inside the
|
||
‘libNAME.so.V’ file
|
||
− is used for dynamic loading via
|
||
‘dlopen("libNAME.so.V(shr.o)", RTLD_MEMBER)’
|
||
• with the ‘Import File’ as archive member named ‘shr.imp’,
|
||
which
|
||
− refers to ‘libNAME.so.V(shr.o)’ as the "SONAME", to
|
||
be recorded in the ‘Loader Section’ of subsequent
|
||
binaries
|
||
− indicates whether ‘libNAME.so.V(shr.o)’ is 32 or 64
|
||
bit
|
||
− lists all the public symbols exported by
|
||
‘lib.so.V(shr.o)’, eventually decorated with the
|
||
‘‘weak’ Keyword’
|
||
− is necessary for shared linking against
|
||
‘lib.so.V(shr.o)’
|
||
A symbolic link using the ‘libNAME.so’ filename scheme is
|
||
created:
|
||
• pointing to the ‘libNAME.so.V’ ‘Shared Archive Library’
|
||
file
|
||
• to permit the ‘ld Command’ to find ‘lib.so.V(shr.imp)’
|
||
via the ‘-lNAME’ argument (requires ‘Runtime Linking’ to
|
||
be enabled)
|
||
• to permit dynamic loading of ‘lib.so.V(shr.o)’ without
|
||
the need to specify the version number via
|
||
‘dlopen("libNAME.so(shr.o)", RTLD_MEMBER)’
|
||
|
||
As long as static library creation is enabled, upon:
|
||
‘--with-aix-soname=svr4’
|
||
A ‘Static Archive Library’ is created:
|
||
• using the ‘libNAME.a’ filename scheme
|
||
• with all the ‘Static Object’ files as archive members,
|
||
which
|
||
− are used for static linking
|
||
|
||
While the aix-soname=‘svr4’ option does not create ‘Shared Object’
|
||
files as members of unversioned ‘Archive Library’ files any more,
|
||
package managers still are responsible to transfer ‘Shared Object’
|
||
files found as member of a previously installed unversioned
|
||
‘Archive Library’ file into the newly installed ‘Archive Library’
|
||
file with the same filename.
|
||
|
||
_WARNING:_ Creating ‘Shared Object’ files with ‘Runtime Linking’
|
||
enabled may bloat the TOC, eventually leading to ‘TOC overflow’
|
||
errors, requiring the use of either the ‘-Wl,-bbigtoc’ linker flag
|
||
(seen to break with the ‘GDB’ debugger) or some of the TOC-related
|
||
compiler flags, *Note RS/6000 and PowerPC Options: (gcc)RS/6000 and
|
||
PowerPC Options.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-aix-soname’ is currently supported by ‘libgcc_s’ only, so
|
||
this option is still experimental and not for normal use yet.
|
||
|
||
Default is the traditional behavior ‘--with-aix-soname=‘aix’’.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-languages=LANG1,LANG2,...’
|
||
Specify that only a particular subset of compilers and their
|
||
runtime libraries should be built. For a list of valid values for
|
||
LANGN you can issue the following command in the ‘gcc’ directory of
|
||
your GCC source tree:
|
||
grep ^language= */config-lang.in
|
||
Currently, you can use any of the following: ‘all’, ‘default’,
|
||
‘ada’, ‘c’, ‘c++’, ‘d’, ‘fortran’, ‘go’, ‘jit’, ‘lto’, ‘m2’,
|
||
‘objc’, ‘obj-c++’. Building the Ada compiler has special
|
||
requirements, see below. If you do not pass this flag, or specify
|
||
the option ‘default’, then the default languages available in the
|
||
‘gcc’ sub-tree will be configured. Ada, D, Go, Jit, Objective-C++
|
||
and Modula-2 are not default languages. LTO is not a default
|
||
language, but is built by default because ‘--enable-lto’ is enabled
|
||
by default. The other languages are default languages. If ‘all’
|
||
is specified, then all available languages are built. An exception
|
||
is ‘jit’ language, which requires ‘--enable-host-shared’ to be
|
||
included with ‘all’.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-stage1-languages=LANG1,LANG2,...’
|
||
Specify that a particular subset of compilers and their runtime
|
||
libraries should be built with the system C compiler during stage 1
|
||
of the bootstrap process, rather than only in later stages with the
|
||
bootstrapped C compiler. The list of valid values is the same as
|
||
for ‘--enable-languages’, and the option ‘all’ will select all of
|
||
the languages enabled by ‘--enable-languages’. This option is
|
||
primarily useful for GCC development; for instance, when a
|
||
development version of the compiler cannot bootstrap due to
|
||
compiler bugs, or when one is debugging front ends other than the C
|
||
front end. When this option is used, one can then build the target
|
||
libraries for the specified languages with the stage-1 compiler by
|
||
using ‘make stage1-bubble all-target’, or run the testsuite on the
|
||
stage-1 compiler for the specified languages using ‘make
|
||
stage1-start check-gcc’.
|
||
|
||
‘--disable-libada’
|
||
Specify that the run-time libraries and tools used by GNAT should
|
||
not be built. This can be useful for debugging, or for
|
||
compatibility with previous Ada build procedures, when it was
|
||
required to explicitly do a ‘make -C gcc gnatlib_and_tools’.
|
||
|
||
‘--disable-libgm2’
|
||
Specify that the run-time libraries and tools used by Modula-2
|
||
should not be built. This can be useful for debugging.
|
||
|
||
‘--disable-libsanitizer’
|
||
Specify that the run-time libraries for the various sanitizers
|
||
should not be built.
|
||
|
||
‘--disable-libssp’
|
||
Specify that the run-time libraries for stack smashing protection
|
||
should not be built or linked against. On many targets library
|
||
support is provided by the C library instead.
|
||
|
||
‘--disable-libquadmath’
|
||
Specify that the GCC quad-precision math library should not be
|
||
built. On some systems, the library is required to be linkable
|
||
when building the Fortran front end, unless
|
||
‘--disable-libquadmath-support’ is used.
|
||
|
||
‘--disable-libquadmath-support’
|
||
Specify that the Fortran front end and ‘libgfortran’ do not add
|
||
support for ‘libquadmath’ on systems supporting it.
|
||
|
||
‘--disable-libgomp’
|
||
Specify that the GNU Offloading and Multi Processing Runtime
|
||
Library should not be built.
|
||
|
||
‘--disable-libvtv’
|
||
Specify that the run-time libraries used by vtable verification
|
||
should not be built.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-dwarf2’
|
||
Specify that the compiler should use DWARF debugging information as
|
||
the default; the exact DWARF version that is the default is
|
||
target-specific.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-advance-toolchain=AT’
|
||
On 64-bit PowerPC Linux systems, configure the compiler to use the
|
||
header files, library files, and the dynamic linker from the
|
||
Advance Toolchain release AT instead of the default versions that
|
||
are provided by the Linux distribution. In general, this option is
|
||
intended for the developers of GCC, and it is not intended for
|
||
general use.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-targets=all’
|
||
‘--enable-targets=TARGET_LIST’
|
||
Some GCC targets, e.g. powerpc64-linux, build bi-arch compilers.
|
||
These are compilers that are able to generate either 64-bit or
|
||
32-bit code. Typically, the corresponding 32-bit target, e.g.
|
||
powerpc-linux for powerpc64-linux, only generates 32-bit code.
|
||
This option enables the 32-bit target to be a bi-arch compiler,
|
||
which is useful when you want a bi-arch compiler that defaults to
|
||
32-bit, and you are building a bi-arch or multi-arch binutils in a
|
||
combined tree. On mips-linux, this will build a tri-arch compiler
|
||
(ABI o32/n32/64), defaulted to o32. Currently, this option only
|
||
affects sparc-linux, powerpc-linux, x86-linux, mips-linux and
|
||
s390-linux.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-default-pie’
|
||
Turn on ‘-fPIE’ and ‘-pie’ by default.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-secureplt’
|
||
This option enables ‘-msecure-plt’ by default for powerpc-linux.
|
||
*Note RS/6000 and PowerPC Options: (gcc)RS/6000 and PowerPC
|
||
Options,
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-default-ssp’
|
||
Turn on ‘-fstack-protector-strong’ by default.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-cld’
|
||
This option enables ‘-mcld’ by default for 32-bit x86 targets.
|
||
*Note i386 and x86-64 Options: (gcc)i386 and x86-64 Options,
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-large-address-aware’
|
||
The ‘--enable-large-address-aware’ option arranges for MinGW
|
||
executables to be linked using the ‘--large-address-aware’ option,
|
||
that enables the use of more than 2GB of memory. If GCC is
|
||
configured with this option, its effects can be reversed by passing
|
||
the ‘-Wl,--disable-large-address-aware’ option to the so-configured
|
||
compiler driver.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-win32-registry’
|
||
‘--enable-win32-registry=KEY’
|
||
‘--disable-win32-registry’
|
||
The ‘--enable-win32-registry’ option enables Microsoft
|
||
Windows-hosted GCC to look up installations paths in the registry
|
||
using the following key:
|
||
|
||
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Free Software Foundation\KEY
|
||
|
||
KEY defaults to GCC version number, and can be overridden by the
|
||
‘--enable-win32-registry=KEY’ option. Vendors and distributors who
|
||
use custom installers are encouraged to provide a different key,
|
||
perhaps one comprised of vendor name and GCC version number, to
|
||
avoid conflict with existing installations. This feature is
|
||
enabled by default, and can be disabled by
|
||
‘--disable-win32-registry’ option. This option has no effect on
|
||
the other hosts.
|
||
|
||
‘--nfp’
|
||
Specify that the machine does not have a floating point unit. This
|
||
option only applies to ‘m68k-sun-sunosN’. On any other system,
|
||
‘--nfp’ has no effect.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-werror’
|
||
‘--disable-werror’
|
||
‘--enable-werror=yes’
|
||
‘--enable-werror=no’
|
||
When you specify this option, it controls whether certain files in
|
||
the compiler are built with ‘-Werror’ in bootstrap stage2 and
|
||
later. If you don’t specify it, ‘-Werror’ is turned on for the
|
||
main development trunk. However it defaults to off for release
|
||
branches and final releases. The specific files which get
|
||
‘-Werror’ are controlled by the Makefiles.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-checking’
|
||
‘--disable-checking’
|
||
‘--enable-checking=LIST’
|
||
This option controls performing internal consistency checks in the
|
||
compiler. It does not change the generated code, but adds error
|
||
checking of the requested complexity. This slows down the compiler
|
||
and may only work properly if you are building the compiler with
|
||
GCC.
|
||
|
||
When the option is not specified, the active set of checks depends
|
||
on context. Namely, bootstrap stage 1 defaults to
|
||
‘--enable-checking=yes’, builds from release branches or release
|
||
archives default to ‘--enable-checking=release’, and otherwise
|
||
‘--enable-checking=yes,extra’ is used. When the option is
|
||
specified without a LIST, the result is the same as
|
||
‘--enable-checking=yes’. Likewise, ‘--disable-checking’ is
|
||
equivalent to ‘--enable-checking=no’.
|
||
|
||
The categories of checks available in LIST are ‘yes’ (most common
|
||
checks ‘assert,misc,gc,gimple,rtlflag,runtime,tree,types’), ‘no’
|
||
(no checks at all), ‘all’ (all but ‘valgrind’), ‘release’ (cheapest
|
||
checks ‘assert,runtime’) or ‘none’ (same as ‘no’). ‘release’
|
||
checks are always on and to disable them ‘--disable-checking’ or
|
||
‘--enable-checking=no[,<other checks>]’ must be explicitly
|
||
requested. Disabling assertions makes the compiler and runtime
|
||
slightly faster but increases the risk of undetected internal
|
||
errors causing wrong code to be generated.
|
||
|
||
Individual checks can be enabled with these flags: ‘assert’, ‘df’,
|
||
‘extra’, ‘fold’, ‘gc’, ‘gcac’, ‘gimple’, ‘misc’, ‘rtl’, ‘rtlflag’,
|
||
‘runtime’, ‘tree’, ‘types’ and ‘valgrind’. ‘extra’ extends ‘misc’
|
||
checking with extra checks that might affect code generation and
|
||
should therefore not differ between stage1 and later stages in
|
||
bootstrap.
|
||
|
||
The ‘valgrind’ check requires the external ‘valgrind’ simulator,
|
||
available from <https://valgrind.org>. The ‘rtl’ checks are
|
||
expensive and the ‘df’, ‘gcac’ and ‘valgrind’ checks are very
|
||
expensive.
|
||
|
||
‘--disable-stage1-checking’
|
||
‘--enable-stage1-checking’
|
||
‘--enable-stage1-checking=LIST’
|
||
This option affects only bootstrap build. If no
|
||
‘--enable-checking’ option is specified the stage1 compiler is
|
||
built with ‘yes’ checking enabled, otherwise the stage1 checking
|
||
flags are the same as specified by ‘--enable-checking’. To build
|
||
the stage1 compiler with different checking options use
|
||
‘--enable-stage1-checking’. The list of checking options is the
|
||
same as for ‘--enable-checking’. If your system is too slow or too
|
||
small to bootstrap a released compiler with checking for stage1
|
||
enabled, you can use ‘--disable-stage1-checking’ to disable
|
||
checking for the stage1 compiler.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-coverage’
|
||
‘--enable-coverage=LEVEL’
|
||
With this option, the compiler is built to collect self coverage
|
||
information, every time it is run. This is for internal
|
||
development purposes, and only works when the compiler is being
|
||
built with gcc. The LEVEL argument controls whether the compiler
|
||
is built optimized or not, values are ‘opt’ and ‘noopt’. For
|
||
coverage analysis you want to disable optimization, for performance
|
||
analysis you want to enable optimization. When coverage is
|
||
enabled, the default level is without optimization.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-gather-detailed-mem-stats’
|
||
When this option is specified more detailed information on memory
|
||
allocation is gathered. This information is printed when using
|
||
‘-fmem-report’.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-valgrind-annotations’
|
||
Mark selected memory related operations in the compiler when run
|
||
under valgrind to suppress false positives.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-nls’
|
||
‘--disable-nls’
|
||
The ‘--enable-nls’ option enables Native Language Support (NLS),
|
||
which lets GCC output diagnostics in languages other than American
|
||
English. Native Language Support is enabled by default if not
|
||
doing a canadian cross build. The ‘--disable-nls’ option disables
|
||
NLS.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-included-gettext’
|
||
If NLS is enabled, the ‘--with-included-gettext’ option causes the
|
||
build procedure to prefer its copy of GNU ‘gettext’.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-catgets’
|
||
If NLS is enabled, and if the host lacks ‘gettext’ but has the
|
||
inferior ‘catgets’ interface, the GCC build procedure normally
|
||
ignores ‘catgets’ and instead uses GCC’s copy of the GNU ‘gettext’
|
||
library. The ‘--with-catgets’ option causes the build procedure to
|
||
use the host’s ‘catgets’ in this situation.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-libiconv-prefix=DIR’
|
||
Search for libiconv header files in ‘DIR/include’ and libiconv
|
||
library files in ‘DIR/lib’.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-obsolete’
|
||
Enable configuration for an obsoleted system. If you attempt to
|
||
configure GCC for a system (build, host, or target) which has been
|
||
obsoleted, and you do not specify this flag, configure will halt
|
||
with an error message.
|
||
|
||
All support for systems which have been obsoleted in one release of
|
||
GCC is removed entirely in the next major release, unless someone
|
||
steps forward to maintain the port.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-decimal-float’
|
||
‘--enable-decimal-float=yes’
|
||
‘--enable-decimal-float=no’
|
||
‘--enable-decimal-float=bid’
|
||
‘--enable-decimal-float=dpd’
|
||
‘--disable-decimal-float’
|
||
Enable (or disable) support for the C decimal floating point
|
||
extension that is in the IEEE 754-2008 standard. This is enabled
|
||
by default only on AArch64, PowerPC, i386, and x86_64 GNU/Linux
|
||
systems. Other systems may also support it, but require the user
|
||
to specifically enable it. You can optionally control which
|
||
decimal floating point format is used (either ‘bid’ or ‘dpd’). The
|
||
‘bid’ (binary integer decimal) format is default on AArch64, i386
|
||
and x86_64 systems, and the ‘dpd’ (densely packed decimal) format
|
||
is default on PowerPC systems.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-fixed-point’
|
||
‘--disable-fixed-point’
|
||
Enable (or disable) support for C fixed-point arithmetic. This
|
||
option is enabled by default for some targets (such as MIPS) which
|
||
have hardware-support for fixed-point operations. On other
|
||
targets, you may enable this option manually.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-long-double-128’
|
||
Specify if ‘long double’ type should be 128-bit by default on
|
||
selected GNU/Linux architectures. If using
|
||
‘--without-long-double-128’, ‘long double’ will be by default
|
||
64-bit, the same as ‘double’ type. When neither of these configure
|
||
options are used, the default will be 128-bit ‘long double’ when
|
||
built against GNU C Library 2.4 and later, 64-bit ‘long double’
|
||
otherwise.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-long-double-format=ibm’
|
||
‘--with-long-double-format=ieee’
|
||
Specify whether ‘long double’ uses the IBM extended double format
|
||
or the IEEE 128-bit floating point format on PowerPC Linux systems.
|
||
This configuration switch will only work on little endian PowerPC
|
||
Linux systems and on big endian 64-bit systems where the default
|
||
cpu is at least power7 (i.e. ‘--with-cpu=power7’,
|
||
‘--with-cpu=power8’, or ‘--with-cpu=power9’ is used).
|
||
|
||
If you use the ‘--with-long-double-64’ configuration option, the
|
||
‘--with-long-double-format=ibm’ and
|
||
‘--with-long-double-format=ieee’ options are ignored.
|
||
|
||
The default ‘long double’ format is to use IBM extended double.
|
||
Until all of the libraries are converted to use IEEE 128-bit
|
||
floating point, it is not recommended to use
|
||
‘--with-long-double-format=ieee’.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-fdpic’
|
||
On SH Linux systems, generate ELF FDPIC code.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-gmp=PATHNAME’
|
||
‘--with-gmp-include=PATHNAME’
|
||
‘--with-gmp-lib=PATHNAME’
|
||
‘--with-mpfr=PATHNAME’
|
||
‘--with-mpfr-include=PATHNAME’
|
||
‘--with-mpfr-lib=PATHNAME’
|
||
‘--with-mpc=PATHNAME’
|
||
‘--with-mpc-include=PATHNAME’
|
||
‘--with-mpc-lib=PATHNAME’
|
||
If you want to build GCC but do not have the GMP library, the MPFR
|
||
library and/or the MPC library installed in a standard location and
|
||
do not have their sources present in the GCC source tree then you
|
||
can explicitly specify the directory where they are installed
|
||
(‘--with-gmp=GMPINSTALLDIR’, ‘--with-mpfr=MPFRINSTALLDIR’,
|
||
‘--with-mpc=MPCINSTALLDIR’). The ‘--with-gmp=GMPINSTALLDIR’ option
|
||
is shorthand for ‘--with-gmp-lib=GMPINSTALLDIR/lib’ and
|
||
‘--with-gmp-include=GMPINSTALLDIR/include’. Likewise the
|
||
‘--with-mpfr=MPFRINSTALLDIR’ option is shorthand for
|
||
‘--with-mpfr-lib=MPFRINSTALLDIR/lib’ and
|
||
‘--with-mpfr-include=MPFRINSTALLDIR/include’, also the
|
||
‘--with-mpc=MPCINSTALLDIR’ option is shorthand for
|
||
‘--with-mpc-lib=MPCINSTALLDIR/lib’ and
|
||
‘--with-mpc-include=MPCINSTALLDIR/include’. If these shorthand
|
||
assumptions are not correct, you can use the explicit include and
|
||
lib options directly. You might also need to ensure the shared
|
||
libraries can be found by the dynamic linker when building and
|
||
using GCC, for example by setting the runtime shared library path
|
||
variable (‘LD_LIBRARY_PATH’ on GNU/Linux and Solaris systems).
|
||
|
||
These flags are applicable to the host platform only. When
|
||
building a cross compiler, they will not be used to configure
|
||
target libraries.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-isl=PATHNAME’
|
||
‘--with-isl-include=PATHNAME’
|
||
‘--with-isl-lib=PATHNAME’
|
||
If you do not have the isl library installed in a standard location
|
||
and you want to build GCC, you can explicitly specify the directory
|
||
where it is installed (‘--with-isl=ISLINSTALLDIR’). The
|
||
‘--with-isl=ISLINSTALLDIR’ option is shorthand for
|
||
‘--with-isl-lib=ISLINSTALLDIR/lib’ and
|
||
‘--with-isl-include=ISLINSTALLDIR/include’. If this shorthand
|
||
assumption is not correct, you can use the explicit include and lib
|
||
options directly.
|
||
|
||
These flags are applicable to the host platform only. When
|
||
building a cross compiler, they will not be used to configure
|
||
target libraries.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-stage1-ldflags=FLAGS’
|
||
This option may be used to set linker flags to be used when linking
|
||
stage 1 of GCC. These are also used when linking GCC if configured
|
||
with ‘--disable-bootstrap’. If ‘--with-stage1-libs’ is not set to
|
||
a value, then the default is ‘-static-libstdc++ -static-libgcc’, if
|
||
supported.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-stage1-libs=LIBS’
|
||
This option may be used to set libraries to be used when linking
|
||
stage 1 of GCC. These are also used when linking GCC if configured
|
||
with ‘--disable-bootstrap’.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-boot-ldflags=FLAGS’
|
||
This option may be used to set linker flags to be used when linking
|
||
stage 2 and later when bootstrapping GCC. If –with-boot-libs is not
|
||
is set to a value, then the default is ‘-static-libstdc++
|
||
-static-libgcc’.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-boot-libs=LIBS’
|
||
This option may be used to set libraries to be used when linking
|
||
stage 2 and later when bootstrapping GCC.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-debug-prefix-map=MAP’
|
||
Convert source directory names using ‘-fdebug-prefix-map’ when
|
||
building runtime libraries. ‘MAP’ is a space-separated list of
|
||
maps of the form ‘OLD=NEW’.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-linker-build-id’
|
||
Tells GCC to pass ‘--build-id’ option to the linker for all final
|
||
links (links performed without the ‘-r’ or ‘--relocatable’ option),
|
||
if the linker supports it. If you specify
|
||
‘--enable-linker-build-id’, but your linker does not support
|
||
‘--build-id’ option, a warning is issued and the
|
||
‘--enable-linker-build-id’ option is ignored. The default is off.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-linker-hash-style=CHOICE’
|
||
Tells GCC to pass ‘--hash-style=CHOICE’ option to the linker for
|
||
all final links. CHOICE can be one of ‘sysv’, ‘gnu’, and ‘both’
|
||
where ‘sysv’ is the default.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-gnu-unique-object’
|
||
‘--disable-gnu-unique-object’
|
||
Tells GCC to use the gnu_unique_object relocation for C++ template
|
||
static data members and inline function local statics. Enabled by
|
||
default for a toolchain with an assembler that accepts it and GLIBC
|
||
2.11 or above, otherwise disabled.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-diagnostics-color=CHOICE’
|
||
Tells GCC to use CHOICE as the default for ‘-fdiagnostics-color=’
|
||
option (if not used explicitly on the command line). CHOICE can be
|
||
one of ‘never’, ‘auto’, ‘always’, and ‘auto-if-env’ where ‘auto’ is
|
||
the default. ‘auto-if-env’ makes ‘-fdiagnostics-color=auto’ the
|
||
default if ‘GCC_COLORS’ is present and non-empty in the environment
|
||
of the compiler, and ‘-fdiagnostics-color=never’ otherwise.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-diagnostics-urls=CHOICE’
|
||
Tells GCC to use CHOICE as the default for ‘-fdiagnostics-urls=’
|
||
option (if not used explicitly on the command line). CHOICE can be
|
||
one of ‘never’, ‘auto’, ‘always’, and ‘auto-if-env’ where ‘auto’ is
|
||
the default. ‘auto-if-env’ makes ‘-fdiagnostics-urls=auto’ the
|
||
default if ‘GCC_URLS’ or ‘TERM_URLS’ is present and non-empty in
|
||
the environment of the compiler, and ‘-fdiagnostics-urls=never’
|
||
otherwise.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-lto’
|
||
‘--disable-lto’
|
||
Enable support for link-time optimization (LTO). This is enabled by
|
||
default, and may be disabled using ‘--disable-lto’.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-linker-plugin-configure-flags=FLAGS’
|
||
‘--enable-linker-plugin-flags=FLAGS’
|
||
By default, linker plugins (such as the LTO plugin) are built for
|
||
the host system architecture. For the case that the linker has a
|
||
different (but run-time compatible) architecture, these flags can
|
||
be specified to build plugins that are compatible to the linker.
|
||
For example, if you are building GCC for a 64-bit x86_64
|
||
(‘x86_64-pc-linux-gnu’) host system, but have a 32-bit x86
|
||
GNU/Linux (‘i686-pc-linux-gnu’) linker executable (which is
|
||
executable on the former system), you can configure GCC as follows
|
||
for getting compatible linker plugins:
|
||
|
||
% SRCDIR/configure \
|
||
--host=x86_64-pc-linux-gnu \
|
||
--enable-linker-plugin-configure-flags=--host=i686-pc-linux-gnu \
|
||
--enable-linker-plugin-flags='CC=gcc\ -m32\ -Wl,-rpath,[...]/i686-pc-linux-gnu/lib'
|
||
|
||
‘--with-plugin-ld=PATHNAME’
|
||
Enable an alternate linker to be used at link-time optimization
|
||
(LTO) link time when ‘-fuse-linker-plugin’ is enabled. This linker
|
||
should have plugin support such as gold starting with version 2.20
|
||
or GNU ld starting with version 2.21. See ‘-fuse-linker-plugin’
|
||
for details.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-canonical-system-headers’
|
||
‘--disable-canonical-system-headers’
|
||
Enable system header path canonicalization for ‘libcpp’. This can
|
||
produce shorter header file paths in diagnostics and dependency
|
||
output files, but these changed header paths may conflict with some
|
||
compilation environments. Enabled by default, and may be disabled
|
||
using ‘--disable-canonical-system-headers’.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-glibc-version=MAJOR.MINOR’
|
||
Tell GCC that when the GNU C Library (glibc) is used on the target
|
||
it will be version MAJOR.MINOR or later. Normally this can be
|
||
detected from the C library’s header files, but this option may be
|
||
needed when bootstrapping a cross toolchain without the header
|
||
files available for building the initial bootstrap compiler.
|
||
|
||
If GCC is configured with some multilibs that use glibc and some
|
||
that do not, this option applies only to the multilibs that use
|
||
glibc. However, such configurations may not work well as not all
|
||
the relevant configuration in GCC is on a per-multilib basis.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-as-accelerator-for=TARGET’
|
||
Build as offload target compiler. Specify offload host triple by
|
||
TARGET.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-offload-targets=TARGET1[=PATH1],...,TARGETN[=PATHN]’
|
||
Enable offloading to targets TARGET1, ..., TARGETN. Offload
|
||
compilers are expected to be already installed. Default search
|
||
path for them is ‘EXEC-PREFIX’, but it can be changed by specifying
|
||
paths PATH1, ..., PATHN.
|
||
|
||
% SRCDIR/configure \
|
||
--enable-offload-targets=amdgcn-amdhsa,nvptx-none
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-offload-defaulted’
|
||
|
||
Tell GCC that configured but not installed offload compilers and
|
||
libgomp plugins are silently ignored. Useful for distribution
|
||
compilers where those are in separate optional packages and where
|
||
the presence or absence of those optional packages should determine
|
||
the actual supported offloading target set rather than the GCC
|
||
configure-time selection.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-cet’
|
||
‘--disable-cet’
|
||
Enable building target run-time libraries with control-flow
|
||
instrumentation, see ‘-fcf-protection’ option. When ‘--enable-cet’
|
||
is specified target libraries are configured to add
|
||
‘-fcf-protection’ and, if needed, other target specific options to
|
||
a set of building options.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-cet=auto’ is default. CET is enabled on Linux/x86 if
|
||
target binutils supports ‘Intel CET’ instructions and disabled
|
||
otherwise. In this case, the target libraries are configured to
|
||
get additional ‘-fcf-protection’ option.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-riscv-attribute=‘yes’, ‘no’ or ‘default’’
|
||
Generate RISC-V attribute by default, in order to record extra
|
||
build information in object.
|
||
|
||
The option is disabled by default. It is enabled on RISC-V/ELF
|
||
(bare-metal) target if target binutils supported.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-s390-excess-float-precision’
|
||
‘--disable-s390-excess-float-precision’
|
||
On s390(x) targets, enable treatment of float expressions with
|
||
double precision when in standards-compliant mode (e.g., when
|
||
‘--std=c99’ or ‘-fexcess-precision=standard’ are given).
|
||
|
||
For a native build and cross compiles that have target headers, the
|
||
option’s default is derived from glibc’s behavior. When glibc
|
||
clamps float_t to double, GCC follows and enables the option. For
|
||
other cross compiles, the default is disabled.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-zstd=PATHNAME’
|
||
‘--with-zstd-include=PATHNAME’
|
||
‘--with-zstd-lib=PATHNAME’
|
||
If you do not have the ‘zstd’ library installed in a standard
|
||
location and you want to build GCC, you can explicitly specify the
|
||
directory where it is installed (‘--with-zstd=ZSTDINSTALLDIR’).
|
||
The ‘--with-zstd=ZSTDINSTALLDIR’ option is shorthand for
|
||
‘--with-zstd-lib=ZSTDINSTALLDIR/lib’ and
|
||
‘--with-zstd-include=ZSTDINSTALLDIR/include’. If this shorthand
|
||
assumption is not correct, you can use the explicit include and lib
|
||
options directly.
|
||
|
||
These flags are applicable to the host platform only. When
|
||
building a cross compiler, they will not be used to configure
|
||
target libraries.
|
||
|
||
Cross-Compiler-Specific Options
|
||
-------------------------------
|
||
|
||
The following options only apply to building cross compilers.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-toolexeclibdir=DIR’
|
||
Specify the installation directory for libraries built with a cross
|
||
compiler. The default is ‘${gcc_tooldir}/lib’.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-sysroot’
|
||
‘--with-sysroot=DIR’
|
||
Tells GCC to consider DIR as the root of a tree that contains (a
|
||
subset of) the root filesystem of the target operating system.
|
||
Target system headers, libraries and run-time object files will be
|
||
searched for in there. More specifically, this acts as if
|
||
‘--sysroot=DIR’ was added to the default options of the built
|
||
compiler. The specified directory is not copied into the install
|
||
tree, unlike the options ‘--with-headers’ and ‘--with-libs’ that
|
||
this option obsoletes. The default value, in case ‘--with-sysroot’
|
||
is not given an argument, is ‘${gcc_tooldir}/sys-root’. If the
|
||
specified directory is a subdirectory of ‘${exec_prefix}’, then it
|
||
will be found relative to the GCC binaries if the installation tree
|
||
is moved.
|
||
|
||
This option affects the system root for the compiler used to build
|
||
target libraries (which runs on the build system) and the compiler
|
||
newly installed with ‘make install’; it does not affect the
|
||
compiler which is used to build GCC itself.
|
||
|
||
If you specify the ‘--with-native-system-header-dir=DIRNAME’ option
|
||
then the compiler will search that directory within DIRNAME for
|
||
native system headers rather than the default ‘/usr/include’.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-build-sysroot’
|
||
‘--with-build-sysroot=DIR’
|
||
Tells GCC to consider DIR as the system root (see ‘--with-sysroot’)
|
||
while building target libraries, instead of the directory specified
|
||
with ‘--with-sysroot’. This option is only useful when you are
|
||
already using ‘--with-sysroot’. You can use ‘--with-build-sysroot’
|
||
when you are configuring with ‘--prefix’ set to a directory that is
|
||
different from the one in which you are installing GCC and your
|
||
target libraries.
|
||
|
||
This option affects the system root for the compiler used to build
|
||
target libraries (which runs on the build system); it does not
|
||
affect the compiler which is used to build GCC itself.
|
||
|
||
If you specify the ‘--with-native-system-header-dir=DIRNAME’ option
|
||
then the compiler will search that directory within DIRNAME for
|
||
native system headers rather than the default ‘/usr/include’.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-headers’
|
||
‘--with-headers=DIR’
|
||
Deprecated in favor of ‘--with-sysroot’. Specifies that target
|
||
headers are available when building a cross compiler. The DIR
|
||
argument specifies a directory which has the target include files.
|
||
These include files will be copied into the ‘gcc’ install
|
||
directory. _This option with the DIR argument is required_ when
|
||
building a cross compiler, if ‘PREFIX/TARGET/sys-include’ doesn’t
|
||
pre-exist. If ‘PREFIX/TARGET/sys-include’ does pre-exist, the DIR
|
||
argument may be omitted. ‘fixincludes’ will be run on these files
|
||
to make them compatible with GCC.
|
||
|
||
‘--without-headers’
|
||
Tells GCC not use any target headers from a libc when building a
|
||
cross compiler. When crossing to GNU/Linux, you need the headers
|
||
so GCC can build the exception handling for libgcc.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-libs’
|
||
‘--with-libs="DIR1 DIR2 ... DIRN"’
|
||
Deprecated in favor of ‘--with-sysroot’. Specifies a list of
|
||
directories which contain the target runtime libraries. These
|
||
libraries will be copied into the ‘gcc’ install directory. If the
|
||
directory list is omitted, this option has no effect.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-newlib’
|
||
Specifies that ‘newlib’ is being used as the target C library.
|
||
This causes ‘__eprintf’ to be omitted from ‘libgcc.a’ on the
|
||
assumption that it will be provided by ‘newlib’.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-avrlibc’
|
||
Only supported for the AVR target. Specifies that ‘AVR-Libc’ is
|
||
being used as the target C library. This causes float support
|
||
functions like ‘__addsf3’ to be omitted from ‘libgcc.a’ on the
|
||
assumption that it will be provided by ‘libm.a’. For more
|
||
technical details, cf. PR54461. It is not supported for RTEMS
|
||
configurations, which currently use newlib. The option is
|
||
supported since version 4.7.2 and is the default in 4.8.0 and
|
||
newer.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-double={32|64|32,64|64,32}’
|
||
‘--with-long-double={32|64|32,64|64,32|double}’
|
||
Only supported for the AVR target since version 10. Specify the
|
||
default layout available for the C/C++ ‘double’ and ‘long double’
|
||
type, respectively. The following rules apply:
|
||
• The first value after the ‘=’ specifies the default layout (in
|
||
bits) of the type and also the default for the ‘-mdouble=’
|
||
resp. ‘-mlong-double=’ compiler option.
|
||
• If more than one value is specified, respective multilib
|
||
variants are available, and ‘-mdouble=’ resp.
|
||
‘-mlong-double=’ acts as a multilib option.
|
||
• If ‘--with-long-double=double’ is specified, ‘double’ and
|
||
‘long double’ will have the same layout.
|
||
• The defaults are ‘--with-long-double=64,32’ and
|
||
‘--with-double=32,64’. The default ‘double’ layout imposed by
|
||
the latter is compatible with older versions of the compiler
|
||
that implement ‘double’ as a 32-bit type, which does not
|
||
comply to the language standard.
|
||
Not all combinations of ‘--with-double=’ and ‘--with-long-double=’
|
||
are valid. For example, the combination ‘--with-double=32,64’
|
||
‘--with-long-double=32’ will be rejected because the first option
|
||
specifies the availability of multilibs for ‘double’, whereas the
|
||
second option implies that ‘long double’ — and hence also ‘double’
|
||
— is always 32 bits wide.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-double-comparison={tristate|bool|libf7}’
|
||
Only supported for the AVR target since version 10. Specify what
|
||
result format is returned by library functions that compare 64-bit
|
||
floating point values (‘DFmode’). The GCC default is ‘tristate’.
|
||
If the floating point implementation returns a boolean instead, set
|
||
it to ‘bool’.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-libf7={libgcc|math|math-symbols|no}’
|
||
Only supported for the AVR target since version 10. Specify to
|
||
which degree code from LibF7 is included in libgcc. LibF7 is an
|
||
ad-hoc, AVR-specific, 64-bit floating point emulation written in C
|
||
and (inline) assembly. ‘libgcc’ adds support for functions that
|
||
one would usually expect in libgcc like double addition, double
|
||
comparisons and double conversions. ‘math’ also adds routines that
|
||
one would expect in ‘libm.a’, but with ‘__’ (two underscores)
|
||
prepended to the symbol names as specified by ‘math.h’.
|
||
‘math-symbols’ also defines weak aliases for the functions declared
|
||
in ‘math.h’. However, ‘--with-libf7’ won’t install no ‘math.h’
|
||
header file whatsoever, this file must come from elsewhere. This
|
||
option sets ‘--with-double-comparison’ to ‘bool’.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-nds32-lib=LIBRARY’
|
||
Specifies that LIBRARY setting is used for building ‘libgcc.a’.
|
||
Currently, the valid LIBRARY is ‘newlib’ or ‘mculib’. This option
|
||
is only supported for the NDS32 target.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-build-time-tools=DIR’
|
||
Specifies where to find the set of target tools (assembler, linker,
|
||
etc.) that will be used while building GCC itself. This option
|
||
can be useful if the directory layouts are different between the
|
||
system you are building GCC on, and the system where you will
|
||
deploy it.
|
||
|
||
For example, on an ‘ia64-hp-hpux’ system, you may have the GNU
|
||
assembler and linker in ‘/usr/bin’, and the native tools in a
|
||
different path, and build a toolchain that expects to find the
|
||
native tools in ‘/usr/bin’.
|
||
|
||
When you use this option, you should ensure that DIR includes ‘ar’,
|
||
‘as’, ‘ld’, ‘nm’, ‘ranlib’ and ‘strip’ if necessary, and possibly
|
||
‘objdump’. Otherwise, GCC may use an inconsistent set of tools.
|
||
|
||
Overriding ‘configure’ test results
|
||
...................................
|
||
|
||
Sometimes, it might be necessary to override the result of some
|
||
‘configure’ test, for example in order to ease porting to a new system
|
||
or work around a bug in a test. The toplevel ‘configure’ script
|
||
provides three variables for this:
|
||
|
||
‘build_configargs’
|
||
The contents of this variable is passed to all build ‘configure’
|
||
scripts.
|
||
|
||
‘host_configargs’
|
||
The contents of this variable is passed to all host ‘configure’
|
||
scripts.
|
||
|
||
‘target_configargs’
|
||
The contents of this variable is passed to all target ‘configure’
|
||
scripts.
|
||
|
||
In order to avoid shell and ‘make’ quoting issues for complex
|
||
overrides, you can pass a setting for ‘CONFIG_SITE’ and set variables in
|
||
the site file.
|
||
|
||
Objective-C-Specific Options
|
||
----------------------------
|
||
|
||
The following options apply to the build of the Objective-C runtime
|
||
library.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-objc-gc’
|
||
Specify that an additional variant of the GNU Objective-C runtime
|
||
library is built, using an external build of the
|
||
Boehm-Demers-Weiser garbage collector
|
||
(<https://www.hboehm.info/gc/>). This library needs to be
|
||
available for each multilib variant, unless configured with
|
||
‘--enable-objc-gc=‘auto’’ in which case the build of the additional
|
||
runtime library is skipped when not available and the build
|
||
continues.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-target-bdw-gc=LIST’
|
||
‘--with-target-bdw-gc-include=LIST’
|
||
‘--with-target-bdw-gc-lib=LIST’
|
||
Specify search directories for the garbage collector header files
|
||
and libraries. LIST is a comma separated list of key value pairs
|
||
of the form ‘MULTILIBDIR=PATH’, where the default multilib key is
|
||
named as ‘.’ (dot), or is omitted (e.g.
|
||
‘--with-target-bdw-gc=/opt/bdw-gc,32=/opt-bdw-gc32’).
|
||
|
||
The options ‘--with-target-bdw-gc-include’ and
|
||
‘--with-target-bdw-gc-lib’ must always be specified together for
|
||
each multilib variant and they take precedence over
|
||
‘--with-target-bdw-gc’. If ‘--with-target-bdw-gc-include’ is
|
||
missing values for a multilib, then the value for the default
|
||
multilib is used (e.g.
|
||
‘--with-target-bdw-gc-include=/opt/bdw-gc/include’
|
||
‘--with-target-bdw-gc-lib=/opt/bdw-gc/lib64,32=/opt-bdw-gc/lib32’).
|
||
If none of these options are specified, the library is assumed in
|
||
default locations.
|
||
|
||
D-Specific Options
|
||
------------------
|
||
|
||
The following options apply to the build of the D runtime library.
|
||
|
||
‘--enable-libphobos-checking’
|
||
‘--disable-libphobos-checking’
|
||
‘--enable-libphobos-checking=LIST’
|
||
This option controls whether run-time checks and contracts are
|
||
compiled into the D runtime library. When the option is not
|
||
specified, the library is built with ‘release’ checking. When the
|
||
option is specified without a LIST, the result is the same as
|
||
‘--enable-libphobos-checking=yes’. Likewise,
|
||
‘--disable-libphobos-checking’ is equivalent to
|
||
‘--enable-libphobos-checking=no’.
|
||
|
||
The categories of checks available in LIST are ‘yes’ (compiles
|
||
libphobos with ‘-fno-release’), ‘no’ (compiles libphobos with
|
||
‘-frelease’), ‘all’ (same as ‘yes’), ‘none’ or ‘release’ (same as
|
||
‘no’).
|
||
|
||
Individual checks available in LIST are ‘assert’ (compiles
|
||
libphobos with an extra option ‘-fassert’).
|
||
|
||
‘--with-libphobos-druntime-only’
|
||
‘--with-libphobos-druntime-only=CHOICE’
|
||
Specify whether to build only the core D runtime library
|
||
(druntime), or both the core and standard library (phobos) into
|
||
libphobos. This is useful for targets that have full support in
|
||
druntime, but no or incomplete support in phobos. CHOICE can be
|
||
one of ‘auto’, ‘yes’, and ‘no’ where ‘auto’ is the default.
|
||
|
||
When the option is not specified, the default choice ‘auto’ means
|
||
that it is inferred whether the target has support for the phobos
|
||
standard library. When the option is specified without a CHOICE,
|
||
the result is the same as ‘--with-libphobos-druntime-only=yes’.
|
||
|
||
‘--with-target-system-zlib’
|
||
Use installed ‘zlib’ rather than that included with GCC. This
|
||
needs to be available for each multilib variant, unless configured
|
||
with ‘--with-target-system-zlib=‘auto’’ in which case the
|
||
GCC included ‘zlib’ is only used when the system installed library
|
||
is not available.
|
||
|
||
|
||
File: gccinstall.info, Node: Building, Next: Testing, Prev: Configuration, Up: Installing GCC
|
||
|
||
5 Building
|
||
**********
|
||
|
||
Now that GCC is configured, you are ready to build the compiler and
|
||
runtime libraries.
|
||
|
||
Some commands executed when making the compiler may fail (return a
|
||
nonzero status) and be ignored by ‘make’. These failures, which are
|
||
often due to files that were not found, are expected, and can safely be
|
||
ignored.
|
||
|
||
It is normal to have compiler warnings when compiling certain files.
|
||
Unless you are a GCC developer, you can generally ignore these warnings
|
||
unless they cause compilation to fail. Developers should attempt to fix
|
||
any warnings encountered, however they can temporarily continue past
|
||
warnings-as-errors by specifying the configure flag ‘--disable-werror’.
|
||
|
||
On certain old systems, defining certain environment variables such
|
||
as ‘CC’ can interfere with the functioning of ‘make’.
|
||
|
||
If you encounter seemingly strange errors when trying to build the
|
||
compiler in a directory other than the source directory, it could be
|
||
because you have previously configured the compiler in the source
|
||
directory. Make sure you have done all the necessary preparations.
|
||
|
||
If you build GCC on a BSD system using a directory stored in an old
|
||
System V file system, problems may occur in running ‘fixincludes’ if the
|
||
System V file system doesn’t support symbolic links. These problems
|
||
result in a failure to fix the declaration of ‘size_t’ in ‘sys/types.h’.
|
||
If you find that ‘size_t’ is a signed type and that type mismatches
|
||
occur, this could be the cause.
|
||
|
||
The solution is not to use such a directory for building GCC.
|
||
|
||
Similarly, when building from the source repository or snapshots, or
|
||
if you modify ‘*.l’ files, you need the Flex lexical analyzer generator
|
||
installed. If you do not modify ‘*.l’ files, releases contain the
|
||
Flex-generated files and you do not need Flex installed to build them.
|
||
There is still one Flex-based lexical analyzer (part of the build
|
||
machinery, not of GCC itself) that is used even if you only build the C
|
||
front end.
|
||
|
||
When building from the source repository or snapshots, or if you
|
||
modify Texinfo documentation, you need version 4.7 or later of Texinfo
|
||
installed if you want Info documentation to be regenerated. Releases
|
||
contain Info documentation pre-built for the unmodified documentation in
|
||
the release.
|
||
|
||
5.1 Building a native compiler
|
||
==============================
|
||
|
||
For a native build, the default configuration is to perform a 3-stage
|
||
bootstrap of the compiler when ‘make’ is invoked. This will build the
|
||
entire GCC system and ensure that it compiles itself correctly. It can
|
||
be disabled with the ‘--disable-bootstrap’ parameter to ‘configure’, but
|
||
bootstrapping is suggested because the compiler will be tested more
|
||
completely and could also have better performance.
|
||
|
||
The bootstrapping process will complete the following steps:
|
||
|
||
• Build tools necessary to build the compiler.
|
||
|
||
• Perform a 3-stage bootstrap of the compiler. This includes
|
||
building three times the target tools for use by the compiler such
|
||
as binutils (bfd, binutils, gas, gprof, ld, and opcodes) if they
|
||
have been individually linked or moved into the top level GCC
|
||
source tree before configuring.
|
||
|
||
• Perform a comparison test of the stage2 and stage3 compilers.
|
||
|
||
• Build runtime libraries using the stage3 compiler from the previous
|
||
step.
|
||
|
||
If you are short on disk space you might consider ‘make
|
||
bootstrap-lean’ instead. The sequence of compilation is the same
|
||
described above, but object files from the stage1 and stage2 of the
|
||
3-stage bootstrap of the compiler are deleted as soon as they are no
|
||
longer needed.
|
||
|
||
If you wish to use non-default GCC flags when compiling the stage2
|
||
and stage3 compilers, set ‘BOOT_CFLAGS’ on the command line when doing
|
||
‘make’. For example, if you want to save additional space during the
|
||
bootstrap and in the final installation as well, you can build the
|
||
compiler binaries without debugging information as in the following
|
||
example. This will save roughly 40% of disk space both for the
|
||
bootstrap and the final installation. (Libraries will still contain
|
||
debugging information.)
|
||
|
||
make BOOT_CFLAGS='-O' bootstrap
|
||
|
||
You can place non-default optimization flags into ‘BOOT_CFLAGS’; they
|
||
are less well tested here than the default of ‘-g -O2’, but should still
|
||
work. In a few cases, you may find that you need to specify special
|
||
flags such as ‘-msoft-float’ here to complete the bootstrap; or, if the
|
||
native compiler miscompiles the stage1 compiler, you may need to work
|
||
around this, by choosing ‘BOOT_CFLAGS’ to avoid the parts of the stage1
|
||
compiler that were miscompiled, or by using ‘make bootstrap4’ to
|
||
increase the number of stages of bootstrap.
|
||
|
||
‘BOOT_CFLAGS’ does not apply to bootstrapped target libraries. Since
|
||
these are always compiled with the compiler currently being
|
||
bootstrapped, you can use ‘CFLAGS_FOR_TARGET’ to modify their
|
||
compilation flags, as for non-bootstrapped target libraries. Again, if
|
||
the native compiler miscompiles the stage1 compiler, you may need to
|
||
work around this by avoiding non-working parts of the stage1 compiler.
|
||
Use ‘STAGE1_TFLAGS’ to this end.
|
||
|
||
If you used the flag ‘--enable-languages=...’ to restrict the
|
||
compilers to be built, only those you’ve actually enabled will be built.
|
||
This will of course only build those runtime libraries, for which the
|
||
particular compiler has been built. Please note, that re-defining
|
||
‘LANGUAGES’ when calling ‘make’ *does not* work anymore!
|
||
|
||
If the comparison of stage2 and stage3 fails, this normally indicates
|
||
that the stage2 compiler has compiled GCC incorrectly, and is therefore
|
||
a potentially serious bug which you should investigate and report. (On
|
||
a few systems, meaningful comparison of object files is impossible; they
|
||
always appear “different”. If you encounter this problem, you will need
|
||
to disable comparison in the ‘Makefile’.)
|
||
|
||
If you do not want to bootstrap your compiler, you can configure with
|
||
‘--disable-bootstrap’. In particular cases, you may want to bootstrap
|
||
your compiler even if the target system is not the same as the one you
|
||
are building on: for example, you could build a
|
||
‘powerpc-unknown-linux-gnu’ toolchain on a ‘powerpc64-unknown-linux-gnu’
|
||
host. In this case, pass ‘--enable-bootstrap’ to the configure script.
|
||
|
||
‘BUILD_CONFIG’ can be used to bring in additional customization to
|
||
the build. It can be set to a whitespace-separated list of names. For
|
||
each such ‘NAME’, top-level ‘config/NAME.mk’ will be included by the
|
||
top-level ‘Makefile’, bringing in any settings it contains. The default
|
||
‘BUILD_CONFIG’ can be set using the configure option
|
||
‘--with-build-config=NAME...’. Some examples of supported build
|
||
configurations are:
|
||
|
||
‘bootstrap-O1’
|
||
Removes any ‘-O’-started option from ‘BOOT_CFLAGS’, and adds ‘-O1’
|
||
to it. ‘BUILD_CONFIG=bootstrap-O1’ is equivalent to
|
||
‘BOOT_CFLAGS='-g -O1'’.
|
||
|
||
‘bootstrap-O3’
|
||
‘bootstrap-Og’
|
||
Analogous to ‘bootstrap-O1’.
|
||
|
||
‘bootstrap-lto’
|
||
Enables Link-Time Optimization for host tools during bootstrapping.
|
||
‘BUILD_CONFIG=bootstrap-lto’ is equivalent to adding ‘-flto’ to
|
||
‘BOOT_CFLAGS’. This option assumes that the host supports the
|
||
linker plugin (e.g. GNU ld version 2.21 or later or GNU gold
|
||
version 2.21 or later).
|
||
|
||
‘bootstrap-lto-noplugin’
|
||
This option is similar to ‘bootstrap-lto’, but is intended for
|
||
hosts that do not support the linker plugin. Without the linker
|
||
plugin static libraries are not compiled with link-time
|
||
optimizations. Since the GCC middle end and back end are in
|
||
‘libbackend.a’ this means that only the front end is actually LTO
|
||
optimized.
|
||
|
||
‘bootstrap-lto-lean’
|
||
This option is similar to ‘bootstrap-lto’, but is intended for
|
||
faster build by only using LTO in the final bootstrap stage. With
|
||
‘make profiledbootstrap’ the LTO frontend is trained only on
|
||
generator files.
|
||
|
||
‘bootstrap-debug’
|
||
Verifies that the compiler generates the same executable code,
|
||
whether or not it is asked to emit debug information. To this end,
|
||
this option builds stage2 host programs without debug information,
|
||
and uses ‘contrib/compare-debug’ to compare them with the stripped
|
||
stage3 object files. If ‘BOOT_CFLAGS’ is overridden so as to not
|
||
enable debug information, stage2 will have it, and stage3 won’t.
|
||
This option is enabled by default when GCC bootstrapping is
|
||
enabled, if ‘strip’ can turn object files compiled with and without
|
||
debug info into identical object files. In addition to better test
|
||
coverage, this option makes default bootstraps faster and leaner.
|
||
|
||
‘bootstrap-debug-big’
|
||
Rather than comparing stripped object files, as in
|
||
‘bootstrap-debug’, this option saves internal compiler dumps during
|
||
stage2 and stage3 and compares them as well, which helps catch
|
||
additional potential problems, but at a great cost in terms of disk
|
||
space. It can be specified in addition to ‘bootstrap-debug’.
|
||
|
||
‘bootstrap-debug-lean’
|
||
This option saves disk space compared with ‘bootstrap-debug-big’,
|
||
but at the expense of some recompilation. Instead of saving the
|
||
dumps of stage2 and stage3 until the final compare, it uses
|
||
‘-fcompare-debug’ to generate, compare and remove the dumps during
|
||
stage3, repeating the compilation that already took place in
|
||
stage2, whose dumps were not saved.
|
||
|
||
‘bootstrap-debug-lib’
|
||
This option tests executable code invariance over debug information
|
||
generation on target libraries, just like ‘bootstrap-debug-lean’
|
||
tests it on host programs. It builds stage3 libraries with
|
||
‘-fcompare-debug’, and it can be used along with any of the
|
||
‘bootstrap-debug’ options above.
|
||
|
||
There aren’t ‘-lean’ or ‘-big’ counterparts to this option because
|
||
most libraries are only build in stage3, so bootstrap compares
|
||
would not get significant coverage. Moreover, the few libraries
|
||
built in stage2 are used in stage3 host programs, so we wouldn’t
|
||
want to compile stage2 libraries with different options for
|
||
comparison purposes.
|
||
|
||
‘bootstrap-debug-ckovw’
|
||
Arranges for error messages to be issued if the compiler built on
|
||
any stage is run without the option ‘-fcompare-debug’. This is
|
||
useful to verify the full ‘-fcompare-debug’ testing coverage. It
|
||
must be used along with ‘bootstrap-debug-lean’ and
|
||
‘bootstrap-debug-lib’.
|
||
|
||
‘bootstrap-cet’
|
||
This option enables Intel CET for host tools during bootstrapping.
|
||
‘BUILD_CONFIG=bootstrap-cet’ is equivalent to adding
|
||
‘-fcf-protection’ to ‘BOOT_CFLAGS’. This option assumes that the
|
||
host supports Intel CET (e.g. GNU assembler version 2.30 or later).
|
||
|
||
‘bootstrap-time’
|
||
Arranges for the run time of each program started by the GCC
|
||
driver, built in any stage, to be logged to ‘time.log’, in the top
|
||
level of the build tree.
|
||
|
||
‘bootstrap-asan’
|
||
Compiles GCC itself using Address Sanitization in order to catch
|
||
invalid memory accesses within the GCC code.
|
||
|
||
‘bootstrap-hwasan’
|
||
Compiles GCC itself using HWAddress Sanitization in order to catch
|
||
invalid memory accesses within the GCC code. This option is only
|
||
available on AArch64 systems that are running Linux kernel version
|
||
5.4 or later.
|
||
|
||
5.2 Building a cross compiler
|
||
=============================
|
||
|
||
When building a cross compiler, it is not generally possible to do a
|
||
3-stage bootstrap of the compiler. This makes for an interesting
|
||
problem as parts of GCC can only be built with GCC.
|
||
|
||
To build a cross compiler, we recommend first building and installing
|
||
a native compiler. You can then use the native GCC compiler to build
|
||
the cross compiler. The installed native compiler needs to be GCC
|
||
version 2.95 or later.
|
||
|
||
Assuming you have already installed a native copy of GCC and
|
||
configured your cross compiler, issue the command ‘make’, which performs
|
||
the following steps:
|
||
|
||
• Build host tools necessary to build the compiler.
|
||
|
||
• Build target tools for use by the compiler such as binutils (bfd,
|
||
binutils, gas, gprof, ld, and opcodes) if they have been
|
||
individually linked or moved into the top level GCC source tree
|
||
before configuring.
|
||
|
||
• Build the compiler (single stage only).
|
||
|
||
• Build runtime libraries using the compiler from the previous step.
|
||
|
||
Note that if an error occurs in any step the make process will exit.
|
||
|
||
If you are not building GNU binutils in the same source tree as GCC,
|
||
you will need a cross-assembler and cross-linker installed before
|
||
configuring GCC. Put them in the directory ‘PREFIX/TARGET/bin’. Here
|
||
is a table of the tools you should put in this directory:
|
||
|
||
‘as’
|
||
This should be the cross-assembler.
|
||
|
||
‘ld’
|
||
This should be the cross-linker.
|
||
|
||
‘ar’
|
||
This should be the cross-archiver: a program which can manipulate
|
||
archive files (linker libraries) in the target machine’s format.
|
||
|
||
‘ranlib’
|
||
This should be a program to construct a symbol table in an archive
|
||
file.
|
||
|
||
The installation of GCC will find these programs in that directory,
|
||
and copy or link them to the proper place to for the cross-compiler to
|
||
find them when run later.
|
||
|
||
The easiest way to provide these files is to build the Binutils
|
||
package. Configure it with the same ‘--host’ and ‘--target’ options
|
||
that you use for configuring GCC, then build and install them. They
|
||
install their executables automatically into the proper directory.
|
||
Alas, they do not support all the targets that GCC supports.
|
||
|
||
If you are not building a C library in the same source tree as GCC,
|
||
you should also provide the target libraries and headers before
|
||
configuring GCC, specifying the directories with ‘--with-sysroot’ or
|
||
‘--with-headers’ and ‘--with-libs’. Many targets also require “start
|
||
files” such as ‘crt0.o’ and ‘crtn.o’ which are linked into each
|
||
executable. There may be several alternatives for ‘crt0.o’, for use
|
||
with profiling or other compilation options. Check your target’s
|
||
definition of ‘STARTFILE_SPEC’ to find out what start files it uses.
|
||
|
||
5.3 Building in parallel
|
||
========================
|
||
|
||
GNU Make 3.80 and above, which is necessary to build GCC, support
|
||
building in parallel. To activate this, you can use ‘make -j 2’ instead
|
||
of ‘make’. You can also specify a bigger number, and in most cases
|
||
using a value greater than the number of processors in your machine will
|
||
result in fewer and shorter I/O latency hits, thus improving overall
|
||
throughput; this is especially true for slow drives and network
|
||
filesystems.
|
||
|
||
5.4 Building the Ada compiler
|
||
=============================
|
||
|
||
*note GNAT-prerequisite::.
|
||
|
||
5.5 Building the D compiler
|
||
===========================
|
||
|
||
*note GDC-prerequisite::.
|
||
|
||
5.6 Building with profile feedback
|
||
==================================
|
||
|
||
It is possible to use profile feedback to optimize the compiler itself.
|
||
This should result in a faster compiler binary. Experiments done on x86
|
||
using gcc 3.3 showed approximately 7 percent speedup on compiling C
|
||
programs. To bootstrap the compiler with profile feedback, use ‘make
|
||
profiledbootstrap’.
|
||
|
||
When ‘make profiledbootstrap’ is run, it will first build a ‘stage1’
|
||
compiler. This compiler is used to build a ‘stageprofile’ compiler
|
||
instrumented to collect execution counts of instruction and branch
|
||
probabilities. Training run is done by building ‘stagetrain’ compiler.
|
||
Finally a ‘stagefeedback’ compiler is built using the information
|
||
collected.
|
||
|
||
Unlike standard bootstrap, several additional restrictions apply.
|
||
The compiler used to build ‘stage1’ needs to support a 64-bit integral
|
||
type. It is recommended to only use GCC for this.
|
||
|
||
On Linux/x86_64 hosts with some restrictions (no virtualization) it
|
||
is also possible to do autofdo build with ‘make autoprofiledback’. This
|
||
uses Linux perf to sample branches in the binary and then rebuild it
|
||
with feedback derived from the profile. Linux perf and the ‘autofdo’
|
||
toolkit needs to be installed for this.
|
||
|
||
Only the profile from the current build is used, so when an error
|
||
occurs it is recommended to clean before restarting. Otherwise the code
|
||
quality may be much worse.
|
||
|
||
|
||
File: gccinstall.info, Node: Testing, Next: Final install, Prev: Building, Up: Installing GCC
|
||
|
||
6 Installing GCC: Testing
|
||
*************************
|
||
|
||
Before you install GCC, we encourage you to run the testsuites and to
|
||
compare your results with results from a similar configuration that have
|
||
been submitted to the gcc-testresults mailing list. Some of these
|
||
archived results are linked from the build status lists at
|
||
<https://gcc.gnu.org/buildstat.html>, although not everyone who reports
|
||
a successful build runs the testsuites and submits the results. This
|
||
step is optional and may require you to download additional software,
|
||
but it can give you confidence in your new GCC installation or point out
|
||
problems before you install and start using your new GCC.
|
||
|
||
First, you must have downloaded the testsuites. These are included
|
||
in the source tarball.
|
||
|
||
Second, you must have the testing tools installed. This includes
|
||
DejaGnu, Tcl, and Expect; the DejaGnu site has links to these. Some
|
||
optional tests also require Python3 and pytest module.
|
||
|
||
If the directories where ‘runtest’ and ‘expect’ were installed are
|
||
not in the ‘PATH’, you may need to set the following environment
|
||
variables appropriately, as in the following example (which assumes that
|
||
DejaGnu has been installed under ‘/usr/local’):
|
||
|
||
TCL_LIBRARY = /usr/local/share/tcl8.0
|
||
DEJAGNULIBS = /usr/local/share/dejagnu
|
||
|
||
(On systems such as Cygwin, these paths are required to be actual
|
||
paths, not mounts or links; presumably this is due to some lack of
|
||
portability in the DejaGnu code.)
|
||
|
||
Finally, you can run the testsuite (which may take a long time):
|
||
cd OBJDIR; make -k check
|
||
|
||
This will test various components of GCC, such as compiler front ends
|
||
and runtime libraries. While running the testsuite, DejaGnu might emit
|
||
some harmless messages resembling ‘WARNING: Couldn't find the global
|
||
config file.’ or ‘WARNING: Couldn't find tool init file’ that can be
|
||
ignored.
|
||
|
||
If you are testing a cross-compiler, you may want to run the
|
||
testsuite on a simulator as described at
|
||
<https://gcc.gnu.org/simtest-howto.html>.
|
||
|
||
6.1 How can you run the testsuite on selected tests?
|
||
====================================================
|
||
|
||
In order to run sets of tests selectively, there are targets ‘make
|
||
check-gcc’ and language specific ‘make check-c’, ‘make check-c++’, ‘make
|
||
check-d’ ‘make check-fortran’, ‘make check-ada’, ‘make check-m2’, ‘make
|
||
check-objc’, ‘make check-obj-c++’, ‘make check-lto’ in the ‘gcc’
|
||
subdirectory of the object directory. You can also just run ‘make
|
||
check’ in a subdirectory of the object directory.
|
||
|
||
A more selective way to just run all ‘gcc’ execute tests in the
|
||
testsuite is to use
|
||
|
||
make check-gcc RUNTESTFLAGS="execute.exp OTHER-OPTIONS"
|
||
|
||
Likewise, in order to run only the ‘g++’ “old-deja” tests in the
|
||
testsuite with filenames matching ‘9805*’, you would use
|
||
|
||
make check-g++ RUNTESTFLAGS="old-deja.exp=9805* OTHER-OPTIONS"
|
||
|
||
The file-matching expression following FILENAME‘.exp=’ is treated as
|
||
a series of whitespace-delimited glob expressions so that multiple
|
||
patterns may be passed, although any whitespace must either be escaped
|
||
or surrounded by single quotes if multiple expressions are desired. For
|
||
example,
|
||
|
||
make check-g++ RUNTESTFLAGS="old-deja.exp=9805*\ virtual2.c OTHER-OPTIONS"
|
||
make check-g++ RUNTESTFLAGS="'old-deja.exp=9805* virtual2.c' OTHER-OPTIONS"
|
||
|
||
The ‘*.exp’ files are located in the testsuite directories of the GCC
|
||
source, the most important ones being ‘compile.exp’, ‘execute.exp’,
|
||
‘dg.exp’ and ‘old-deja.exp’. To get a list of the possible ‘*.exp’
|
||
files, pipe the output of ‘make check’ into a file and look at the
|
||
‘Running ... .exp’ lines.
|
||
|
||
6.2 Passing options and running multiple testsuites
|
||
===================================================
|
||
|
||
You can pass multiple options to the testsuite using the
|
||
‘--target_board’ option of DejaGNU, either passed as part of
|
||
‘RUNTESTFLAGS’, or directly to ‘runtest’ if you prefer to work outside
|
||
the makefiles. For example,
|
||
|
||
make check-g++ RUNTESTFLAGS="--target_board=unix/-O3/-fmerge-constants"
|
||
|
||
will run the standard ‘g++’ testsuites (“unix” is the target name for
|
||
a standard native testsuite situation), passing ‘-O3 -fmerge-constants’
|
||
to the compiler on every test, i.e., slashes separate options.
|
||
|
||
You can run the testsuites multiple times using combinations of
|
||
options with a syntax similar to the brace expansion of popular shells:
|
||
|
||
..."--target_board=arm-sim\{-mhard-float,-msoft-float\}\{-O1,-O2,-O3,\}"
|
||
|
||
(Note the empty option caused by the trailing comma in the final
|
||
group.) The following will run each testsuite eight times using the
|
||
‘arm-sim’ target, as if you had specified all possible combinations
|
||
yourself:
|
||
|
||
--target_board='arm-sim/-mhard-float/-O1 \
|
||
arm-sim/-mhard-float/-O2 \
|
||
arm-sim/-mhard-float/-O3 \
|
||
arm-sim/-mhard-float \
|
||
arm-sim/-msoft-float/-O1 \
|
||
arm-sim/-msoft-float/-O2 \
|
||
arm-sim/-msoft-float/-O3 \
|
||
arm-sim/-msoft-float'
|
||
|
||
They can be combined as many times as you wish, in arbitrary ways.
|
||
This list:
|
||
|
||
..."--target_board=unix/-Wextra\{-O3,-fno-strength\}\{-fomit-frame,\}"
|
||
|
||
will generate four combinations, all involving ‘-Wextra’.
|
||
|
||
The disadvantage to this method is that the testsuites are run in
|
||
serial, which is a waste on multiprocessor systems. For users with GNU
|
||
Make and a shell which performs brace expansion, you can run the
|
||
testsuites in parallel by having the shell perform the combinations and
|
||
‘make’ do the parallel runs. Instead of using ‘--target_board’, use a
|
||
special makefile target:
|
||
|
||
make -jN check-TESTSUITE//TEST-TARGET/OPTION1/OPTION2/...
|
||
|
||
For example,
|
||
|
||
make -j3 check-gcc//sh-hms-sim/{-m1,-m2,-m3,-m3e,-m4}/{,-nofpu}
|
||
|
||
will run three concurrent “make-gcc” testsuites, eventually testing
|
||
all ten combinations as described above. Note that this is currently
|
||
only supported in the ‘gcc’ subdirectory. (To see how this works, try
|
||
typing ‘echo’ before the example given here.)
|
||
|
||
6.3 How to interpret test results
|
||
=================================
|
||
|
||
The result of running the testsuite are various ‘*.sum’ and ‘*.log’
|
||
files in the testsuite subdirectories. The ‘*.log’ files contain a
|
||
detailed log of the compiler invocations and the corresponding results,
|
||
the ‘*.sum’ files summarize the results. These summaries contain status
|
||
codes for all tests:
|
||
|
||
• PASS: the test passed as expected
|
||
• XPASS: the test unexpectedly passed
|
||
• FAIL: the test unexpectedly failed
|
||
• XFAIL: the test failed as expected
|
||
• UNSUPPORTED: the test is not supported on this platform
|
||
• ERROR: the testsuite detected an error
|
||
• WARNING: the testsuite detected a possible problem
|
||
|
||
It is normal for some tests to report unexpected failures. At the
|
||
current time the testing harness does not allow fine grained control
|
||
over whether or not a test is expected to fail. This problem should be
|
||
fixed in future releases.
|
||
|
||
6.4 Submitting test results
|
||
===========================
|
||
|
||
If you want to report the results to the GCC project, use the
|
||
‘contrib/test_summary’ shell script. Start it in the OBJDIR with
|
||
|
||
SRCDIR/contrib/test_summary -p your_commentary.txt \
|
||
-m gcc-testresults@gcc.gnu.org |sh
|
||
|
||
This script uses the ‘Mail’ program to send the results, so make sure
|
||
it is in your ‘PATH’. The file ‘your_commentary.txt’ is prepended to
|
||
the testsuite summary and should contain any special remarks you have on
|
||
your results or your build environment. Please do not edit the
|
||
testsuite result block or the subject line, as these messages may be
|
||
automatically processed.
|
||
|
||
|
||
File: gccinstall.info, Node: Final install, Prev: Testing, Up: Installing GCC
|
||
|
||
7 Installing GCC: Final installation
|
||
************************************
|
||
|
||
Now that GCC has been built (and optionally tested), you can install it
|
||
with
|
||
cd OBJDIR && make install
|
||
|
||
We strongly recommend to install into a target directory where there
|
||
is no previous version of GCC present. Also, the GNAT runtime should
|
||
not be stripped, as this would break certain features of the debugger
|
||
that depend on this debugging information (catching Ada exceptions for
|
||
instance).
|
||
|
||
That step completes the installation of GCC; user level binaries can
|
||
be found in ‘PREFIX/bin’ where PREFIX is the value you specified with
|
||
the ‘--prefix’ to configure (or ‘/usr/local’ by default). (If you
|
||
specified ‘--bindir’, that directory will be used instead; otherwise, if
|
||
you specified ‘--exec-prefix’, ‘EXEC-PREFIX/bin’ will be used.) Headers
|
||
for the C++ library are installed in ‘PREFIX/include’; libraries in
|
||
‘LIBDIR’ (normally ‘PREFIX/lib’); internal parts of the compiler in
|
||
‘LIBDIR/gcc’ and ‘LIBEXECDIR/gcc’; documentation in info format in
|
||
‘INFODIR’ (normally ‘PREFIX/info’).
|
||
|
||
When installing cross-compilers, GCC’s executables are not only
|
||
installed into ‘BINDIR’, that is, ‘EXEC-PREFIX/bin’, but additionally
|
||
into ‘EXEC-PREFIX/TARGET-ALIAS/bin’, if that directory exists.
|
||
Typically, such “tooldirs” hold target-specific binutils, including
|
||
assembler and linker.
|
||
|
||
Installation into a temporary staging area or into a ‘chroot’ jail
|
||
can be achieved with the command
|
||
|
||
make DESTDIR=PATH-TO-ROOTDIR install
|
||
|
||
where PATH-TO-ROOTDIR is the absolute path of a directory relative to
|
||
which all installation paths will be interpreted. Note that the
|
||
directory specified by ‘DESTDIR’ need not exist yet; it will be created
|
||
if necessary.
|
||
|
||
There is a subtle point with tooldirs and ‘DESTDIR’: If you relocate
|
||
a cross-compiler installation with e.g. ‘DESTDIR=ROOTDIR’, then the
|
||
directory ‘ROOTDIR/EXEC-PREFIX/TARGET-ALIAS/bin’ will be filled with
|
||
duplicated GCC executables only if it already exists, it will not be
|
||
created otherwise. This is regarded as a feature, not as a bug, because
|
||
it gives slightly more control to the packagers using the ‘DESTDIR’
|
||
feature.
|
||
|
||
You can install stripped programs and libraries with
|
||
|
||
make install-strip
|
||
|
||
By default, only the man pages and info-format GCC documentation are
|
||
built and installed. If you want to generate the GCC manuals in other
|
||
formats, use commands like
|
||
|
||
make dvi
|
||
make pdf
|
||
make html
|
||
|
||
to build the manuals in the corresponding formats, and
|
||
|
||
make install-dvi
|
||
make install-pdf
|
||
make install-html
|
||
|
||
to install them. Alternatively, there are prebuilt online versions of
|
||
the manuals for released versions of GCC on the GCC web site.
|
||
|
||
If you are bootstrapping a released version of GCC then please
|
||
quickly review the build status page for your release, available from
|
||
<https://gcc.gnu.org/buildstat.html>. If your system is not listed for
|
||
the version of GCC that you built, send a note to <gcc@gcc.gnu.org>
|
||
indicating that you successfully built and installed GCC. Include the
|
||
following information:
|
||
|
||
• Output from running ‘SRCDIR/config.guess’. Do not send that file
|
||
itself, just the one-line output from running it.
|
||
|
||
• The output of ‘gcc -v’ for your newly installed ‘gcc’. This tells
|
||
us which version of GCC you built and the options you passed to
|
||
configure.
|
||
|
||
• If the build was for GNU/Linux, also include:
|
||
• The distribution name and version (e.g., Red Hat 7.1 or Debian
|
||
2.2.3); this information should be available from
|
||
‘/etc/issue’.
|
||
|
||
• The version of the Linux kernel, available from ‘uname
|
||
--version’ or ‘uname -a’.
|
||
|
||
• The version of glibc you used; for RPM-based systems like Red
|
||
Hat, Mandrake, and SuSE type ‘rpm -q glibc’ to get the glibc
|
||
version, and on systems like Debian and Progeny use ‘dpkg -l
|
||
libc6’.
|
||
For other systems, you can include similar information if you think
|
||
it is relevant.
|
||
|
||
• Any other information that you think would be useful to people
|
||
building GCC on the same configuration. The new entry in the build
|
||
status list will include a link to the archived copy of your
|
||
message.
|
||
|
||
We’d also like to know if the *note host/target specific installation
|
||
notes: Specific. didn’t include your host/target information or if that
|
||
information is incomplete or out of date. Send a note to
|
||
<gcc@gcc.gnu.org> detailing how the information should be changed.
|
||
|
||
If you find a bug, please report it following the bug reporting
|
||
guidelines.
|
||
|
||
|
||
File: gccinstall.info, Node: Binaries, Next: Specific, Prev: Installing GCC, Up: Top
|
||
|
||
8 Installing GCC: Binaries
|
||
**************************
|
||
|
||
We are often asked about pre-compiled versions of GCC. While we cannot
|
||
provide these for all platforms, below you’ll find links to binaries for
|
||
various platforms where creating them by yourself is not easy due to
|
||
various reasons.
|
||
|
||
Please note that we did not create these binaries, nor do we support
|
||
them. If you have any problems installing them, please contact their
|
||
makers.
|
||
|
||
• AIX:
|
||
• AIX Open Source Packages (AIX5L AIX 6.1 AIX 7.1).
|
||
|
||
• DOS—DJGPP.
|
||
|
||
• HP-UX:
|
||
• HP-UX Porting Center;
|
||
|
||
• macOS:
|
||
• The Homebrew package manager;
|
||
• MacPorts.
|
||
|
||
• Microsoft Windows:
|
||
• The Cygwin project;
|
||
• The MinGW and mingw-w64 projects.
|
||
|
||
• OpenPKG offers binaries for quite a number of platforms.
|
||
|
||
• The GFortran Wiki has links to GNU Fortran binaries for several
|
||
platforms.
|
||
|
||
|
||
File: gccinstall.info, Node: Specific, Next: GNU Free Documentation License, Prev: Binaries, Up: Top
|
||
|
||
9 Host/target specific installation notes for GCC
|
||
*************************************************
|
||
|
||
Please read this document carefully _before_ installing the GNU Compiler
|
||
Collection on your machine.
|
||
|
||
Note that this list of install notes is _not_ a list of supported
|
||
hosts or targets. Not all supported hosts and targets are listed here,
|
||
only the ones that require host-specific or target-specific information
|
||
have to.
|
||
|
||
aarch64*-*-*
|
||
============
|
||
|
||
Binutils pre 2.24 does not have support for selecting ‘-mabi’ and does
|
||
not support ILP32. If it is used to build GCC 4.9 or later, GCC will
|
||
not support option ‘-mabi=ilp32’.
|
||
|
||
To enable a workaround for the Cortex-A53 erratum number 835769 by
|
||
default (for all CPUs regardless of -mcpu option given) at configure
|
||
time use the ‘--enable-fix-cortex-a53-835769’ option. This will enable
|
||
the fix by default and can be explicitly disabled during compilation by
|
||
passing the ‘-mno-fix-cortex-a53-835769’ option. Conversely,
|
||
‘--disable-fix-cortex-a53-835769’ will disable the workaround by
|
||
default. The workaround is disabled by default if neither of
|
||
‘--enable-fix-cortex-a53-835769’ or ‘--disable-fix-cortex-a53-835769’ is
|
||
given at configure time.
|
||
|
||
To enable a workaround for the Cortex-A53 erratum number 843419 by
|
||
default (for all CPUs regardless of -mcpu option given) at configure
|
||
time use the ‘--enable-fix-cortex-a53-843419’ option. This workaround
|
||
is applied at link time. Enabling the workaround will cause GCC to pass
|
||
the relevant option to the linker. It can be explicitly disabled during
|
||
compilation by passing the ‘-mno-fix-cortex-a53-843419’ option.
|
||
Conversely, ‘--disable-fix-cortex-a53-843419’ will disable the
|
||
workaround by default. The workaround is disabled by default if neither
|
||
of ‘--enable-fix-cortex-a53-843419’ or ‘--disable-fix-cortex-a53-843419’
|
||
is given at configure time.
|
||
|
||
To enable Branch Target Identification Mechanism and Return Address
|
||
Signing by default at configure time use the
|
||
‘--enable-standard-branch-protection’ option. This is equivalent to
|
||
having ‘-mbranch-protection=standard’ during compilation. This can be
|
||
explicitly disabled during compilation by passing the
|
||
‘-mbranch-protection=none’ option which turns off all types of branch
|
||
protections. Conversely, ‘--disable-standard-branch-protection’ will
|
||
disable both the protections by default. This mechanism is turned off
|
||
by default if neither of the options are given at configure time.
|
||
|
||
alpha*-*-*
|
||
==========
|
||
|
||
This section contains general configuration information for all
|
||
Alpha-based platforms using ELF. In addition to reading this section,
|
||
please read all other sections that match your target.
|
||
|
||
amd64-*-solaris2*
|
||
=================
|
||
|
||
This is a synonym for ‘x86_64-*-solaris2*’.
|
||
|
||
amdgcn-*-amdhsa
|
||
===============
|
||
|
||
AMD GCN GPU target.
|
||
|
||
Instead of GNU Binutils, you will need to install LLVM 13.0.1, or
|
||
later, and copy ‘bin/llvm-mc’ to ‘amdgcn-amdhsa/bin/as’, ‘bin/lld’ to
|
||
‘amdgcn-amdhsa/bin/ld’, ‘bin/llvm-nm’ to ‘amdgcn-amdhsa/bin/nm’, and
|
||
‘bin/llvm-ar’ to both ‘bin/amdgcn-amdhsa-ar’ and
|
||
‘bin/amdgcn-amdhsa-ranlib’.
|
||
|
||
Use Newlib (4.3.0 or newer).
|
||
|
||
To run the binaries, install the HSA Runtime from the ROCm Platform,
|
||
and use ‘libexec/gcc/amdhsa-amdhsa/VERSION/gcn-run’ to launch them on
|
||
the GPU.
|
||
|
||
arc-*-elf32
|
||
===========
|
||
|
||
Use ‘configure --target=arc-elf32 --with-cpu=CPU
|
||
--enable-languages="c,c++"’ to configure GCC, with CPU being one of
|
||
‘arc600’, ‘arc601’, or ‘arc700’.
|
||
|
||
arc-linux-uclibc
|
||
================
|
||
|
||
Use ‘configure --target=arc-linux-uclibc --with-cpu=arc700
|
||
--enable-languages="c,c++"’ to configure GCC.
|
||
|
||
arm-*-eabi
|
||
==========
|
||
|
||
ARM-family processors.
|
||
|
||
Building the Ada frontend commonly fails (an infinite loop executing
|
||
‘xsinfo’) if the host compiler is GNAT 4.8. Host compilers built from
|
||
the GNAT 4.6, 4.9 or 5 release branches are known to succeed.
|
||
|
||
avr
|
||
===
|
||
|
||
ATMEL AVR-family micro controllers. These are used in embedded
|
||
applications. There are no standard Unix configurations. *Note AVR
|
||
Options: (gcc)AVR Options, for the list of supported MCU types.
|
||
|
||
Use ‘configure --target=avr --enable-languages="c"’ to configure GCC.
|
||
|
||
Further installation notes and other useful information about AVR
|
||
tools can also be obtained from:
|
||
|
||
• http://www.nongnu.org/avr/
|
||
• http://www.amelek.gda.pl/avr/
|
||
|
||
The following error:
|
||
Error: register required
|
||
|
||
indicates that you should upgrade to a newer version of the binutils.
|
||
|
||
Blackfin
|
||
========
|
||
|
||
The Blackfin processor, an Analog Devices DSP. *Note Blackfin Options:
|
||
(gcc)Blackfin Options,
|
||
|
||
More information, and a version of binutils with support for this
|
||
processor, are available at
|
||
<https://sourceforge.net/projects/adi-toolchain/>.
|
||
|
||
CRIS
|
||
====
|
||
|
||
CRIS is a CPU architecture in Axis Communications systems-on-a-chip, for
|
||
example the ETRAX series. These are used in embedded applications.
|
||
|
||
*Note CRIS Options: (gcc)CRIS Options, for a list of CRIS-specific
|
||
options.
|
||
|
||
Use ‘configure --target=cris-elf’ to configure GCC for building a
|
||
cross-compiler for CRIS.
|
||
|
||
DOS
|
||
===
|
||
|
||
Please have a look at the binaries page.
|
||
|
||
You cannot install GCC by itself on MSDOS; it will not compile under
|
||
any MSDOS compiler except itself. You need to get the complete
|
||
compilation package DJGPP, which includes binaries as well as sources,
|
||
and includes all the necessary compilation tools and libraries.
|
||
|
||
epiphany-*-elf
|
||
==============
|
||
|
||
Adapteva Epiphany. This configuration is intended for embedded systems.
|
||
|
||
*-*-freebsd*
|
||
============
|
||
|
||
In order to better utilize FreeBSD base system functionality and match
|
||
the configuration of the system compiler, GCC 4.5 and above as well as
|
||
GCC 4.4 past 2010-06-20 leverage SSP support in libc (which is present
|
||
on FreeBSD 7 or later) and the use of ‘__cxa_atexit’ by default (on
|
||
FreeBSD 6 or later). The use of ‘dl_iterate_phdr’ inside
|
||
‘libgcc_s.so.1’ and boehm-gc (on FreeBSD 7 or later) is enabled by GCC
|
||
4.5 and above.
|
||
|
||
We support FreeBSD using the ELF file format with DWARF 2 debugging
|
||
for all CPU architectures. There are no known issues with mixing object
|
||
files and libraries with different debugging formats. Otherwise, this
|
||
release of GCC should now match more of the configuration used in the
|
||
stock FreeBSD configuration of GCC. In particular, ‘--enable-threads’
|
||
is now configured by default. However, as a general user, do not
|
||
attempt to replace the system compiler with this release. Known to
|
||
bootstrap and check with good results on FreeBSD 7.2-STABLE. In the
|
||
past, known to bootstrap and check with good results on FreeBSD 3.0,
|
||
3.4, 4.0, 4.2, 4.3, 4.4, 4.5, 4.8, 4.9 and 5-CURRENT.
|
||
|
||
The version of binutils installed in ‘/usr/bin’ probably works with
|
||
this release of GCC. Bootstrapping against the latest GNU binutils
|
||
and/or the version found in ‘/usr/ports/devel/binutils’ has been known
|
||
to enable additional features and improve overall testsuite results.
|
||
However, it is currently known that boehm-gc may not configure properly
|
||
on FreeBSD prior to the FreeBSD 7.0 release with GNU binutils after
|
||
2.16.1.
|
||
|
||
ft32-*-elf
|
||
==========
|
||
|
||
The FT32 processor. This configuration is intended for embedded
|
||
systems.
|
||
|
||
h8300-hms
|
||
=========
|
||
|
||
Renesas H8/300 series of processors.
|
||
|
||
Please have a look at the binaries page.
|
||
|
||
The calling convention and structure layout has changed in release
|
||
2.6. All code must be recompiled. The calling convention now passes
|
||
the first three arguments in function calls in registers. Structures
|
||
are no longer a multiple of 2 bytes.
|
||
|
||
hppa*-hp-hpux*
|
||
==============
|
||
|
||
Support for HP-UX version 9 and older was discontinued in GCC 3.4.
|
||
|
||
We require using gas/binutils on all hppa platforms. Version 2.19 or
|
||
later is recommended.
|
||
|
||
It may be helpful to configure GCC with the ‘--with-gnu-as’ and
|
||
‘--with-as=...’ options to ensure that GCC can find GAS.
|
||
|
||
The HP assembler should not be used with GCC. It is rarely tested and
|
||
may not work. It shouldn’t be used with any languages other than C due
|
||
to its many limitations.
|
||
|
||
Specifically, ‘-g’ does not work (HP-UX uses a peculiar debugging
|
||
format which GCC does not know about). It also inserts timestamps into
|
||
each object file it creates, causing the 3-stage comparison test to fail
|
||
during a bootstrap. You should be able to continue by saying ‘make
|
||
all-host all-target’ after getting the failure from ‘make’.
|
||
|
||
Various GCC features are not supported. For example, it does not
|
||
support weak symbols or alias definitions. As a result, explicit
|
||
template instantiations are required when using C++. This makes it
|
||
difficult if not impossible to build many C++ applications.
|
||
|
||
There are two default scheduling models for instructions. These are
|
||
PROCESSOR_7100LC and PROCESSOR_8000. They are selected from the pa-risc
|
||
architecture specified for the target machine when configuring.
|
||
PROCESSOR_8000 is the default. PROCESSOR_7100LC is selected when the
|
||
target is a ‘hppa1*’ machine.
|
||
|
||
The PROCESSOR_8000 model is not well suited to older processors.
|
||
Thus, it is important to completely specify the machine architecture
|
||
when configuring if you want a model other than PROCESSOR_8000. The
|
||
macro TARGET_SCHED_DEFAULT can be defined in BOOT_CFLAGS if a different
|
||
default scheduling model is desired.
|
||
|
||
As of GCC 4.0, GCC uses the UNIX 95 namespace for HP-UX 10.10 through
|
||
11.00, and the UNIX 98 namespace for HP-UX 11.11 and later. This
|
||
namespace change might cause problems when bootstrapping with an earlier
|
||
version of GCC or the HP compiler as essentially the same namespace is
|
||
required for an entire build. This problem can be avoided in a number
|
||
of ways. With HP cc, ‘UNIX_STD’ can be set to ‘95’ or ‘98’. Another
|
||
way is to add an appropriate set of predefines to ‘CC’. The description
|
||
for the ‘munix=’ option contains a list of the predefines used with each
|
||
standard.
|
||
|
||
More specific information to ‘hppa*-hp-hpux*’ targets follows.
|
||
|
||
hppa*-hp-hpux10
|
||
===============
|
||
|
||
For hpux10.20, we _highly_ recommend you pick up the latest sed patch
|
||
‘PHCO_19798’ from HP.
|
||
|
||
The C++ ABI has changed incompatibly in GCC 4.0. COMDAT subspaces
|
||
are used for one-only code and data. This resolves many of the previous
|
||
problems in using C++ on this target. However, the ABI is not
|
||
compatible with the one implemented under HP-UX 11 using secondary
|
||
definitions.
|
||
|
||
hppa*-hp-hpux11
|
||
===============
|
||
|
||
GCC 3.0 and up support HP-UX 11. GCC 2.95.x is not supported and cannot
|
||
be used to compile GCC 3.0 and up.
|
||
|
||
The libffi library haven’t been ported to 64-bit HP-UX and doesn’t
|
||
build.
|
||
|
||
Refer to binaries for information about obtaining precompiled GCC
|
||
binaries for HP-UX. Precompiled binaries must be obtained to build the
|
||
Ada language as it cannot be bootstrapped using C. Ada is only
|
||
available for the 32-bit PA-RISC runtime.
|
||
|
||
Starting with GCC 3.4 an ISO C compiler is required to bootstrap.
|
||
The bundled compiler supports only traditional C; you will need either
|
||
HP’s unbundled compiler, or a binary distribution of GCC.
|
||
|
||
It is possible to build GCC 3.3 starting with the bundled HP
|
||
compiler, but the process requires several steps. GCC 3.3 can then be
|
||
used to build later versions.
|
||
|
||
There are several possible approaches to building the distribution.
|
||
Binutils can be built first using the HP tools. Then, the GCC
|
||
distribution can be built. The second approach is to build GCC first
|
||
using the HP tools, then build binutils, then rebuild GCC. There have
|
||
been problems with various binary distributions, so it is best not to
|
||
start from a binary distribution.
|
||
|
||
On 64-bit capable systems, there are two distinct targets. Different
|
||
installation prefixes must be used if both are to be installed on the
|
||
same system. The ‘hppa[1-2]*-hp-hpux11*’ target generates code for the
|
||
32-bit PA-RISC runtime architecture and uses the HP linker. The
|
||
‘hppa64-hp-hpux11*’ target generates 64-bit code for the PA-RISC 2.0
|
||
architecture.
|
||
|
||
The script config.guess now selects the target type based on the
|
||
compiler detected during configuration. You must define ‘PATH’ or ‘CC’
|
||
so that configure finds an appropriate compiler for the initial
|
||
bootstrap. When ‘CC’ is used, the definition should contain the options
|
||
that are needed whenever ‘CC’ is used.
|
||
|
||
Specifically, options that determine the runtime architecture must be
|
||
in ‘CC’ to correctly select the target for the build. It is also
|
||
convenient to place many other compiler options in ‘CC’. For example,
|
||
‘CC="cc -Ac +DA2.0W -Wp,-H16376 -D_CLASSIC_TYPES -D_HPUX_SOURCE"’ can be
|
||
used to bootstrap the GCC 3.3 branch with the HP compiler in 64-bit
|
||
K&R/bundled mode. The ‘+DA2.0W’ option will result in the automatic
|
||
selection of the ‘hppa64-hp-hpux11*’ target. The macro definition table
|
||
of cpp needs to be increased for a successful build with the HP
|
||
compiler. _CLASSIC_TYPES and _HPUX_SOURCE need to be defined when
|
||
building with the bundled compiler, or when using the ‘-Ac’ option.
|
||
These defines aren’t necessary with ‘-Ae’.
|
||
|
||
It is best to explicitly configure the ‘hppa64-hp-hpux11*’ target
|
||
with the ‘--with-ld=...’ option. This overrides the standard search for
|
||
ld. The two linkers supported on this target require different
|
||
commands. The default linker is determined during configuration. As a
|
||
result, it’s not possible to switch linkers in the middle of a GCC
|
||
build. This has been reported to sometimes occur in unified builds of
|
||
binutils and GCC.
|
||
|
||
A recent linker patch must be installed for the correct operation of
|
||
GCC 3.3 and later. ‘PHSS_26559’ and ‘PHSS_24304’ are the oldest linker
|
||
patches that are known to work. They are for HP-UX 11.00 and 11.11,
|
||
respectively. ‘PHSS_24303’, the companion to ‘PHSS_24304’, might be
|
||
usable but it hasn’t been tested. These patches have been superseded.
|
||
Consult the HP patch database to obtain the currently recommended linker
|
||
patch for your system.
|
||
|
||
The patches are necessary for the support of weak symbols on the
|
||
32-bit port, and for the running of initializers and finalizers. Weak
|
||
symbols are implemented using SOM secondary definition symbols. Prior
|
||
to HP-UX 11, there are bugs in the linker support for secondary symbols.
|
||
The patches correct a problem of linker core dumps creating shared
|
||
libraries containing secondary symbols, as well as various other linking
|
||
issues involving secondary symbols.
|
||
|
||
GCC 3.3 uses the ELF DT_INIT_ARRAY and DT_FINI_ARRAY capabilities to
|
||
run initializers and finalizers on the 64-bit port. The 32-bit port
|
||
uses the linker ‘+init’ and ‘+fini’ options for the same purpose. The
|
||
patches correct various problems with the +init/+fini options, including
|
||
program core dumps. Binutils 2.14 corrects a problem on the 64-bit port
|
||
resulting from HP’s non-standard use of the .init and .fini sections for
|
||
array initializers and finalizers.
|
||
|
||
Although the HP and GNU linkers are both supported for the
|
||
‘hppa64-hp-hpux11*’ target, it is strongly recommended that the HP
|
||
linker be used for link editing on this target.
|
||
|
||
At this time, the GNU linker does not support the creation of long
|
||
branch stubs. As a result, it cannot successfully link binaries
|
||
containing branch offsets larger than 8 megabytes. In addition, there
|
||
are problems linking shared libraries, linking executables with
|
||
‘-static’, and with dwarf2 unwind and exception support. It also
|
||
doesn’t provide stubs for internal calls to global functions in shared
|
||
libraries, so these calls cannot be overloaded.
|
||
|
||
The HP dynamic loader does not support GNU symbol versioning, so
|
||
symbol versioning is not supported. It may be necessary to disable
|
||
symbol versioning with ‘--disable-symvers’ when using GNU ld.
|
||
|
||
POSIX threads are the default. The optional DCE thread library is
|
||
not supported, so ‘--enable-threads=dce’ does not work.
|
||
|
||
*-*-linux-gnu
|
||
=============
|
||
|
||
The ‘.init_array’ and ‘.fini_array’ sections are enabled unconditionally
|
||
which requires at least glibc 2.1 and binutils 2.12.
|
||
|
||
Versions of libstdc++-v3 starting with 3.2.1 require bug fixes
|
||
present in glibc 2.2.5 and later. More information is available in the
|
||
libstdc++-v3 documentation.
|
||
|
||
i?86-*-linux*
|
||
=============
|
||
|
||
As of GCC 3.3, binutils 2.13.1 or later is required for this platform.
|
||
See bug 10877 for more information.
|
||
|
||
If you receive Signal 11 errors when building on GNU/Linux, then it
|
||
is possible you have a hardware problem. Further information on this
|
||
can be found on www.bitwizard.nl.
|
||
|
||
i?86-*-solaris2*
|
||
================
|
||
|
||
Use this for Solaris 11.3 or later on x86 and x86-64 systems. Starting
|
||
with GCC 4.7, there is also a 64-bit ‘amd64-*-solaris2*’ or
|
||
‘x86_64-*-solaris2*’ configuration that corresponds to
|
||
‘sparcv9-sun-solaris2*’.
|
||
|
||
ia64-*-linux
|
||
============
|
||
|
||
IA-64 processor (also known as IPF, or Itanium Processor Family) running
|
||
GNU/Linux.
|
||
|
||
If you are using the installed system libunwind library with
|
||
‘--with-system-libunwind’, then you must use libunwind 0.98 or later.
|
||
|
||
ia64-*-hpux*
|
||
============
|
||
|
||
Building GCC on this target requires the GNU Assembler. The bundled HP
|
||
assembler will not work. To prevent GCC from using the wrong assembler,
|
||
the option ‘--with-gnu-as’ may be necessary.
|
||
|
||
The GCC libunwind library has not been ported to HPUX. This means
|
||
that for GCC versions 3.2.3 and earlier, ‘--enable-libunwind-exceptions’
|
||
is required to build GCC. For GCC 3.3 and later, this is the default.
|
||
For gcc 3.4.3 and later, ‘--enable-libunwind-exceptions’ is removed and
|
||
the system libunwind library will always be used.
|
||
|
||
*-ibm-aix*
|
||
==========
|
||
|
||
Support for AIX version 3 and older was discontinued in GCC 3.4.
|
||
Support for AIX version 4.2 and older was discontinued in GCC 4.5.
|
||
|
||
“out of memory” bootstrap failures may indicate a problem with
|
||
process resource limits (ulimit). Hard limits are configured in the
|
||
‘/etc/security/limits’ system configuration file.
|
||
|
||
GCC 4.9 and above require a C++ compiler for bootstrap. IBM VAC++ /
|
||
xlC cannot bootstrap GCC. xlc can bootstrap an older version of GCC and
|
||
G++ can bootstrap recent releases of GCC.
|
||
|
||
GCC can bootstrap with recent versions of IBM XLC, but bootstrapping
|
||
with an earlier release of GCC is recommended. Bootstrapping with XLC
|
||
requires a larger data segment, which can be enabled through the
|
||
LDR_CNTRL environment variable, e.g.,
|
||
|
||
% LDR_CNTRL=MAXDATA=0x50000000
|
||
% export LDR_CNTRL
|
||
|
||
One can start with a pre-compiled version of GCC to build from
|
||
sources. One may delete GCC’s “fixed” header files when starting with a
|
||
version of GCC built for an earlier release of AIX.
|
||
|
||
To speed up the configuration phases of bootstrapping and installing
|
||
GCC, one may use GNU Bash instead of AIX ‘/bin/sh’, e.g.,
|
||
|
||
% CONFIG_SHELL=/opt/freeware/bin/bash
|
||
% export CONFIG_SHELL
|
||
|
||
and then proceed as described in the build instructions, where we
|
||
strongly recommend specifying an absolute path to invoke
|
||
SRCDIR/configure.
|
||
|
||
Because GCC on AIX is built as a 32-bit executable by default,
|
||
(although it can generate 64-bit programs) the GMP and MPFR libraries
|
||
required by gfortran must be 32-bit libraries. Building GMP and MPFR as
|
||
static archive libraries works better than shared libraries.
|
||
|
||
Errors involving ‘alloca’ when building GCC generally are due to an
|
||
incorrect definition of ‘CC’ in the Makefile or mixing files compiled
|
||
with the native C compiler and GCC. During the stage1 phase of the
|
||
build, the native AIX compiler *must* be invoked as ‘cc’ (not ‘xlc’).
|
||
Once ‘configure’ has been informed of ‘xlc’, one needs to use ‘make
|
||
distclean’ to remove the configure cache files and ensure that ‘CC’
|
||
environment variable does not provide a definition that will confuse
|
||
‘configure’. If this error occurs during stage2 or later, then the
|
||
problem most likely is the version of Make (see above).
|
||
|
||
The native ‘as’ and ‘ld’ are recommended for bootstrapping on AIX.
|
||
The GNU Assembler, GNU Linker, and GNU Binutils version 2.20 is the
|
||
minimum level that supports bootstrap on AIX 5. The GNU Assembler has
|
||
not been updated to support AIX 6 or AIX 7. The native AIX tools do
|
||
interoperate with GCC.
|
||
|
||
AIX 7.1 added partial support for DWARF debugging, but full support
|
||
requires AIX 7.1 TL03 SP7 that supports additional DWARF sections and
|
||
fixes a bug in the assembler. AIX 7.1 TL03 SP5 distributed a version of
|
||
libm.a missing important symbols; a fix for IV77796 will be included in
|
||
SP6.
|
||
|
||
AIX 5.3 TL10, AIX 6.1 TL05 and AIX 7.1 TL00 introduced an AIX
|
||
assembler change that sometimes produces corrupt assembly files causing
|
||
AIX linker errors. The bug breaks GCC bootstrap on AIX and can cause
|
||
compilation failures with existing GCC installations. An AIX iFix for
|
||
AIX 5.3 is available (APAR IZ98385 for AIX 5.3 TL10, APAR IZ98477 for
|
||
AIX 5.3 TL11 and IZ98134 for AIX 5.3 TL12). AIX 5.3 TL11 SP8, AIX 5.3
|
||
TL12 SP5, AIX 6.1 TL04 SP11, AIX 6.1 TL05 SP7, AIX 6.1 TL06 SP6, AIX 6.1
|
||
TL07 and AIX 7.1 TL01 should include the fix.
|
||
|
||
Building ‘libstdc++.a’ requires a fix for an AIX Assembler bug APAR
|
||
IY26685 (AIX 4.3) or APAR IY25528 (AIX 5.1). It also requires a fix for
|
||
another AIX Assembler bug and a co-dependent AIX Archiver fix referenced
|
||
as APAR IY53606 (AIX 5.2) or as APAR IY54774 (AIX 5.1)
|
||
|
||
‘libstdc++’ in GCC 3.4 increments the major version number of the
|
||
shared object and GCC installation places the ‘libstdc++.a’ shared
|
||
library in a common location which will overwrite the and GCC 3.3
|
||
version of the shared library. Applications either need to be re-linked
|
||
against the new shared library or the GCC 3.1 and GCC 3.3 versions of
|
||
the ‘libstdc++’ shared object needs to be available to the AIX runtime
|
||
loader. The GCC 3.1 ‘libstdc++.so.4’, if present, and GCC 3.3
|
||
‘libstdc++.so.5’ shared objects can be installed for runtime dynamic
|
||
loading using the following steps to set the ‘F_LOADONLY’ flag in the
|
||
shared object for _each_ multilib ‘libstdc++.a’ installed:
|
||
|
||
Extract the shared objects from the currently installed ‘libstdc++.a’
|
||
archive:
|
||
% ar -x libstdc++.a libstdc++.so.4 libstdc++.so.5
|
||
|
||
Enable the ‘F_LOADONLY’ flag so that the shared object will be
|
||
available for runtime dynamic loading, but not linking:
|
||
% strip -e libstdc++.so.4 libstdc++.so.5
|
||
|
||
Archive the runtime-only shared object in the GCC 3.4 ‘libstdc++.a’
|
||
archive:
|
||
% ar -q libstdc++.a libstdc++.so.4 libstdc++.so.5
|
||
|
||
Eventually, the ‘--with-aix-soname=svr4’ configure option may drop
|
||
the need for this procedure for libraries that support it.
|
||
|
||
Linking executables and shared libraries may produce warnings of
|
||
duplicate symbols. The assembly files generated by GCC for AIX always
|
||
have included multiple symbol definitions for certain global variable
|
||
and function declarations in the original program. The warnings should
|
||
not prevent the linker from producing a correct library or runnable
|
||
executable.
|
||
|
||
AIX 4.3 utilizes a “large format” archive to support both 32-bit and
|
||
64-bit object modules. The routines provided in AIX 4.3.0 and AIX 4.3.1
|
||
to parse archive libraries did not handle the new format correctly.
|
||
These routines are used by GCC and result in error messages during
|
||
linking such as “not a COFF file”. The version of the routines shipped
|
||
with AIX 4.3.1 should work for a 32-bit environment. The ‘-g’ option of
|
||
the archive command may be used to create archives of 32-bit objects
|
||
using the original “small format”. A correct version of the routines is
|
||
shipped with AIX 4.3.2 and above.
|
||
|
||
Some versions of the AIX binder (linker) can fail with a relocation
|
||
overflow severe error when the ‘-bbigtoc’ option is used to link
|
||
GCC-produced object files into an executable that overflows the TOC. A
|
||
fix for APAR IX75823 (OVERFLOW DURING LINK WHEN USING GCC AND -BBIGTOC)
|
||
is available from IBM Customer Support and from its
|
||
techsupport.services.ibm.com website as PTF U455193.
|
||
|
||
The AIX 4.3.2.1 linker (bos.rte.bind_cmds Level 4.3.2.1) will dump
|
||
core with a segmentation fault when invoked by any version of GCC. A
|
||
fix for APAR IX87327 is available from IBM Customer Support and from its
|
||
techsupport.services.ibm.com website as PTF U461879. This fix is
|
||
incorporated in AIX 4.3.3 and above.
|
||
|
||
The initial assembler shipped with AIX 4.3.0 generates incorrect
|
||
object files. A fix for APAR IX74254 (64BIT DISASSEMBLED OUTPUT FROM
|
||
COMPILER FAILS TO ASSEMBLE/BIND) is available from IBM Customer Support
|
||
and from its techsupport.services.ibm.com website as PTF U453956. This
|
||
fix is incorporated in AIX 4.3.1 and above.
|
||
|
||
AIX provides National Language Support (NLS). Compilers and
|
||
assemblers use NLS to support locale-specific representations of various
|
||
data formats including floating-point numbers (e.g., ‘.’ vs ‘,’ for
|
||
separating decimal fractions). There have been problems reported where
|
||
GCC does not produce the same floating-point formats that the assembler
|
||
expects. If one encounters this problem, set the ‘LANG’ environment
|
||
variable to ‘C’ or ‘En_US’.
|
||
|
||
A default can be specified with the ‘-mcpu=CPU_TYPE’ switch and using
|
||
the configure option ‘--with-cpu-CPU_TYPE’.
|
||
|
||
iq2000-*-elf
|
||
============
|
||
|
||
Vitesse IQ2000 processors. These are used in embedded applications.
|
||
There are no standard Unix configurations.
|
||
|
||
lm32-*-elf
|
||
==========
|
||
|
||
Lattice Mico32 processor. This configuration is intended for embedded
|
||
systems.
|
||
|
||
lm32-*-uclinux
|
||
==============
|
||
|
||
Lattice Mico32 processor. This configuration is intended for embedded
|
||
systems running uClinux.
|
||
|
||
LoongArch
|
||
=========
|
||
|
||
LoongArch processor. The following LoongArch targets are available:
|
||
‘loongarch64-linux-gnu*’
|
||
LoongArch processor running GNU/Linux. This target triplet may be
|
||
coupled with a small set of possible suffixes to identify their
|
||
default ABI type:
|
||
‘f64’
|
||
Uses ‘lp64d/base’ ABI by default.
|
||
‘f32’
|
||
Uses ‘lp64f/base’ ABI by default.
|
||
‘sf’
|
||
Uses ‘lp64s/base’ ABI by default.
|
||
|
||
‘loongarch64-linux-gnu’
|
||
Same as ‘loongarch64-linux-gnuf64’, but may be used with
|
||
‘--with-abi=*’ to configure the default ABI type.
|
||
|
||
More information about LoongArch can be found at
|
||
<https://github.com/loongson/LoongArch-Documentation>.
|
||
|
||
m32c-*-elf
|
||
==========
|
||
|
||
Renesas M32C processor. This configuration is intended for embedded
|
||
systems.
|
||
|
||
m32r-*-elf
|
||
==========
|
||
|
||
Renesas M32R processor. This configuration is intended for embedded
|
||
systems.
|
||
|
||
m68k-*-*
|
||
========
|
||
|
||
By default, ‘m68k-*-elf*’, ‘m68k-*-rtems’, ‘m68k-*-uclinux’ and
|
||
‘m68k-*-linux’ build libraries for both M680x0 and ColdFire processors.
|
||
If you only need the M680x0 libraries, you can omit the ColdFire ones by
|
||
passing ‘--with-arch=m68k’ to ‘configure’. Alternatively, you can omit
|
||
the M680x0 libraries by passing ‘--with-arch=cf’ to ‘configure’. These
|
||
targets default to 5206 or 5475 code as appropriate for the target
|
||
system when configured with ‘--with-arch=cf’ and 68020 code otherwise.
|
||
|
||
The ‘m68k-*-netbsd’ and ‘m68k-*-openbsd’ targets also support the
|
||
‘--with-arch’ option. They will generate ColdFire CFV4e code when
|
||
configured with ‘--with-arch=cf’ and 68020 code otherwise.
|
||
|
||
You can override the default processors listed above by configuring
|
||
with ‘--with-cpu=TARGET’. This TARGET can either be a ‘-mcpu’ argument
|
||
or one of the following values: ‘m68000’, ‘m68010’, ‘m68020’, ‘m68030’,
|
||
‘m68040’, ‘m68060’, ‘m68020-40’ and ‘m68020-60’.
|
||
|
||
GCC requires at least binutils version 2.17 on these targets.
|
||
|
||
m68k-*-uclinux
|
||
==============
|
||
|
||
GCC 4.3 changed the uClinux configuration so that it uses the
|
||
‘m68k-linux-gnu’ ABI rather than the ‘m68k-elf’ ABI. It also added
|
||
improved support for C++ and flat shared libraries, both of which were
|
||
ABI changes.
|
||
|
||
microblaze-*-elf
|
||
================
|
||
|
||
Xilinx MicroBlaze processor. This configuration is intended for
|
||
embedded systems.
|
||
|
||
mips-*-*
|
||
========
|
||
|
||
If on a MIPS system you get an error message saying “does not have gp
|
||
sections for all it’s [sic] sectons [sic]”, don’t worry about it. This
|
||
happens whenever you use GAS with the MIPS linker, but there is not
|
||
really anything wrong, and it is okay to use the output file. You can
|
||
stop such warnings by installing the GNU linker.
|
||
|
||
It would be nice to extend GAS to produce the gp tables, but they are
|
||
optional, and there should not be a warning about their absence.
|
||
|
||
The libstdc++ atomic locking routines for MIPS targets requires MIPS
|
||
II and later. A patch went in just after the GCC 3.3 release to make
|
||
‘mips*-*-*’ use the generic implementation instead. You can also
|
||
configure for ‘mipsel-elf’ as a workaround. The ‘mips*-*-linux*’ target
|
||
continues to use the MIPS II routines. More work on this is expected in
|
||
future releases.
|
||
|
||
The built-in ‘__sync_*’ functions are available on MIPS II and later
|
||
systems and others that support the ‘ll’, ‘sc’ and ‘sync’ instructions.
|
||
This can be overridden by passing ‘--with-llsc’ or ‘--without-llsc’ when
|
||
configuring GCC. Since the Linux kernel emulates these instructions if
|
||
they are missing, the default for ‘mips*-*-linux*’ targets is
|
||
‘--with-llsc’. The ‘--with-llsc’ and ‘--without-llsc’ configure options
|
||
may be overridden at compile time by passing the ‘-mllsc’ or ‘-mno-llsc’
|
||
options to the compiler.
|
||
|
||
MIPS systems check for division by zero (unless
|
||
‘-mno-check-zero-division’ is passed to the compiler) by generating
|
||
either a conditional trap or a break instruction. Using trap results in
|
||
smaller code, but is only supported on MIPS II and later. Also, some
|
||
versions of the Linux kernel have a bug that prevents trap from
|
||
generating the proper signal (‘SIGFPE’). To enable the use of break,
|
||
use the ‘--with-divide=breaks’ ‘configure’ option when configuring GCC.
|
||
The default is to use traps on systems that support them.
|
||
|
||
moxie-*-elf
|
||
===========
|
||
|
||
The moxie processor.
|
||
|
||
msp430-*-elf*
|
||
=============
|
||
|
||
TI MSP430 processor. This configuration is intended for embedded
|
||
systems.
|
||
|
||
‘msp430-*-elf’ is the standard configuration with most GCC features
|
||
enabled by default.
|
||
|
||
‘msp430-*-elfbare’ is tuned for a bare-metal environment, and
|
||
disables features related to shared libraries and other functionality
|
||
not used for this device. This reduces code and data usage of the GCC
|
||
libraries, resulting in a minimal run-time environment by default.
|
||
|
||
Features disabled by default include:
|
||
• transactional memory
|
||
• __cxa_atexit
|
||
|
||
nds32le-*-elf
|
||
=============
|
||
|
||
Andes NDS32 target in little endian mode.
|
||
|
||
nds32be-*-elf
|
||
=============
|
||
|
||
Andes NDS32 target in big endian mode.
|
||
|
||
nvptx-*-none
|
||
============
|
||
|
||
Nvidia PTX target.
|
||
|
||
Instead of GNU binutils, you will need to install nvptx-tools. Tell
|
||
GCC where to find it:
|
||
‘--with-build-time-tools=[install-nvptx-tools]/nvptx-none/bin’.
|
||
|
||
You will need newlib 4.3.0 or later. It can be automatically built
|
||
together with GCC. For this, add a symbolic link to nvptx-newlib’s
|
||
‘newlib’ directory to the directory containing the GCC sources.
|
||
|
||
Use the ‘--disable-sjlj-exceptions’ and
|
||
‘--enable-newlib-io-long-long’ options when configuring.
|
||
|
||
The ‘--with-arch’ option may be specified to override the default
|
||
value for the ‘-march’ option, and to also build corresponding target
|
||
libraries. The default is ‘--with-arch=sm_30’.
|
||
|
||
For example, if ‘--with-arch=sm_70’ is specified, ‘-march=sm_30’ and
|
||
‘-march=sm_70’ target libraries are built, and code generation defaults
|
||
to ‘-march=sm_70’.
|
||
|
||
or1k-*-elf
|
||
==========
|
||
|
||
The OpenRISC 1000 32-bit processor with delay slots. This configuration
|
||
is intended for embedded systems.
|
||
|
||
or1k-*-linux
|
||
============
|
||
|
||
The OpenRISC 1000 32-bit processor with delay slots.
|
||
|
||
powerpc-*-*
|
||
===========
|
||
|
||
You can specify a default version for the ‘-mcpu=CPU_TYPE’ switch by
|
||
using the configure option ‘--with-cpu-CPU_TYPE’.
|
||
|
||
You will need GNU binutils 2.20 or newer.
|
||
|
||
powerpc-*-darwin*
|
||
=================
|
||
|
||
PowerPC running Darwin (Mac OS X kernel).
|
||
|
||
Pre-installed versions of Mac OS X may not include any developer
|
||
tools, meaning that you will not be able to build GCC from source. Tool
|
||
binaries are available at <https://opensource.apple.com>.
|
||
|
||
This version of GCC requires at least cctools-590.36. The
|
||
cctools-590.36 package referenced from
|
||
<https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/2006-03/msg00507.html> will not work on
|
||
systems older than 10.3.9 (aka darwin7.9.0).
|
||
|
||
powerpc-*-elf
|
||
=============
|
||
|
||
PowerPC system in big endian mode, running System V.4.
|
||
|
||
powerpc*-*-linux-gnu*
|
||
=====================
|
||
|
||
PowerPC system in big endian mode running Linux.
|
||
|
||
powerpc-*-netbsd*
|
||
=================
|
||
|
||
PowerPC system in big endian mode running NetBSD.
|
||
|
||
powerpc-*-eabisim
|
||
=================
|
||
|
||
Embedded PowerPC system in big endian mode for use in running under the
|
||
PSIM simulator.
|
||
|
||
powerpc-*-eabi
|
||
==============
|
||
|
||
Embedded PowerPC system in big endian mode.
|
||
|
||
powerpcle-*-elf
|
||
===============
|
||
|
||
PowerPC system in little endian mode, running System V.4.
|
||
|
||
powerpcle-*-eabisim
|
||
===================
|
||
|
||
Embedded PowerPC system in little endian mode for use in running under
|
||
the PSIM simulator.
|
||
|
||
powerpcle-*-eabi
|
||
================
|
||
|
||
Embedded PowerPC system in little endian mode.
|
||
|
||
rl78-*-elf
|
||
==========
|
||
|
||
The Renesas RL78 processor. This configuration is intended for embedded
|
||
systems.
|
||
|
||
riscv32-*-elf
|
||
=============
|
||
|
||
The RISC-V RV32 instruction set. This configuration is intended for
|
||
embedded systems. This (and all other RISC-V) targets require the
|
||
binutils 2.30 release.
|
||
|
||
riscv32-*-linux
|
||
===============
|
||
|
||
The RISC-V RV32 instruction set running GNU/Linux. This (and all other
|
||
RISC-V) targets require the binutils 2.30 release.
|
||
|
||
riscv64-*-elf
|
||
=============
|
||
|
||
The RISC-V RV64 instruction set. This configuration is intended for
|
||
embedded systems. This (and all other RISC-V) targets require the
|
||
binutils 2.30 release.
|
||
|
||
riscv64-*-linux
|
||
===============
|
||
|
||
The RISC-V RV64 instruction set running GNU/Linux. This (and all other
|
||
RISC-V) targets require the binutils 2.30 release.
|
||
|
||
rx-*-elf
|
||
========
|
||
|
||
The Renesas RX processor.
|
||
|
||
s390-*-linux*
|
||
=============
|
||
|
||
S/390 system running GNU/Linux for S/390.
|
||
|
||
s390x-*-linux*
|
||
==============
|
||
|
||
zSeries system (64-bit) running GNU/Linux for zSeries.
|
||
|
||
s390x-ibm-tpf*
|
||
==============
|
||
|
||
zSeries system (64-bit) running TPF. This platform is supported as
|
||
cross-compilation target only.
|
||
|
||
*-*-solaris2*
|
||
=============
|
||
|
||
Support for Solaris 11.3 and earlier has been obsoleted in GCC 13, but
|
||
can still be enabled by configuring with ‘--enable-obsolete’. Support
|
||
for Solaris 10 has been removed in GCC 10. Support for Solaris 9 has
|
||
been removed in GCC 5. Support for Solaris 8 has been removed in GCC
|
||
4.8. Support for Solaris 7 has been removed in GCC 4.6.
|
||
|
||
Solaris 11.3 provides GCC 4.5.2, 4.7.3, and 4.8.2 as
|
||
‘/usr/gcc/4.5/bin/gcc’ or similar. Solaris 11.4 provides one or more of
|
||
GCC 5, 7, 9, 10, 11, and 12.
|
||
|
||
You need to install the ‘system/header’, ‘system/linker’, and
|
||
‘developer/assembler’ packages.
|
||
|
||
Trying to use the compatibility tools in ‘/usr/ucb’, from the
|
||
‘compatibility/ucb’ package, to install GCC has been observed to cause
|
||
trouble. The fix is to remove ‘/usr/ucb’ from your ‘PATH’.
|
||
|
||
The build process works more smoothly with the legacy Solaris tools
|
||
so, if you have ‘/usr/xpg4/bin’ in your ‘PATH’, we recommend that you
|
||
place ‘/usr/bin’ before ‘/usr/xpg4/bin’ for the duration of the build.
|
||
|
||
We recommend the use of the Solaris assembler or the GNU assembler,
|
||
in conjunction with the Solaris linker.
|
||
|
||
The GNU ‘as’ versions included in Solaris 11.3, from GNU binutils
|
||
2.23.1 or newer (in ‘/usr/bin/gas’ and ‘/usr/gnu/bin/as’), are known to
|
||
work. The version from GNU binutils 2.40 is known to work as well.
|
||
Recent versions of the Solaris assembler in ‘/usr/bin/as’ work almost as
|
||
well, though. To use GNU ‘as’, configure with the options
|
||
‘--with-gnu-as --with-as=/usr/gnu/bin/as’.
|
||
|
||
For linking, the Solaris linker is preferred. If you want to use the
|
||
GNU linker instead, the version in Solaris 11.3, from GNU binutils
|
||
2.23.1 or newer (in ‘/usr/gnu/bin/ld’ and ‘/usr/bin/gld’), works, as
|
||
does the version from GNU binutils 2.40. However, it generally lacks
|
||
platform specific features, so better stay with Solaris ‘ld’. To use
|
||
the LTO linker plugin (‘-fuse-linker-plugin’) with GNU ‘ld’, GNU
|
||
binutils _must_ be configured with ‘--enable-largefile’. To use Solaris
|
||
‘ld’, we recommend to configure with ‘--without-gnu-ld
|
||
--with-ld=/usr/bin/ld’ to guarantee the right linker is found
|
||
irrespective of the user’s ‘PATH’.
|
||
|
||
Note that your mileage may vary if you use a combination of the GNU
|
||
tools and the Solaris tools: while the combination GNU ‘as’ and Solaris
|
||
‘ld’ works well, the reverse combination Solaris ‘as’ with GNU ‘ld’ may
|
||
fail to build or cause memory corruption at runtime in some cases for
|
||
C++ programs.
|
||
|
||
To enable symbol versioning in ‘libstdc++’ and other runtime
|
||
libraries with the Solaris linker, you need to have any version of GNU
|
||
‘c++filt’, which is part of GNU binutils. Symbol versioning will be
|
||
disabled if no appropriate version is found. Solaris ‘c++filt’ from the
|
||
Solaris Studio compilers does _not_ work.
|
||
|
||
In order to build the GNU Ada compiler, GNAT, a working GNAT is
|
||
needed. Since Solaris 11.4 SRU 39, GNAT 11 or 12 is bundled in the
|
||
‘developer/gcc/gcc-gnat’ package.
|
||
|
||
In order to build the GNU D compiler, GDC, a working ‘libphobos’ is
|
||
needed. That library wasn’t built by default in GCC 9–11 on SPARC, or
|
||
on x86 when the Solaris assembler is used, but can be enabled by
|
||
configuring with ‘--enable-libphobos’. Also, GDC 9.4.0 is required on
|
||
x86, while GDC 9.3.0 is known to work on SPARC.
|
||
|
||
The versions of the GNU Multiple Precision Library (GMP), the MPFR
|
||
library and the MPC library bundled with Solaris 11.3 and later are
|
||
usually recent enough to match GCC’s requirements. There are two
|
||
caveats:
|
||
|
||
• While the version of the GMP library in Solaris 11.3 works with
|
||
GCC, you need to configure with
|
||
‘--with-gmp-include=/usr/include/gmp’.
|
||
|
||
• The version of the MPFR libary included in Solaris 11.3 is too old;
|
||
you need to provide a more recent one.
|
||
|
||
sparc*-*-*
|
||
==========
|
||
|
||
This section contains general configuration information for all
|
||
SPARC-based platforms. In addition to reading this section, please read
|
||
all other sections that match your target.
|
||
|
||
Newer versions of the GNU Multiple Precision Library (GMP), the MPFR
|
||
library and the MPC library are known to be miscompiled by earlier
|
||
versions of GCC on these platforms. We therefore recommend the use of
|
||
the exact versions of these libraries listed as minimal versions in the
|
||
prerequisites.
|
||
|
||
sparc-sun-solaris2*
|
||
===================
|
||
|
||
When GCC is configured to use GNU binutils 2.14 or later, the binaries
|
||
produced are smaller than the ones produced using Solaris native tools;
|
||
this difference is quite significant for binaries containing debugging
|
||
information.
|
||
|
||
Starting with Solaris 7, the operating system is capable of executing
|
||
64-bit SPARC V9 binaries. GCC 3.1 and later properly supports this; the
|
||
‘-m64’ option enables 64-bit code generation.
|
||
|
||
When configuring the GNU Multiple Precision Library (GMP), the MPFR
|
||
library or the MPC library on Solaris, the canonical target triplet must
|
||
be specified as the ‘build’ parameter on the ‘configure’ line. This
|
||
target triplet can be obtained by invoking ‘./config.guess’ in the
|
||
toplevel source directory of GCC (and not that of GMP or MPFR or MPC).
|
||
For example:
|
||
|
||
% SRCDIR/configure --build=sparc-sun-solaris2.11 --prefix=DIRNAME
|
||
|
||
sparc-*-linux*
|
||
==============
|
||
|
||
sparc64-*-solaris2*
|
||
===================
|
||
|
||
This is a synonym for ‘sparcv9-*-solaris2*’.
|
||
|
||
sparcv9-*-solaris2*
|
||
===================
|
||
|
||
When configuring a 64-bit-default GCC on Solaris/SPARC, you must use a
|
||
build compiler that generates 64-bit code, either by default or by
|
||
specifying ‘CC='gcc -m64' CXX='g++ -m64' GDC='gdc -m64'’ to ‘configure’.
|
||
Additionally, you _must_ pass ‘--build=sparcv9-sun-solaris2.11’ or
|
||
‘--build=sparc64-sun-solaris2.11’ because ‘config.guess’ misdetects this
|
||
situation, which can cause build failures.
|
||
|
||
When configuring the GNU Multiple Precision Library (GMP), the MPFR
|
||
library or the MPC library, the canonical target triplet must be
|
||
specified as the ‘build’ parameter on the ‘configure’ line. For
|
||
example:
|
||
|
||
% SRCDIR/configure --build=sparcv9-sun-solaris2.11 --prefix=DIRNAME
|
||
|
||
c6x-*-*
|
||
=======
|
||
|
||
The C6X family of processors. This port requires binutils-2.22 or
|
||
newer.
|
||
|
||
visium-*-elf
|
||
============
|
||
|
||
CDS VISIUMcore processor. This configuration is intended for embedded
|
||
systems.
|
||
|
||
*-*-vxworks*
|
||
============
|
||
|
||
Support for VxWorks is in flux. At present GCC supports _only_ the very
|
||
recent VxWorks 5.5 (aka Tornado 2.2) release, and only on PowerPC. We
|
||
welcome patches for other architectures supported by VxWorks 5.5.
|
||
Support for VxWorks AE would also be welcome; we believe this is merely
|
||
a matter of writing an appropriate “configlette” (see below). We are
|
||
not interested in supporting older, a.out or COFF-based, versions of
|
||
VxWorks in GCC 3.
|
||
|
||
VxWorks comes with an older version of GCC installed in
|
||
‘$WIND_BASE/host’; we recommend you do not overwrite it. Choose an
|
||
installation PREFIX entirely outside $WIND_BASE. Before running
|
||
‘configure’, create the directories ‘PREFIX’ and ‘PREFIX/bin’. Link or
|
||
copy the appropriate assembler, linker, etc. into ‘PREFIX/bin’, and set
|
||
your PATH to include that directory while running both ‘configure’ and
|
||
‘make’.
|
||
|
||
You must give ‘configure’ the ‘--with-headers=$WIND_BASE/target/h’
|
||
switch so that it can find the VxWorks system headers. Since VxWorks is
|
||
a cross compilation target only, you must also specify
|
||
‘--target=TARGET’. ‘configure’ will attempt to create the directory
|
||
‘PREFIX/TARGET/sys-include’ and copy files into it; make sure the user
|
||
running ‘configure’ has sufficient privilege to do so.
|
||
|
||
GCC’s exception handling runtime requires a special “configlette”
|
||
module, ‘contrib/gthr_supp_vxw_5x.c’. Follow the instructions in that
|
||
file to add the module to your kernel build. (Future versions of
|
||
VxWorks will incorporate this module.)
|
||
|
||
x86_64-*-*, amd64-*-*
|
||
=====================
|
||
|
||
GCC supports the x86-64 architecture implemented by the AMD64 processor
|
||
(amd64-*-* is an alias for x86_64-*-*) on GNU/Linux, FreeBSD and NetBSD.
|
||
On GNU/Linux the default is a bi-arch compiler which is able to generate
|
||
both 64-bit x86-64 and 32-bit x86 code (via the ‘-m32’ switch).
|
||
|
||
x86_64-*-solaris2*
|
||
==================
|
||
|
||
GCC also supports the x86-64 architecture implemented by the AMD64
|
||
processor (‘amd64-*-*’ is an alias for ‘x86_64-*-*’). Unlike other
|
||
systems, without special options a bi-arch compiler is built which
|
||
generates 32-bit code by default, but can generate 64-bit x86-64 code
|
||
with the ‘-m64’ switch. Since GCC 4.7, there is also a configuration
|
||
that defaults to 64-bit code, but can generate 32-bit code with ‘-m32’.
|
||
To configure and build this way, you have to provide all support
|
||
libraries like ‘libgmp’ as 64-bit code, configure with
|
||
‘--target=x86_64-pc-solaris2.11’ and ‘CC=gcc -m64’.
|
||
|
||
xtensa*-*-elf
|
||
=============
|
||
|
||
This target is intended for embedded Xtensa systems using the ‘newlib’ C
|
||
library. It uses ELF but does not support shared objects.
|
||
Designed-defined instructions specified via the Tensilica Instruction
|
||
Extension (TIE) language are only supported through inline assembly.
|
||
|
||
The Xtensa configuration information must be specified prior to
|
||
building GCC. The ‘include/xtensa-config.h’ header file contains the
|
||
configuration information. If you created your own Xtensa configuration
|
||
with the Xtensa Processor Generator, the downloaded files include a
|
||
customized copy of this header file, which you can use to replace the
|
||
default header file.
|
||
|
||
xtensa*-*-linux*
|
||
================
|
||
|
||
This target is for Xtensa systems running GNU/Linux. It supports ELF
|
||
shared objects and the GNU C library (glibc). It also generates
|
||
position-independent code (PIC) regardless of whether the ‘-fpic’ or
|
||
‘-fPIC’ options are used. In other respects, this target is the same as
|
||
the ‘xtensa*-*-elf’ target.
|
||
|
||
Microsoft Windows
|
||
=================
|
||
|
||
Intel 16-bit versions
|
||
---------------------
|
||
|
||
The 16-bit versions of Microsoft Windows, such as Windows 3.1, are not
|
||
supported.
|
||
|
||
However, the 32-bit port has limited support for Microsoft Windows
|
||
3.11 in the Win32s environment, as a target only. See below.
|
||
|
||
Intel 32-bit versions
|
||
---------------------
|
||
|
||
The 32-bit versions of Windows, including Windows 95, Windows NT,
|
||
Windows XP, and Windows Vista, are supported by several different target
|
||
platforms. These targets differ in which Windows subsystem they target
|
||
and which C libraries are used.
|
||
|
||
• Cygwin *-*-cygwin: Cygwin provides a user-space Linux API emulation
|
||
layer in the Win32 subsystem.
|
||
• MinGW *-*-mingw32: MinGW is a native GCC port for the Win32
|
||
subsystem that provides a subset of POSIX.
|
||
• MKS i386-pc-mks: NuTCracker from MKS. See
|
||
<https://www.mkssoftware.com> for more information.
|
||
|
||
Intel 64-bit versions
|
||
---------------------
|
||
|
||
GCC contains support for x86-64 using the mingw-w64 runtime library,
|
||
available from <https://www.mingw-w64.org/downloads/>. This library
|
||
should be used with the target triple x86_64-pc-mingw32.
|
||
|
||
Windows CE
|
||
----------
|
||
|
||
Windows CE is supported as a target only on Hitachi SuperH
|
||
(sh-wince-pe), and MIPS (mips-wince-pe).
|
||
|
||
Other Windows Platforms
|
||
-----------------------
|
||
|
||
GCC no longer supports Windows NT on the Alpha or PowerPC.
|
||
|
||
GCC no longer supports the Windows POSIX subsystem. However, it does
|
||
support the Interix subsystem. See above.
|
||
|
||
Old target names including *-*-winnt and *-*-windowsnt are no longer
|
||
used.
|
||
|
||
UWIN support has been removed due to a lack of maintenance.
|
||
|
||
*-*-cygwin
|
||
==========
|
||
|
||
Ports of GCC are included with the Cygwin environment.
|
||
|
||
GCC will build under Cygwin without modification; it does not build
|
||
with Microsoft’s C++ compiler and there are no plans to make it do so.
|
||
|
||
The Cygwin native compiler can be configured to target any 32-bit x86
|
||
cpu architecture desired; the default is i686-pc-cygwin. It should be
|
||
used with as up-to-date a version of binutils as possible; use either
|
||
the latest official GNU binutils release in the Cygwin distribution, or
|
||
version 2.20 or above if building your own.
|
||
|
||
*-*-mingw32
|
||
===========
|
||
|
||
GCC will build with and support only MinGW runtime 3.12 and later.
|
||
Earlier versions of headers are incompatible with the new default
|
||
semantics of ‘extern inline’ in ‘-std=c99’ and ‘-std=gnu99’ modes.
|
||
|
||
To support emitting DWARF debugging info you need to use GNU binutils
|
||
version 2.16 or above containing support for the ‘.secrel32’ assembler
|
||
pseudo-op.
|
||
|
||
Older systems
|
||
=============
|
||
|
||
GCC contains support files for many older (1980s and early 1990s) Unix
|
||
variants. For the most part, support for these systems has not been
|
||
deliberately removed, but it has not been maintained for several years
|
||
and may suffer from bitrot.
|
||
|
||
Starting with GCC 3.1, each release has a list of “obsoleted”
|
||
systems. Support for these systems is still present in that release,
|
||
but ‘configure’ will fail unless the ‘--enable-obsolete’ option is
|
||
given. Unless a maintainer steps forward, support for these systems
|
||
will be removed from the next release of GCC.
|
||
|
||
Support for old systems as hosts for GCC can cause problems if the
|
||
workarounds for compiler, library and operating system bugs affect the
|
||
cleanliness or maintainability of the rest of GCC. In some cases, to
|
||
bring GCC up on such a system, if still possible with current GCC, may
|
||
require first installing an old version of GCC which did work on that
|
||
system, and using it to compile a more recent GCC, to avoid bugs in the
|
||
vendor compiler. Old releases of GCC 1 and GCC 2 are available in the
|
||
‘old-releases’ directory on the GCC mirror sites. Header bugs may
|
||
generally be avoided using ‘fixincludes’, but bugs or deficiencies in
|
||
libraries and the operating system may still cause problems.
|
||
|
||
Support for older systems as targets for cross-compilation is less
|
||
problematic than support for them as hosts for GCC; if an enthusiast
|
||
wishes to make such a target work again (including resurrecting any of
|
||
the targets that never worked with GCC 2, starting from the last version
|
||
before they were removed), patches following the usual requirements
|
||
would be likely to be accepted, since they should not affect the support
|
||
for more modern targets.
|
||
|
||
For some systems, old versions of GNU binutils may also be useful,
|
||
and are available from ‘pub/binutils/old-releases’ on sourceware.org
|
||
mirror sites.
|
||
|
||
Some of the information on specific systems above relates to such
|
||
older systems, but much of the information about GCC on such systems
|
||
(which may no longer be applicable to current GCC) is to be found in the
|
||
GCC texinfo manual.
|
||
|
||
all ELF targets (SVR4, Solaris, etc.)
|
||
=====================================
|
||
|
||
C++ support is significantly better on ELF targets if you use the GNU
|
||
linker; duplicate copies of inlines, vtables and template instantiations
|
||
will be discarded automatically.
|
||
|
||
|
||
File: gccinstall.info, Node: GNU Free Documentation License, Next: Concept Index, Prev: Specific, Up: Top
|
||
|
||
GNU Free Documentation License
|
||
******************************
|
||
|
||
Version 1.3, 3 November 2008
|
||
|
||
Copyright © 2000, 2001, 2002, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
|
||
<https://www.fsf.org>
|
||
|
||
Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
|
||
of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
|
||
|
||
0. PREAMBLE
|
||
|
||
The purpose of this License is to make a manual, textbook, or other
|
||
functional and useful document “free” in the sense of freedom: to
|
||
assure everyone the effective freedom to copy and redistribute it,
|
||
with or without modifying it, either commercially or
|
||
noncommercially. Secondarily, this License preserves for the
|
||
author and publisher a way to get credit for their work, while not
|
||
being considered responsible for modifications made by others.
|
||
|
||
This License is a kind of “copyleft”, which means that derivative
|
||
works of the document must themselves be free in the same sense.
|
||
It complements the GNU General Public License, which is a copyleft
|
||
license designed for free software.
|
||
|
||
We have designed this License in order to use it for manuals for
|
||
free software, because free software needs free documentation: a
|
||
free program should come with manuals providing the same freedoms
|
||
that the software does. But this License is not limited to
|
||
software manuals; it can be used for any textual work, regardless
|
||
of subject matter or whether it is published as a printed book. We
|
||
recommend this License principally for works whose purpose is
|
||
instruction or reference.
|
||
|
||
1. APPLICABILITY AND DEFINITIONS
|
||
|
||
This License applies to any manual or other work, in any medium,
|
||
that contains a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it can
|
||
be distributed under the terms of this License. Such a notice
|
||
grants a world-wide, royalty-free license, unlimited in duration,
|
||
to use that work under the conditions stated herein. The
|
||
“Document”, below, refers to any such manual or work. Any member
|
||
of the public is a licensee, and is addressed as “you”. You accept
|
||
the license if you copy, modify or distribute the work in a way
|
||
requiring permission under copyright law.
|
||
|
||
A “Modified Version” of the Document means any work containing the
|
||
Document or a portion of it, either copied verbatim, or with
|
||
modifications and/or translated into another language.
|
||
|
||
A “Secondary Section” is a named appendix or a front-matter section
|
||
of the Document that deals exclusively with the relationship of the
|
||
publishers or authors of the Document to the Document’s overall
|
||
subject (or to related matters) and contains nothing that could
|
||
fall directly within that overall subject. (Thus, if the Document
|
||
is in part a textbook of mathematics, a Secondary Section may not
|
||
explain any mathematics.) The relationship could be a matter of
|
||
historical connection with the subject or with related matters, or
|
||
of legal, commercial, philosophical, ethical or political position
|
||
regarding them.
|
||
|
||
The “Invariant Sections” are certain Secondary Sections whose
|
||
titles are designated, as being those of Invariant Sections, in the
|
||
notice that says that the Document is released under this License.
|
||
If a section does not fit the above definition of Secondary then it
|
||
is not allowed to be designated as Invariant. The Document may
|
||
contain zero Invariant Sections. If the Document does not identify
|
||
any Invariant Sections then there are none.
|
||
|
||
The “Cover Texts” are certain short passages of text that are
|
||
listed, as Front-Cover Texts or Back-Cover Texts, in the notice
|
||
that says that the Document is released under this License. A
|
||
Front-Cover Text may be at most 5 words, and a Back-Cover Text may
|
||
be at most 25 words.
|
||
|
||
A “Transparent” copy of the Document means a machine-readable copy,
|
||
represented in a format whose specification is available to the
|
||
general public, that is suitable for revising the document
|
||
straightforwardly with generic text editors or (for images composed
|
||
of pixels) generic paint programs or (for drawings) some widely
|
||
available drawing editor, and that is suitable for input to text
|
||
formatters or for automatic translation to a variety of formats
|
||
suitable for input to text formatters. A copy made in an otherwise
|
||
Transparent file format whose markup, or absence of markup, has
|
||
been arranged to thwart or discourage subsequent modification by
|
||
readers is not Transparent. An image format is not Transparent if
|
||
used for any substantial amount of text. A copy that is not
|
||
“Transparent” is called “Opaque”.
|
||
|
||
Examples of suitable formats for Transparent copies include plain
|
||
ASCII without markup, Texinfo input format, LaTeX input format,
|
||
SGML or XML using a publicly available DTD, and standard-conforming
|
||
simple HTML, PostScript or PDF designed for human modification.
|
||
Examples of transparent image formats include PNG, XCF and JPG.
|
||
Opaque formats include proprietary formats that can be read and
|
||
edited only by proprietary word processors, SGML or XML for which
|
||
the DTD and/or processing tools are not generally available, and
|
||
the machine-generated HTML, PostScript or PDF produced by some word
|
||
processors for output purposes only.
|
||
|
||
The “Title Page” means, for a printed book, the title page itself,
|
||
plus such following pages as are needed to hold, legibly, the
|
||
material this License requires to appear in the title page. For
|
||
works in formats which do not have any title page as such, “Title
|
||
Page” means the text near the most prominent appearance of the
|
||
work’s title, preceding the beginning of the body of the text.
|
||
|
||
The “publisher” means any person or entity that distributes copies
|
||
of the Document to the public.
|
||
|
||
A section “Entitled XYZ” means a named subunit of the Document
|
||
whose title either is precisely XYZ or contains XYZ in parentheses
|
||
following text that translates XYZ in another language. (Here XYZ
|
||
stands for a specific section name mentioned below, such as
|
||
“Acknowledgements”, “Dedications”, “Endorsements”, or “History”.)
|
||
To “Preserve the Title” of such a section when you modify the
|
||
Document means that it remains a section “Entitled XYZ” according
|
||
to this definition.
|
||
|
||
The Document may include Warranty Disclaimers next to the notice
|
||
which states that this License applies to the Document. These
|
||
Warranty Disclaimers are considered to be included by reference in
|
||
this License, but only as regards disclaiming warranties: any other
|
||
implication that these Warranty Disclaimers may have is void and
|
||
has no effect on the meaning of this License.
|
||
|
||
2. VERBATIM COPYING
|
||
|
||
You may copy and distribute the Document in any medium, either
|
||
commercially or noncommercially, provided that this License, the
|
||
copyright notices, and the license notice saying this License
|
||
applies to the Document are reproduced in all copies, and that you
|
||
add no other conditions whatsoever to those of this License. You
|
||
may not use technical measures to obstruct or control the reading
|
||
or further copying of the copies you make or distribute. However,
|
||
you may accept compensation in exchange for copies. If you
|
||
distribute a large enough number of copies you must also follow the
|
||
conditions in section 3.
|
||
|
||
You may also lend copies, under the same conditions stated above,
|
||
and you may publicly display copies.
|
||
|
||
3. COPYING IN QUANTITY
|
||
|
||
If you publish printed copies (or copies in media that commonly
|
||
have printed covers) of the Document, numbering more than 100, and
|
||
the Document’s license notice requires Cover Texts, you must
|
||
enclose the copies in covers that carry, clearly and legibly, all
|
||
these Cover Texts: Front-Cover Texts on the front cover, and
|
||
Back-Cover Texts on the back cover. Both covers must also clearly
|
||
and legibly identify you as the publisher of these copies. The
|
||
front cover must present the full title with all words of the title
|
||
equally prominent and visible. You may add other material on the
|
||
covers in addition. Copying with changes limited to the covers, as
|
||
long as they preserve the title of the Document and satisfy these
|
||
conditions, can be treated as verbatim copying in other respects.
|
||
|
||
If the required texts for either cover are too voluminous to fit
|
||
legibly, you should put the first ones listed (as many as fit
|
||
reasonably) on the actual cover, and continue the rest onto
|
||
adjacent pages.
|
||
|
||
If you publish or distribute Opaque copies of the Document
|
||
numbering more than 100, you must either include a machine-readable
|
||
Transparent copy along with each Opaque copy, or state in or with
|
||
each Opaque copy a computer-network location from which the general
|
||
network-using public has access to download using public-standard
|
||
network protocols a complete Transparent copy of the Document, free
|
||
of added material. If you use the latter option, you must take
|
||
reasonably prudent steps, when you begin distribution of Opaque
|
||
copies in quantity, to ensure that this Transparent copy will
|
||
remain thus accessible at the stated location until at least one
|
||
year after the last time you distribute an Opaque copy (directly or
|
||
through your agents or retailers) of that edition to the public.
|
||
|
||
It is requested, but not required, that you contact the authors of
|
||
the Document well before redistributing any large number of copies,
|
||
to give them a chance to provide you with an updated version of the
|
||
Document.
|
||
|
||
4. MODIFICATIONS
|
||
|
||
You may copy and distribute a Modified Version of the Document
|
||
under the conditions of sections 2 and 3 above, provided that you
|
||
release the Modified Version under precisely this License, with the
|
||
Modified Version filling the role of the Document, thus licensing
|
||
distribution and modification of the Modified Version to whoever
|
||
possesses a copy of it. In addition, you must do these things in
|
||
the Modified Version:
|
||
|
||
A. Use in the Title Page (and on the covers, if any) a title
|
||
distinct from that of the Document, and from those of previous
|
||
versions (which should, if there were any, be listed in the
|
||
History section of the Document). You may use the same title
|
||
as a previous version if the original publisher of that
|
||
version gives permission.
|
||
|
||
B. List on the Title Page, as authors, one or more persons or
|
||
entities responsible for authorship of the modifications in
|
||
the Modified Version, together with at least five of the
|
||
principal authors of the Document (all of its principal
|
||
authors, if it has fewer than five), unless they release you
|
||
from this requirement.
|
||
|
||
C. State on the Title page the name of the publisher of the
|
||
Modified Version, as the publisher.
|
||
|
||
D. Preserve all the copyright notices of the Document.
|
||
|
||
E. Add an appropriate copyright notice for your modifications
|
||
adjacent to the other copyright notices.
|
||
|
||
F. Include, immediately after the copyright notices, a license
|
||
notice giving the public permission to use the Modified
|
||
Version under the terms of this License, in the form shown in
|
||
the Addendum below.
|
||
|
||
G. Preserve in that license notice the full lists of Invariant
|
||
Sections and required Cover Texts given in the Document’s
|
||
license notice.
|
||
|
||
H. Include an unaltered copy of this License.
|
||
|
||
I. Preserve the section Entitled “History”, Preserve its Title,
|
||
and add to it an item stating at least the title, year, new
|
||
authors, and publisher of the Modified Version as given on the
|
||
Title Page. If there is no section Entitled “History” in the
|
||
Document, create one stating the title, year, authors, and
|
||
publisher of the Document as given on its Title Page, then add
|
||
an item describing the Modified Version as stated in the
|
||
previous sentence.
|
||
|
||
J. Preserve the network location, if any, given in the Document
|
||
for public access to a Transparent copy of the Document, and
|
||
likewise the network locations given in the Document for
|
||
previous versions it was based on. These may be placed in the
|
||
“History” section. You may omit a network location for a work
|
||
that was published at least four years before the Document
|
||
itself, or if the original publisher of the version it refers
|
||
to gives permission.
|
||
|
||
K. For any section Entitled “Acknowledgements” or “Dedications”,
|
||
Preserve the Title of the section, and preserve in the section
|
||
all the substance and tone of each of the contributor
|
||
acknowledgements and/or dedications given therein.
|
||
|
||
L. Preserve all the Invariant Sections of the Document, unaltered
|
||
in their text and in their titles. Section numbers or the
|
||
equivalent are not considered part of the section titles.
|
||
|
||
M. Delete any section Entitled “Endorsements”. Such a section
|
||
may not be included in the Modified Version.
|
||
|
||
N. Do not retitle any existing section to be Entitled
|
||
“Endorsements” or to conflict in title with any Invariant
|
||
Section.
|
||
|
||
O. Preserve any Warranty Disclaimers.
|
||
|
||
If the Modified Version includes new front-matter sections or
|
||
appendices that qualify as Secondary Sections and contain no
|
||
material copied from the Document, you may at your option designate
|
||
some or all of these sections as invariant. To do this, add their
|
||
titles to the list of Invariant Sections in the Modified Version’s
|
||
license notice. These titles must be distinct from any other
|
||
section titles.
|
||
|
||
You may add a section Entitled “Endorsements”, provided it contains
|
||
nothing but endorsements of your Modified Version by various
|
||
parties—for example, statements of peer review or that the text has
|
||
been approved by an organization as the authoritative definition of
|
||
a standard.
|
||
|
||
You may add a passage of up to five words as a Front-Cover Text,
|
||
and a passage of up to 25 words as a Back-Cover Text, to the end of
|
||
the list of Cover Texts in the Modified Version. Only one passage
|
||
of Front-Cover Text and one of Back-Cover Text may be added by (or
|
||
through arrangements made by) any one entity. If the Document
|
||
already includes a cover text for the same cover, previously added
|
||
by you or by arrangement made by the same entity you are acting on
|
||
behalf of, you may not add another; but you may replace the old
|
||
one, on explicit permission from the previous publisher that added
|
||
the old one.
|
||
|
||
The author(s) and publisher(s) of the Document do not by this
|
||
License give permission to use their names for publicity for or to
|
||
assert or imply endorsement of any Modified Version.
|
||
|
||
5. COMBINING DOCUMENTS
|
||
|
||
You may combine the Document with other documents released under
|
||
this License, under the terms defined in section 4 above for
|
||
modified versions, provided that you include in the combination all
|
||
of the Invariant Sections of all of the original documents,
|
||
unmodified, and list them all as Invariant Sections of your
|
||
combined work in its license notice, and that you preserve all
|
||
their Warranty Disclaimers.
|
||
|
||
The combined work need only contain one copy of this License, and
|
||
multiple identical Invariant Sections may be replaced with a single
|
||
copy. If there are multiple Invariant Sections with the same name
|
||
but different contents, make the title of each such section unique
|
||
by adding at the end of it, in parentheses, the name of the
|
||
original author or publisher of that section if known, or else a
|
||
unique number. Make the same adjustment to the section titles in
|
||
the list of Invariant Sections in the license notice of the
|
||
combined work.
|
||
|
||
In the combination, you must combine any sections Entitled
|
||
“History” in the various original documents, forming one section
|
||
Entitled “History”; likewise combine any sections Entitled
|
||
“Acknowledgements”, and any sections Entitled “Dedications”. You
|
||
must delete all sections Entitled “Endorsements.”
|
||
|
||
6. COLLECTIONS OF DOCUMENTS
|
||
|
||
You may make a collection consisting of the Document and other
|
||
documents released under this License, and replace the individual
|
||
copies of this License in the various documents with a single copy
|
||
that is included in the collection, provided that you follow the
|
||
rules of this License for verbatim copying of each of the documents
|
||
in all other respects.
|
||
|
||
You may extract a single document from such a collection, and
|
||
distribute it individually under this License, provided you insert
|
||
a copy of this License into the extracted document, and follow this
|
||
License in all other respects regarding verbatim copying of that
|
||
document.
|
||
|
||
7. AGGREGATION WITH INDEPENDENT WORKS
|
||
|
||
A compilation of the Document or its derivatives with other
|
||
separate and independent documents or works, in or on a volume of a
|
||
storage or distribution medium, is called an “aggregate” if the
|
||
copyright resulting from the compilation is not used to limit the
|
||
legal rights of the compilation’s users beyond what the individual
|
||
works permit. When the Document is included in an aggregate, this
|
||
License does not apply to the other works in the aggregate which
|
||
are not themselves derivative works of the Document.
|
||
|
||
If the Cover Text requirement of section 3 is applicable to these
|
||
copies of the Document, then if the Document is less than one half
|
||
of the entire aggregate, the Document’s Cover Texts may be placed
|
||
on covers that bracket the Document within the aggregate, or the
|
||
electronic equivalent of covers if the Document is in electronic
|
||
form. Otherwise they must appear on printed covers that bracket
|
||
the whole aggregate.
|
||
|
||
8. TRANSLATION
|
||
|
||
Translation is considered a kind of modification, so you may
|
||
distribute translations of the Document under the terms of section
|
||
4. Replacing Invariant Sections with translations requires special
|
||
permission from their copyright holders, but you may include
|
||
translations of some or all Invariant Sections in addition to the
|
||
original versions of these Invariant Sections. You may include a
|
||
translation of this License, and all the license notices in the
|
||
Document, and any Warranty Disclaimers, provided that you also
|
||
include the original English version of this License and the
|
||
original versions of those notices and disclaimers. In case of a
|
||
disagreement between the translation and the original version of
|
||
this License or a notice or disclaimer, the original version will
|
||
prevail.
|
||
|
||
If a section in the Document is Entitled “Acknowledgements”,
|
||
“Dedications”, or “History”, the requirement (section 4) to
|
||
Preserve its Title (section 1) will typically require changing the
|
||
actual title.
|
||
|
||
9. TERMINATION
|
||
|
||
You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Document
|
||
except as expressly provided under this License. Any attempt
|
||
otherwise to copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute it is void,
|
||
and will automatically terminate your rights under this License.
|
||
|
||
However, if you cease all violation of this License, then your
|
||
license from a particular copyright holder is reinstated (a)
|
||
provisionally, unless and until the copyright holder explicitly and
|
||
finally terminates your license, and (b) permanently, if the
|
||
copyright holder fails to notify you of the violation by some
|
||
reasonable means prior to 60 days after the cessation.
|
||
|
||
Moreover, your license from a particular copyright holder is
|
||
reinstated permanently if the copyright holder notifies you of the
|
||
violation by some reasonable means, this is the first time you have
|
||
received notice of violation of this License (for any work) from
|
||
that copyright holder, and you cure the violation prior to 30 days
|
||
after your receipt of the notice.
|
||
|
||
Termination of your rights under this section does not terminate
|
||
the licenses of parties who have received copies or rights from you
|
||
under this License. If your rights have been terminated and not
|
||
permanently reinstated, receipt of a copy of some or all of the
|
||
same material does not give you any rights to use it.
|
||
|
||
10. FUTURE REVISIONS OF THIS LICENSE
|
||
|
||
The Free Software Foundation may publish new, revised versions of
|
||
the GNU Free Documentation License from time to time. Such new
|
||
versions will be similar in spirit to the present version, but may
|
||
differ in detail to address new problems or concerns. See
|
||
<https://www.gnu.org/copyleft/>.
|
||
|
||
Each version of the License is given a distinguishing version
|
||
number. If the Document specifies that a particular numbered
|
||
version of this License “or any later version” applies to it, you
|
||
have the option of following the terms and conditions either of
|
||
that specified version or of any later version that has been
|
||
published (not as a draft) by the Free Software Foundation. If the
|
||
Document does not specify a version number of this License, you may
|
||
choose any version ever published (not as a draft) by the Free
|
||
Software Foundation. If the Document specifies that a proxy can
|
||
decide which future versions of this License can be used, that
|
||
proxy’s public statement of acceptance of a version permanently
|
||
authorizes you to choose that version for the Document.
|
||
|
||
11. RELICENSING
|
||
|
||
“Massive Multiauthor Collaboration Site” (or “MMC Site”) means any
|
||
World Wide Web server that publishes copyrightable works and also
|
||
provides prominent facilities for anybody to edit those works. A
|
||
public wiki that anybody can edit is an example of such a server.
|
||
A “Massive Multiauthor Collaboration” (or “MMC”) contained in the
|
||
site means any set of copyrightable works thus published on the MMC
|
||
site.
|
||
|
||
“CC-BY-SA” means the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0
|
||
license published by Creative Commons Corporation, a not-for-profit
|
||
corporation with a principal place of business in San Francisco,
|
||
California, as well as future copyleft versions of that license
|
||
published by that same organization.
|
||
|
||
“Incorporate” means to publish or republish a Document, in whole or
|
||
in part, as part of another Document.
|
||
|
||
An MMC is “eligible for relicensing” if it is licensed under this
|
||
License, and if all works that were first published under this
|
||
License somewhere other than this MMC, and subsequently
|
||
incorporated in whole or in part into the MMC, (1) had no cover
|
||
texts or invariant sections, and (2) were thus incorporated prior
|
||
to November 1, 2008.
|
||
|
||
The operator of an MMC Site may republish an MMC contained in the
|
||
site under CC-BY-SA on the same site at any time before August 1,
|
||
2009, provided the MMC is eligible for relicensing.
|
||
|
||
ADDENDUM: How to use this License for your documents
|
||
====================================================
|
||
|
||
To use this License in a document you have written, include a copy of
|
||
the License in the document and put the following copyright and license
|
||
notices just after the title page:
|
||
|
||
Copyright (C) YEAR YOUR NAME.
|
||
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
|
||
under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3
|
||
or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation;
|
||
with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover
|
||
Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU
|
||
Free Documentation License''.
|
||
|
||
If you have Invariant Sections, Front-Cover Texts and Back-Cover
|
||
Texts, replace the “with...Texts.” line with this:
|
||
|
||
with the Invariant Sections being LIST THEIR TITLES, with
|
||
the Front-Cover Texts being LIST, and with the Back-Cover Texts
|
||
being LIST.
|
||
|
||
If you have Invariant Sections without Cover Texts, or some other
|
||
combination of the three, merge those two alternatives to suit the
|
||
situation.
|
||
|
||
If your document contains nontrivial examples of program code, we
|
||
recommend releasing these examples in parallel under your choice of free
|
||
software license, such as the GNU General Public License, to permit
|
||
their use in free software.
|
||
|
||
|
||
File: gccinstall.info, Node: Concept Index, Prev: GNU Free Documentation License, Up: Top
|
||
|
||
Concept Index
|
||
*************
|
||
|
||
|