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Here is the procedure for installing GNU CC on a Unix system.
1.1 Compilation in a Separate Directory | Compiling in a separate directory (not where the source is). | |
1.2 Building and Installing a Cross-Compiler | Building and installing a cross-compiler. | |
1.3 Installing GNU CC on the HP Precision Architecture | See below for installation on the HP Precision Architecture. | |
1.4 Installing GNU CC on the Sun | See below for installation on the Sun. | |
1.5 Installing GNU CC on the 3b1 | See below for installation on the 3b1. | |
1.6 Installing GNU CC on Unos | See below for installation on Unos (from CRDS). | |
1.7 Installing GNU CC on VMS | See below for installation on VMS. | |
1.8 Installing GNU CC on the WE32K | See below for installation on the 3b* aside from the 3b1. | |
1.9 Installing GNU CC on the MIPS | See below for installation on the MIPS Architecture. |
PATH
. The cc
command in
‘/usr/ucb’ uses libraries which have bugs.
If you are building a compiler to produce code for the machine it runs on, specify just one machine type. Use the ‘--target’ option; the host type will default to be the same as the target. (For information on building a cross-compiler, see Building and Installing a Cross-Compiler.) The command looks like this:
configure --target=sparc-sun-sunos4.1
A configuration name may be canonical or it may be more or less abbreviated.
A canonical configuration name has three parts, separated by dashes. It looks like this: ‘cpu-company-system’. (The three parts may themselves contain dashes; ‘configure’ can figure out which dashes serve which purpose.) For example, ‘m68k-sun-sunos4.1’ specifies a Sun 3.
You can also replace parts of the configuration by nicknames or aliases. For example, ‘sun3’ stands for ‘m68k-sun’, so ‘sun3-sunos4.1’ is another way to specify a Sun 3. You can also use simply ‘sun3-sunos’, since the version of SunOS is assumed by default to be version 4. ‘sun3-bsd’ also works, since ‘configure’ knows that the only BSD variant on a Sun 3 is SunOS.
You can specify a version number after any of the system types, and some of the CPU types. In most cases, the version is irrelevant, and will be ignored. So you might as well specify the version if you know it.
Here are the possible CPU types:
a29k, alpha, arm, cn, elxsi, hppa1.0, hppa1.1, i386, i860, i960, m68000, m68k, m88k, mips, ns32k, pyramid, romp, rs6000, sparc, vax, we32k.
Here are the recognized company names. As you can see, customary abbreviations are used rather than the longer official names.
alliant, altos, apollo, att, cbm, convergent, convex, crds, dec, dg, encore, harris, hp, ibm, mips, motorola, ncr, next, ns, omron, sequent, sgi, sony, sun, tti, unicom.
The company name is meaningful only to disambiguate when the rest of the information supplied is insufficient. You can omit it, writing just ‘cpu-system’, if it is not needed. For example, ‘vax-ultrix4.2’ is equivalent to ‘vax-dec-ultrix4.2’.
Here is a list of system types:
aix, aos, bsd, ctix, dgux, dynix, genix, hpux, isc, linux, luna, mach, minix, newsos, osf, osfrose, riscos, sco, sunos, sysv, ultrix, unos, vms.
You can omit the system type; then ‘configure’ guesses the operating system from the CPU and company.
You can add a version number to the system type; this may or may not make a difference. For example, you can write ‘bsd4.3’ or ‘bsd4.4’ to distinguish versions of BSD. In practice, the version number is most needed for ‘sysv3’ and ‘sysv4’, which are often treated differently.
If you specify an impossible combination such as ‘i860-dg-vms’, then you may get an error message from ‘configure’, or it may ignore part of the information and do the best it can with the rest. ‘configure’ always prints the canonical name for the alternative that it used.
Often a particular model of machine has a name. Many machine names are recognized as aliases for CPU/company combinations. Thus, the machine name ‘sun3’, mentioned above, is an alias for ‘m68k-sun’. Sometimes we accept a company name as a machine name, when the name is popularly used for a particular machine. Here is a table of the known machine names:
3300, 3b1, 3bn, 7300, altos3068, altos, apollo68, att-7300, balance, convex-cn, crds, decstation-3100, decstation, delta, encore, fx2800, gmicro, hp7nn, hp8nn, hp9k2nn, hp9k3nn, hp9k7nn, hp9k8nn, iris4d, iris, isi68, m3230, magnum, merlin, miniframe, mmax, news-3600, news800, news, next, pbd, pc532, pmax, ps2, risc-news, rtpc, sun2, sun386i, sun386, sun3, sun4, symmetry, tower-32, tower.
Remember that a machine name specifies both the cpu type and the company name.
There are four additional options you can specify independently to describe variant hardware and software configurations. These are ‘--with-gnu-as’, ‘--with-gnu-ld’, ‘--with-stabs’ and ‘--nfp’.
On certain systems, you must specify whether you want GNU CC to work with the usual compilation tools or with the GNU compilation tools (including GAS). Use the ‘--with-gnu-as’ argument when you run ‘configure’, if you want to use the GNU tools. (Specify ‘--with-gnu-ld’ as well, since on these systems GAS works only with the GNU linker.) The systems where this makes a difference are ‘i386-anything-sysv’, ‘i860-anything-bsd’, ‘m68k-hp-hpux’, ‘m68k-sony-bsd’, ‘m68k-altos-sysv’, ‘m68000-hp-hpux’, and ‘m68000-att-sysv’. On any other system, ‘--with-gnu-as’ has no effect.
Specify the option ‘--with-gnu-ld’ if you plan to use the GNU
linker. This inhibits the installation of collect2
, a program
which otherwise serves as a front-end for the system’s linker on most
configurations.
On MIPS based systems, you must specify whether you want GNU CC to create the normal ECOFF debugging format, or to use BSD-style stabs passed through the ECOFF symbol table. The normal ECOFF debug format cannot fully handle languages other than C. BSD stabs format can handle other languages, but it only works with the GNU debugger GDB.
Normally, GNU CC uses the ECOFF debugging format by default; if you prefer BSD stabs, specify ‘--with-stabs’ when you configure GNU CC.
No matter which default you choose when you configure GNU CC, the user can use the ‘-gcoff’ and ‘-gstabs+’ options to specify explicitly the debug format for a particular compilation.
On certain systems, you must specify whether the machine has a floating point unit. These systems are ‘m68k-sun-sunosn’ and ‘m68k-isi-bsd’. On any other system, ‘--nfp’ currently has no effect, though perhaps there are other systems where it could usefully make a difference.
If you want to install your own homemade configuration files, you can use ‘local’ as the company name to access them. If you use configuration ‘cpu-local’, the entire configuration name is used to form the configuration file names.
Thus, if you specify ‘m68k-local’, then the files used are ‘m68k-local.md’, ‘m68k-local.h’, ‘m68k-local.c’, ‘xm-m68k-local.h’, ‘t-m68k-local’, and ‘x-m68k-local’.
Here is a list of configurations that have special treatment or special things you must know:
Systems using processors that implement the DEC Alpha architecture and are running the OSF/1 operating system. (VMS on the Alpha is not currently supported by GNU CC.) As of this writing, the only Alpha-based product currently available from DEC is the 21064 (EV4) processor chip; no system-level products can be ordered. This port is provided for those developers who might have early Alpha hardware from DEC or other vendors and run the OSF/1 operating system. It has not been extensively tested and both the C++ and Objective-C languages may not work, except in a cross-compilation environment.
The ASSEMBLE_FILE_START
macro writes a .verstamp
directive
containing the version of the calling sequence. Currently, we use
‘9 0’, which we believe will work until the official release by DEC
of their system, at which point ‘3 11’ is the correct value. If
you get a mismatch error from the assembler on a .verstamp
line,
consult the file ‘/usr/include/stamp.h’ for the present value. GNU
C on the Alpha does not support versions of DEC’s OSF/1 earlier than
BL9; if you are running an older version, we suggest you ask your DEC
contact for an update.
Note that since the Alpha is a 64-bit architecture, cross-compilers from 32-bit machines will not generate as efficient code as that generated when the compiler is running on a 64-bit machine because many optimizations that depend on being able to represent a word on the target in an integral value on the host cannot be performed.
AMD Am29K-family processors. These are normally used in embedded applications. There are no standard Unix configurations. This configuration corresponds to AMD’s standard calling sequence and binary interface and is compatible with other 29K tools.
You may need to make a variant of the file ‘a29k.h’ for your particular configuration.
AMD Am29050 used in a system running a variant of BSD Unix.
The Elxsi’s C compiler has known limitations that prevent it from
compiling GNU C. Please contact mrs@cygnus.com
for more details.
Compilation with RCC is recommended.
You need a version of GAS that you can get from tranle@intellicorp.com
.
Go to the Berkeley universe before compiling. In addition, you probably need to create a file named ‘string.h’ containing just one line: ‘#include <strings.h>’.
You may find that you need another version of GNU CC to begin bootstrapping with, since the current version when built with the system’s own compiler seems to get an infinite loop compiling part of ‘libgcc2.c’. GNU CC version 2 compiled with GNU CC (any version) seems not to have this problem.
AT&T 3b1, a.k.a. 7300 PC. Special procedures are needed to compile GNU CC with this machine’s standard C compiler, due to bugs in that compiler. See section Installing GNU CC on the 3b1. You can bootstrap it more easily with previous versions of GNU CC if you have them.
HP 9000 series 200 running BSD. Note that the C compiler that comes
with this system cannot compile GNU CC; contact law@cs.utah.edu
to get binaries of GNU CC for bootstrapping.
Altos 3068. You must use the GNU assembler, linker and debugger, with COFF-encapsulation. Also, you must fix a kernel bug. Details in the file ‘README.ALTOS’.
HP 9000 series 300 or 400 running HP-UX. HP-UX version 8.0 has a bug in the assembler that prevents compilation of GNU CC. To fix it, get patch PHCO_0800 from HP.
In addition, ‘--gas’ does not currently work with this configuration. Changes in HP-UX have broken the library conversion tool and the linker.
Sun 3. We do not provide a configuration file to use the Sun FPA by default, because programs that establish signal handlers for floating point traps inherently cannot work with the FPA.
Motorola m88k running the AT&T/Unisoft/Motorola V.3 reference port. These systems tend to use the Green Hills C, revision 1.8.5, as the standard C compiler. There are apparently bugs in this compiler that result in object files differences between stage 2 and stage 3. If this happens, make the stage 4 compiler and compare it to the stage 3 compiler. If the stage 3 and stage 4 object files are identical, this suggests a problem with the standard C compiler. It is best, however, to use an older version of GNU CC for bootstrapping.
Motorola m88k running DG/UX. To build native or cross compilers on DG/UX, you must first change to the 88open BCS software development environment. This is done by issuing this command:
eval `sde-target m88kbcs`
MIPS machines running the MIPS operating system in BSD mode. It’s
possible that some old versions of the system lack the functions
memcpy
, memcmp
, and memset
. If your system lacks
these, you must remove or undo the definition of
TARGET_MEM_FUNCTIONS
in ‘mips-bsd.h’.
Sony MIPS NEWS. This works in NEWSOS 5.0.1, but not in 5.0.2 (which uses ELF instead of COFF). Support for 5.0.2 will probably be provided soon by volunteers.
Encore ns32000 system. Encore systems are supported only under BSD.
National Semiconductor ns32000 system. Genix has bugs in alloca
and malloc
; you must get the compiled versions of these from GNU
Emacs.
Go to the Berkeley universe before compiling. In addition, you probably need to create a file named ‘string.h’ containing just one line: ‘#include <strings.h>’.
UTEK ns32000 system (“merlin”). The C compiler that comes with this system cannot compile GNU CC; contact ‘tektronix!reed!mason’ to get binaries of GNU CC for bootstrapping.
The only operating systems supported for the IBM RT PC are AOS and
MACH. GNU CC does not support AIX running on the RT. We recommend you
compile GNU CC with an earlier version of itself; if you compile GNU CC
with hc
, the Metaware compiler, it will work, but you will get
mismatches between the stage 2 and stage 3 compilers in various files.
These errors are minor differences in some floating-point constants and
can be safely ignored; the stage 3 compiler is correct.
Read the file ‘README.RS6000’ for information on how to get a fix for a problem in the IBM assembler that prevents use of GNU CC. You must either obtain the new assembler or avoid using the ‘-g’ switch. Note that ‘Makefile.in’ uses ‘-g’ by default when compiling ‘libgcc2.c’.
Don’t try compiling with Vax C (vcc
). It produces incorrect code
in some cases (for example, when alloca
is used).
Meanwhile, compiling ‘cp-parse.c’ with pcc does not work because of an internal table size limitation in that compiler. To avoid this problem, compile just the GNU C compiler first, and use it to recompile building all the languages that you want to run.
Here we spell out what files will be set up by configure
. Normally
you need not be concerned with these files.
The top-level config file is located in the subdirectory ‘config’. Its name is always ‘xm-something.h’; usually ‘xm-machine.h’, but there are some exceptions.
If your system does not support symbolic links, you might want to set up ‘config.h’ to contain a ‘#include’ command which refers to the appropriate file.
Bison versions older than Sept 8, 1988 will produce incorrect output for ‘c-parse.c’.
‘LANGUAGES=c’ specifies that only the C compiler should be compiled. The makefile normally builds compilers for all the supported languages; currently, C, C++ and Objective C. However, C is the only language that is sure to work when you build with other non-GNU C compilers. In addition, building anything but C at this stage is a waste of time.
In general, you can specify the languages to build by typing the argument ‘LANGUAGES="list"’, where list is one or more words from the list ‘c’, ‘c++’, and ‘objective-c’.
Ignore any warnings you may see about “statement not reached” in ‘insn-emit.c’; they are normal. Any other compilation errors may represent bugs in the port to your machine or operating system, and should be investigated and reported (@pxref{Bugs}).
Some commercial compilers fail to compile GNU CC because they have bugs or limitations. For example, the Microsoft compiler is said to run out of macro space. Some Ultrix compilers run out of expression space; then you need to break up the statement where the problem happens.
If you are building with a previous GNU C compiler, do not use ‘CC=gcc’ on the make command or by editing the Makefile. Instead, use a full pathname to specify the compiler, such as ‘CC=/usr/local/bin/gcc’. This is because make might execute the ‘gcc’ in the current directory before all of the compiler components have been built.
make stage1
The files are moved into a subdirectory named ‘stage1’.
Once installation is complete, you may wish to delete these files
with rm -r stage1
.
make CC="stage1/xgcc -Bstage1/" CFLAGS="-g -O"
This is called making the stage 2 compiler.
The command shown above builds compilers for all the supported
languages. If you don’t want them all, you can specify the languages to
build by typing the argument ‘LANGUAGES="list"’. list
should contain one or more words from the list ‘c’, ‘c++’,
‘objective-c’, and ‘proto’. Separate the words with spaces.
‘proto’ stands for the programs protoize
and
unprotoize
; they are not a separate language, but you use
LANGUAGES
to enable or disable their installation.
If you are going to build the stage 3 compiler, then you might want to build only the C language in stage 2.
Once you have built the stage 2 compiler, if you are short of disk space, you can delete the subdirectory ‘stage1’.
On a 68000 or 68020 system lacking floating point hardware, unless you have selected a ‘tm.h’ file that expects by default that there is no such hardware, do this instead:
make CC="stage1/xgcc -Bstage1/" CFLAGS="-g -O -msoft-float"
make stage2 make CC="stage2/xgcc -Bstage2/" CFLAGS="-g -O"
This is called making the stage 3 compiler. Aside from the ‘-B’
option, the compiler options should be the same as when you made the
stage 2 compiler. But the LANGUAGES
option need not be the
same. The command shown above builds compilers for all the supported
languages; if you don’t want them all, you can specify the languages to
build by typing the argument ‘LANGUAGES="list"’, as described
above.
Then compare the latest object files with the stage 2 object files—they ought to be identical, unless they contain time stamps. You can compare the files, disregarding the time stamps if any, like this:
make compare
This will mention any object files that differ between stage 2 and stage 3. Any difference, no matter how innocuous, indicates that the stage 2 compiler has compiled GNU CC incorrectly, and is therefore a potentially serious bug which you should investigate and report (@pxref{Bugs}).
If your system does not put time stamps in the object files, then this is a faster way to compare them (using the Bourne shell):
for file in *.o; do cmp $file stage2/$file done
If you have built the compiler with the ‘-mno-mips-tfile’ option on MIPS machines, you will not be able to compare the files.
make install CC="stage2/xgcc -Bstage2/" CFLAGS="-g -O" LANGUAGES="list"
(Use the same value for CC
, CFLAGS
and LANGUAGES
that you used when compiling the files that are being installed. One
reason this is necessary is that some versions of Make have bugs and
recompile files gratuitously when you do this step. If you use the same
variable values, those files will be recompiled properly.
This copies the files ‘cc1’, ‘cpp’ and ‘libgcc.a’ to files ‘cc1’, ‘cpp’ and ‘libgcc.a’ in directory ‘/usr/local/lib/gcc-lib/target/version’, which is where the compiler driver program looks for them. Here target is the target machine type specified when you ran ‘configure’, and version is the version number of GNU CC. This naming scheme permits various versions and/or cross-compilers to coexist.
It also copies the driver program ‘gcc’ into the directory ‘/usr/local/bin’, so that it appears in typical execution search paths.
On some systems, this command will cause recompilation of some files.
This is usually due to bugs in make
. You should either ignore
this problem, or use GNU Make.
Warning: there is a bug in alloca
in the Sun library. To
avoid this bug, be sure to install the executables of GNU CC that were
compiled by GNU CC. (That is, the executables from stage 2 or 3, not
stage 1.) They use alloca
as a built-in function and never the
one in the library.
(It is usually better to install GNU CC executables from stage 2 or 3, since they usually run faster than the ones compiled with some other compiler.)
make install-libobjc CC="stage2/xgcc -Bstage2/" CFLAGS="-g -O"
Various system header files often contain constructs which are erroneous, incompatible with ANSI C or otherwise unsuitable, and they will not work when you compile programs with GNU CC.
The most common erroneous construct is found in ‘ioctl.h’, where a macro expects argument values to be substituted for argument names inside of character constants—something not done in ANSI C. This particular problem can be prevented by using ‘-traditional’. Other problems are not so easy to work around.
GNU CC comes with shell scripts to fix known header file problems. They install corrected copies of various header files in a special directory where only GNU CC will normally look for them. The scripts adapt to various systems by searching all the system header files for the problem cases that we know about.
Use the following command to do this:
make install-fixincludes
If you selected a different directory for GNU CC installation when you
installed it, by specifying the Make variable prefix
or
libdir
, specify it the same way in this command.
Note that some systems are starting to come with ANSI C system header
files. On these systems, don’t run install-fixincludes
; it may
not work, and is certainly not necessary. One exception: there are is a
special script for System V release 4, which you should run.
It is not the purpose of install-fixincludes
to add prototypes to
the system header files. We support headers with ANSI C prototypes in
the GNU C Library, and we have no time to support adding them to other
systems’ header files.
libg++
distribution. It should be available from the same
place where you got the GCC distribution. Just as GCC does not
distribute a C runtime library, it also does not include a C++ run-time
library. All I/O functionality, special class libraries, etc., are
available in the libg++
distribution.
If you cannot install the compiler’s passes and run-time support in ‘/usr/local/lib’, you can alternatively use the ‘-B’ option to specify a prefix by which they may be found. The compiler concatenates the prefix with the names ‘cpp’, ‘cc1’ and ‘libgcc.a’. Thus, you can put the files in a directory ‘/usr/foo/gcc’ and specify ‘-B/usr/foo/gcc/’ when you run GNU CC.
Also, you can specify an alternative default directory for these files
by setting the Make variable libdir
when you make GNU CC.
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If you wish to build the object files and executables in a directory other than the one containing the source files, here is what you must do differently:
VPATH
feature. (GNU Make supports it, as do Make versions on most BSD
systems.)
make distclean
mkdir gcc-sun3 cd gcc-sun3
On systems that do not support symbolic links, this directory must be on the same file system as the source code directory.
../gcc/configure …
This also tells configure
where to find the compiler sources;
configure
takes the directory from the file name that was used to
invoke it. But if you want to be sure, you can specify the source
directory with the ‘--srcdir’ option, like this:
../gcc/configure --srcdir=../gcc sun3
The directory you specify with ‘--srcdir’ need not be the same
as the one that configure
is found in.
Now, you can run make
in that directory. You need not repeat the
configuration steps shown above, when ordinary source files change. You
must, however, run configure
again when the configuration files
change, if your system does not support symbolic links.
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GNU CC can function as a cross-compiler for many machines, but not all.
Since GNU CC generates assembler code, you probably need a cross-assembler that GNU CC can run, in order to produce object files. If you want to link on other than the target machine, you need a cross-linker as well. You also need header files and libraries suitable for the target machine that you can install on the host machine.
To build GNU CC as a cross-compiler, you start out by running
configure
. You must specify two different configurations, the
host and the target. Use the ‘--host=host’ option for the
host and ‘--target=target’ to specify the target type. For
example, here is how to configure for a cross-compiler that runs on a
hypothetical Intel 386 system and produces code for an HP 68030 system
running BSD:
configure --target=m68k-hp-bsd4.3 --host=i386-bozotheclone-bsd4.3
Next you should install the cross-assembler and cross-linker (and
ar
and ranlib
). Put them in the directory
‘/usr/local/target/bin’. The installation of GNU CC will find
them there and copy or link them to the proper place to find them when
you run the cross-compiler later.
If you want to install any additional libraries to use with the cross-compiler, put them in the directory ‘/usr/local/target/lib’; all files in that subdirectory will be installed in the proper place when you install the cross-compiler. Likewise, put the header files for the target machine in ‘/usr/local/target/include’.
You must now produce a substitute for ‘libgcc1.a’. Normally this file is compiled with the “native compiler” for the target machine; compiling it with GNU CC does not work. But compiling it with the host machine’s compiler also doesn’t work—that produces a file that would run on the host, and you need it to run on the target.
We can’t give you any automatic way to produce this substitute. For
some targets, the subroutines in ‘libgcc1.c’ are not actually used.
You need not provide the ones that won’t be used. The ones that most
commonly are used are the multiplication, division and remainder
routines—many RISC machines rely on the library for this. One way to
make them work is to define the appropriate perform_…
macros for the subroutines that you need. If these definitions do not
use the C arithmetic operators that they are meant to implement, you
might be able to compile them with the cross-compiler you are building.
To do this, specify ‘LIBGCC1=libgcc1.a OLDCC=./xgcc’ when building
the compiler.
Now you can proceed just as for compiling a single-machine compiler through the step of building stage 1. If you have not provided some sort of ‘libgcc1.a’, then compilation will give up at the point where it needs that file, printing a suitable error message. If you do provide ‘libgcc1.a’, then building the compiler will automatically compile and link a test program called ‘cross-test’; if you get errors in the linking, it means that not all of the necessary routines in ‘libgcc1.a’ are available.
When you are using a cross-compiler configuration, building stage 1 does not compile all of GNU CC. This is because one part of building, the compilation of ‘libgcc2.c’, requires use of the cross-compiler.
However, when you type ‘make install’ to install the bulk of the cross-compiler, that will also compile ‘libgcc2.c’ and install the resulting ‘libgcc.a’.
Do not try to build stage 2 for a cross-compiler. It doesn’t work to rebuild GNU CC as a cross-compiler using the cross-compiler, because that would produce a program that runs on the target machine, not on the host. For example, if you compile a 386-to-68030 cross-compiler with itself, the result will not be right either for the 386 (because it was compiled into 68030 code) or for the 68030 (because it was configured for a 386 as the host). If you want to compile GNU CC into 68030 code, whether you compile it on a 68030 or with a cross-compiler on a 386, you must specify a 68030 as the host when you configure it.
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There are two variants of this CPU, called 1.0 and 1.1, which have different machine descriptions. You must use the right one for your machine. All 7nn machines and 8n7 machines use 1.1, while all other 8nn machines use 1.0.
The easiest way to handle this problem is to use ‘configure hpnnn’ or ‘configure hpnnn-hpux’, where nnn is the model number of the machine. Then ‘configure’ will figure out if the machine is a 1.0 or 1.1. Use ‘uname -a’ to find out the model number of your machine.
‘-g’ does not work on HP-UX, since that system uses a peculiar
debugging format which GNU CC does not know about. There are preliminary
versions of GAS and GDB for the HP-PA which do work with GNU CC for
debugging. You can get them by anonymous ftp from jaguar.cs.utah.edu
‘dist’ subdirectory. You would need to install GAS in the file
/usr/local/lib/gcc-lib/configuration/gccversion/as
where configuration is the configuration name (perhaps ‘hpnnn-hpux’) and gccversion is the GNU CC version number. Do this before starting the build process, otherwise you will get errors from the HPUX assembler while building ‘libgcc2.a’. The command
make install-dir
will create the necessary directory hierarchy so you can install GAS before building GCC.
If you obtained GAS before October 6, 1992 it is highly recommended you get a new one to avoid several bugs which have been discovered recently.
To enable debugging, configure GNU CC with the ‘--gas’ option before building.
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Make sure the environment variable FLOAT_OPTION
is not set when
you compile ‘libgcc.a’. If this option were set to f68881
when ‘libgcc.a’ is compiled, the resulting code would demand to be
linked with a special startup file and would not link properly without
special pains.
There is a bug in alloca
in certain versions of the Sun library.
To avoid this bug, install the binaries of GNU CC that were compiled by
GNU CC. They use alloca
as a built-in function and never the one
in the library.
Some versions of the Sun compiler crash when compiling GNU CC. The problem is a segmentation fault in cpp. This problem seems to be due to the bulk of data in the environment variables. You may be able to avoid it by using the following command to compile GNU CC with Sun CC:
make CC="TERMCAP=x OBJS=x LIBFUNCS=x STAGESTUFF=x cc"
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Installing GNU CC on the 3b1 is difficult if you do not already have GNU CC running, due to bugs in the installed C compiler. However, the following procedure might work. We are unable to test it.
obstack_free
in the file
‘tree.c’ with _obstack_free
.
make
to get the first-stage GNU CC.
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Use ‘configure unos’ for building on Unos.
The Unos assembler is named casm
instead of as
. For some
strange reason linking ‘/bin/as’ to ‘/bin/casm’ changes the
behavior, and does not work. So, when installing GNU CC, you should
install the following script as ‘as’ in the subdirectory where
the passes of GCC are installed:
#!/bin/sh casm $*
The default Unos library is named ‘libunos.a’ instead of ‘libc.a’. To allow GNU CC to function, either change all references to ‘-lc’ in ‘gcc.c’ to ‘-lunos’ or link ‘/lib/libc.a’ to ‘/lib/libunos.a’.
When compiling GNU CC with the standard compiler, to overcome bugs in
the support of alloca
, do not use ‘-O’ when making stage 2.
Then use the stage 2 compiler with ‘-O’ to make the stage 3
compiler. This compiler will have the same characteristics as the usual
stage 2 compiler on other systems. Use it to make a stage 4 compiler
and compare that with stage 3 to verify proper compilation.
(Perhaps simply defining ALLOCA
in ‘x-crds’ as described in
the comments there will make the above paragraph superfluous. Please
inform us of whether this works.)
Unos uses memory segmentation instead of demand paging, so you will need a lot of memory. 5 Mb is barely enough if no other tasks are running. If linking ‘cc1’ fails, try putting the object files into a library and linking from that library.
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The VMS version of GNU CC is distributed in a backup saveset containing both source code and precompiled binaries.
To install the ‘gcc’ command so you can use the compiler easily, in the same manner as you use the VMS C compiler, you must install the VMS CLD file for GNU CC as follows:
$ assign /system /translation=concealed - disk:[gcc.] gnu_cc $ assign /system /translation=concealed - disk:[gcc.include.] gnu_cc_include
with the appropriate disk and directory names. These commands can be placed in your system startup file so they will be executed whenever the machine is rebooted. You may, if you choose, do this via the ‘GCC_INSTALL.COM’ script in the ‘[GCC]’ directory.
$ set command /table=sys$common:[syslib]dcltables - /output=sys$common:[syslib]dcltables gnu_cc:[000000]gcc $ install replace sys$common:[syslib]dcltables
$ library/help sys$library:helplib.hlb gcc.hlp
Now you can invoke the compiler with a command like ‘gcc /verbose file.c’, which is equivalent to the command ‘gcc -v -c file.c’ in Unix.
If you wish to use GNU C++ you must first install GNU CC, and then perform the following steps:
$ assign /system /translation=concealed - disk:[gcc.gxx_include.] gnu_gxx_include
with the appropriate disk and directory name. If you are going to be using libg++, this is where the libg++ install procedure will install the libg++ header files.
The GNU C++ compiler can be invoked with a command like ‘gcc /plus /verbose file.cc’, which is equivalent to the command ‘g++ -v -c file.cc’ in Unix.
We try to put corresponding binaries and sources on the VMS distribution tape. But sometimes the binaries will be from an older version than the sources, because we don’t always have time to update them. (Use the ‘/version’ option to determine the version number of the binaries and compare it with the source file ‘version.c’ to tell whether this is so.) In this case, you should use the binaries you get to recompile the sources. If you must recompile, here is how:
$ @vmsconfig.com
$ assign /system /translation=concealed - disk:[bison.] gnu_bison
You may, if you choose, use the ‘INSTALL_BISON.COM’ script in the ‘[BISON]’ directory.
$ set command /table=sys$common:[syslib]dcltables - /output=sys$common:[syslib]dcltables - gnu_bison:[000000]bison $ install replace sys$common:[syslib]dcltables
To install the library, use the following commands:
$ library gnu_cc:[000000]gcclib/delete=(new,eprintf) $ library libgcc2/extract=*/output=libgcc2.obj $ library gnu_cc:[000000]gcclib libgcc2.obj
The first command simply removes old modules that will be replaced with modules from libgcc2. If the VMS librarian complains about those modules not being present, simply ignore the message and continue on with the next command.
Whenever you update the compiler on your system, you should also update the library with the above procedure.
$ assign dua0:[gcc.build_dir.]/translation=concealed, - dua1:[gcc.source_dir.]/translation=concealed gcc_build $ set default gcc_build:[000000]
where ‘dua1:[gcc.source_dir]’ contains the source code, and ‘dua0:[gcc.build_dir]’ is meant to contain all of the generated object files and executables. Once you have done this, you can proceed building GCC as described above. (Keep in mind that ‘gcc_build’ is a rooted logical name, and thus the device names in each element of the search list must be an actual physical device name rather than another rooted logical name).
extern const
variables will not have
the read-only bit set, and the linker will generate warning messages
about mismatched psect attributes for these variables. These warning
messages are merely a nuisance, and can safely be ignored.
If you are compiling with a version of GNU CC older than 1.33, specify
‘/DEFINE=("inline=")’ as an option in all the compilations. This
requires editing all the gcc
commands in ‘make-cc1.com’.
(The older versions had problems supporting inline
.) Once you
have a working 1.33 or newer GNU CC, you can change this file back.
CC
, CFLAGS
, and
LIBS
. See comments in those files. However, you must
also have a working version of the GNU assembler (GNU as, aka GAS) as
it is used as the back-end for GNU CC to produce binary object modules
and is not included in the GNU CC sources. GAS is also needed to
compile ‘libgcc2’ in order to build ‘gcclib’ (see above);
‘make-l2.com’ expects to be able to find it operational in
‘gnu_cc:[000000]gnu-as.exe’.
To use GNU CC on VMS, you need the VMS driver programs ‘gcc.exe’, ‘gcc.com’, and ‘gcc.cld’. They are distributed with the VMS binaries (‘gcc-vms’) rather than the GNU CC sources. GAS is also included in ‘gcc-vms’, as is Bison.
Once you have successfully built GNU CC with VAX C, you should use the
resulting compiler to rebuild itself. Before doing this, be sure to
restore the CC
, CFLAGS
, and LIBS
definitions in
‘make-cccp.com’ and ‘make-cc1.com’. The second generation
compiler will be able to take advantage of many optimizations that must
be suppressed when building with other compilers.
Under previous versions of GNU CC, the generated code would occasionally give strange results when linked with the sharable ‘VAXCRTL’ library. Now this should work.
Even with this version, however, GNU CC itself should not be linked with
the sharable ‘VAXCRTL’. The version of qsort
in
‘VAXCRTL’ has a bug (known to be present in VMS versions V4.6
through V5.5) which causes the compiler to fail.
The executables that are generated by ‘make-cc1.com’ and
‘make-cccp.com’ use the object library version of ‘VAXCRTL’ in
order to make use of the qsort
routine in ‘gcclib.olb’. If
you wish to link the compiler executables with the shareable image
version of ‘VAXCRTL’, you should edit the file ‘tm.h’ (created
by ‘vmsconfig.com’) to define the macro QSORT_WORKAROUND
.
QSORT_WORKAROUND
is always defined when GNU CC is compiled with
VAX C, to avoid a problem in case ‘gcclib.olb’ is not yet
available.
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These computers are also known as the 3b2, 3b5, 3b20 and other similar names. (However, the 3b1 is actually a 68000; see Installing GNU CC on the 3b1.)
Don’t use ‘-g’ when compiling with the system’s compiler. The system’s linker seems to be unable to handle such a large program with debugging information.
The system’s compiler runs out of capacity when compiling ‘stmt.c’ in GNU CC. You can work around this by building ‘cpp’ in GNU CC first, then use that instead of the system’s preprocessor with the system’s C compiler to compile ‘stmt.c’. Here is how:
mv /lib/cpp /lib/cpp.att cp cpp /lib/cpp.gnu echo "/lib/cpp.gnu -traditional $*" > /lib/cpp chmod +x /lib/cpp
The system’s compiler produces bad code for some of the GNU CC optimization files. So you must build the stage 2 compiler without optimization. Then build a stage 3 compiler with optimization. That executable should work. Here are the necessary commands:
make LANGUAGES=c CC=stage1/xgcc CFLAGS="-Bstage1/ -g" make stage2 make CC=stage2/xgcc CFLAGS="-Bstage2/ -g -O"
You may need to raise the ULIMIT setting to build a C++ compiler, as the file ‘cc1plus’ is larger than one megabyte.
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See Installing GNU CC about whether to use ‘--with-stabs’ or not.
The MIPS C compiler needs to be told to increase its table size
for switch statements with the ‘-Wf,-XNg1500’ option in
order to compile ‘cp-parse.c’. If you use the ‘-O2’
optimization option, you also need to use ‘-Olimit 3000’.
Both of these options are automatically generated in the
‘Makefile’ that the shell script ‘configure’ builds.
If you override the CC
make variable and use the MIPS
compilers, you may need to add ‘-Wf,-XNg1500 -Olimit 3000’.
MIPS computers running RISC-OS can support four different personalities: default, BSD 4.3, System V.3, and System V.4 (older versions of RISC-OS don’t support V.4). To configure GCC for these platforms use the following configurations:
rev
’Default configuration for RISC-OS, revision rev
.
rev
bsd’BSD 4.3 configuration for RISC-OS, revision rev
.
rev
sysv4’System V.4 configuration for RISC-OS, revision rev
.
rev
sysv’System V.3 configuration for RISC-OS, revision rev
.
The revision rev
mentioned above is the revision of
RISC-OS to use. You must reconfigure GCC when going from a
RISC-OS revision 4 to RISC-OS revision 5. This has the effect of
avoiding a linker
bug (see @ref{Installation Problems} for more details).
DECstations can support three different personalities: Ultrix, DEC OSF/1, and OSF/rose. To configure GCC for these platforms use the following configurations:
Ultrix configuration.
Dec’s version of OSF/1.
Open Software Foundation reference port of OSF/1 which uses the OSF/rose object file format instead of ECOFF. Normally, you would not select this configuration.
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