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author | Ulrich Drepper <drepper@redhat.com> | 1998-09-23 15:28:54 +0000 |
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committer | Ulrich Drepper <drepper@redhat.com> | 1998-09-23 15:28:54 +0000 |
commit | a379e56acc0955dd1ec03740cfbb632ce54b7416 (patch) | |
tree | 408e9a4ab3aa25628e67dec3b09448eee54a4054 /FAQ.in | |
parent | 34a4b66d934c5aa8d413073f0df773ed5830c05b (diff) | |
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Update.
1998-09-23 15:25 Ulrich Drepper <drepper@cygnus.com>
* libio/stdio.h: Define __need_getopt and include getopt.h to define
getopt stuff.
* posix/unistd.h: Likewise.
* stdio/stdio.h: Likewise.
* posix/getopt.h: Remove _GNU_SOURCE use. If __need_getopt is defined
define only getopt and the variables.
(CPPFLAGS): Add -DUSE_LIBDB1
Diffstat (limited to 'FAQ.in')
-rw-r--r-- | FAQ.in | 27 |
1 files changed, 14 insertions, 13 deletions
@@ -59,8 +59,8 @@ a local mirror first. You should always try to use the latest official release. Older versions may not have all the features GNU libc requires. The current releases of -egcs (1.0.2) and GNU CC (2.8.1) should work with the GNU C library (for -powerpc see question ?powerpc). +egcs (1.0.3 and 1.1) and GNU CC (2.8.1) should work with the GNU C library +(for powerpc see question ?powerpc). ?? When I try to compile glibc I get only error messages. What's wrong? @@ -176,11 +176,10 @@ new options. ?? The compiler hangs while building iconvdata modules. What's wrong? -{ZW} This is a problem with all current releases of GCC. Initialization of -large static arrays is very slow. The compiler will eventually finish; give -it time. +{ZW} This is a problem of older GCC. Initialization of large static arrays +is very slow. The compiler will eventually finish; give it time. -The problem will be fixed in egcs 1.1 but probably not before then. +The problem is fixed in egcs 1.1 but not in earlier releases. ?? When I run `nm -u libc.so' on the produced library I still find unresolved symbols. Can this be ok? @@ -295,10 +294,9 @@ command line which failed and run the test from the subdirectory for this test in the sources. There are some failures which are not directly related to the GNU libc: -- Some compiler produce buggy code. The current egcs snapshots are ok and - the not yet released egcs 1.1 should be ok. gcc 2.8.1 might cause some - failures, gcc 2.7.2.x is so buggy, that explicit checks have been used so - that you can't build with it. +- Some compiler produce buggy code. The egcs 1.1 release should be ok. gcc + 2.8.1 might cause some failures, gcc 2.7.2.x is so buggy, that explicit + checks have been used so that you can't build with it. - The kernel might have bugs. For example on Linux/Alpha 2.0.34 the floating point handling has quite a number of bugs and therefore most of the test cases in the math subdirectory will fail. The current Linux 2.1 @@ -435,11 +433,14 @@ US. user specifies a -dynamic-linker argument. This is the name of the libc5 dynamic linker, which does not work with glibc. -For casual use of GNU libc you can just specify - -dynamic-linker=/lib/ld-linux.so.2 +For casual use of GNU libc you can just specify to the linker + --dynamic-linker=/lib/ld-linux.so.2 which is the glibc dynamic linker, on Linux systems. On other systems the -name is /lib/ld.so.1. +name is /lib/ld.so.1. When linking via gcc, you've got to add + -Wl,--dynamic-linker=/lib/ld-linux.so.2 + +to the gcc command line. To change your environment to use GNU libc for compiling you need to change the `specs' file of your gcc. This file is normally found at |