| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687 | <sect2><title> </title><para> </para></sect2><sect2><title>Installation of GCC</title><para>Unpack only the GCC-core tarball, as we won't be needing a C++ compilerfor the moment.</para><para>This package is known to behave badly when you have changed itsdefault optimization flags (including the -march and -mcpu options).Therefore, if you have defined any environment variables that overridedefault optimizations, such as CFLAGS and CXXFLAGS, we recommend unsettingor modifying them when building GCC.</para><para><screen><userinput>patch -Np1 -i ../gcc-&gcc-version;-mmap_test.patchpatch -Np1 -i ../gcc-&gcc-version;-no_fixincludes.patch</userinput></screen></para><para>It is recommended by the GCC installation documentation to buildGCC outside of the source directory in a dedicated directory:</para><para><screen><userinput>mkdir ../gcc-buildcd ../gcc-build</userinput></screen></para><para>Prepare GCC to be compiled:</para><para><screen><userinput>../gcc-&gcc-version;/configure --prefix=/stage1 \    --with-local-prefix=/stage1 \    --disable-nls --enable-shared \    --enable-languages=c</userinput></screen></para><para>The meaning of the new configure options is:</para><itemizedlist><listitem><para><userinput>--with-local-prefix=/stage1</userinput>:  Thepurpose of this switch is to remove <filename>/usr/local/include</filename>from <userinput>gcc</userinput>'s include search path. This is not absolutelyessential, but we want to try and minimize the influence from the host system,so this seems a logical thing to do.</para></listitem><listitem><para><userinput>--enable-shared</userinput>: This switch mayseem counter-intuitive at first. But using it allows the building of<filename>libgcc_s.so.1</filename> and <filename>libgcc_eh.a</filename>, andhaving <filename>libgcc_eh.a</filename> available ensures that the configurescript for Glibc (the next package we compile) produces the proper results.Note that the <userinput>gcc</userinput> binaries will still be linkedstatically, as this is controlled by the <userinput>-static</userinput>value of BOOT_LDFLAGS further on.</para></listitem><listitem><para><userinput>--enable-languages=c</userinput>: This optionensures that only the C compiler is built. The option is only needed when youhave downloaded and unpacked the full GCC tarball.</para></listitem></itemizedlist><para>Continue with compiling the package:</para><para><screen><userinput>make BOOT_LDFLAGS="-static" bootstrap</userinput></screen></para><para>The meaning of the make parameters is:</para><itemizedlist><listitem><para><userinput>BOOT_LDFLAGS="-static"</userinput>: This tellsGCC to link its programs statically.</para></listitem><listitem><para><userinput>bootstrap</userinput>: This target doesn't justcompile GCC, but compiles it several times. It uses the programs compiled ina first round to compile itself a second time, and then again a third time.It then compares these second and third compiles to make sure it canreproduce itself flawlessly, which most probably means that it wascompiled correctly.</para></listitem></itemizedlist><para>And install the package:</para><para><screen><userinput>make install</userinput></screen></para><para>As a finishing touch we'll create the <filenameclass="symlink">/stage1/bin/cc</filename> symlink. Many programs andscripts run <userinput>cc</userinput> instead of <userinput>gcc</userinput>,a thing meant to keep programs generic and therefore usable on all kinds ofUnix systems. Not everybody has the GNU C compiler installed. Simply running<userinput>cc</userinput> leaves the system administrator free to decide whatC compiler to install, as long as there's a symlink pointing to it:</para><para><screen><userinput>ln -sf gcc /stage1/bin/cc</userinput></screen></para></sect2>
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