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authorUlrich Drepper <drepper@redhat.com>1999-03-08 14:50:23 +0000
committerUlrich Drepper <drepper@redhat.com>1999-03-08 14:50:23 +0000
commit27e309c17790ac7d0a2163785a2f4633f87b4958 (patch)
tree26c30351b1d5020802dc71760e41494c61904615 /FAQ
parent57b4b78a238953382c0e2ef07e969138e96b1f16 (diff)
Update.
1999-03-05 Andreas Jaeger <aj@arthur.rhein-neckar.de> * manual/llio.texi (Open-time Flags): Clarify that O_SHLOCK and O_EXLOCK are BSD extensions. Reported by Jochen Voss <voss@mathematik.uni-kl.de> [PR libc/985].
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@@ -566,10 +566,11 @@ prefix to something like /usr/local/glibc2 which is not used for anything.)
The dangers when installing glibc in /usr are twofold:
* glibc will overwrite the headers in /usr/include. Other C libraries
- install a different but overlapping set of headers there, so the
- effect will probably be that you can't compile anything. You need to
- rename /usr/include out of the way first. (Do not throw it away; you
- will then lose the ability to compile programs against your old libc.)
+ install a different but overlapping set of headers there, so the effect
+ will probably be that you can't compile anything. You need to rename
+ /usr/include out of the way before running `make install'. (Do not throw
+ it away; you will then lose the ability to compile programs against your
+ old libc.)
* None of your old libraries, static or shared, can be used with a
different C library major version. For shared libraries this is not a