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authorJakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>2006-02-03 09:39:28 +0000
committerJakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>2006-02-03 09:39:28 +0000
commit9f57ac239bd04f64ae20f6e7b35f387ae6605312 (patch)
tree1971d9c5a6261ff535fec20e8be494fac1f61eb2 /INSTALL
parentc3a8c11b0c6a6e44e98dcd4bb0fdb397e4fd56f7 (diff)
Updated to fedora-glibc-20060203T0932
Diffstat (limited to 'INSTALL')
-rw-r--r--INSTALL35
1 files changed, 16 insertions, 19 deletions
diff --git a/INSTALL b/INSTALL
index e424610a04..b503ea8f5f 100644
--- a/INSTALL
+++ b/INSTALL
@@ -9,15 +9,7 @@ installation. It is updated more frequently than this manual.
Features can be added to GNU Libc via "add-on" bundles. These are
separate tar files, which you unpack into the top level of the source
tree. Then you give `configure' the `--enable-add-ons' option to
-activate them, and they will be compiled into the library. As of the
-2.2 release, one important component of glibc is distributed as
-"official" add-ons: the linuxthreads add-on. Unless you are doing an
-unusual installation, you should get this.
-
- Support for POSIX threads is maintained by someone else, so it's in a
-separate package. It is only available for GNU/Linux systems, but this
-will change in the future. Get it from the same place you got the main
-bundle; the file is `glibc-linuxthreads-VERSION.tar.gz'.
+activate them, and they will be compiled into the library.
You will need recent versions of several GNU tools: definitely GCC
and GNU Make, and possibly others. *Note Tools for Compilation::,
@@ -84,8 +76,7 @@ will be used, and CFLAGS sets optimization options for the compiler.
specified with no list, it enables all the add-on packages it
finds. If you do not wish to use some add-on packages that you
have present in your source tree, give this option a list of the
- add-ons that you _do_ want used, like this:
- `--enable-add-ons=linuxthreads'
+ add-ons that you _do_ want used, like this: `--enable-add-ons=nptl'
`--enable-kernel=VERSION'
This option is currently only useful on GNU/Linux systems. The
@@ -302,11 +293,18 @@ build the GNU C library:
recommend GNU `make' version 3.79. All earlier versions have
severe bugs or lack features.
- * GCC 3.2 or newer
+ * GCC 3.4 or newer, GCC 4.1 recommended
The GNU C library can only be compiled with the GNU C compiler
- family. As of the 2.3 release, GCC 3.2 or higher is required. As
- of this writing, GCC 3.2 is the compiler we advise to use.
+ family. For the 2.3 releases, GCC 3.2 or higher is required; GCC
+ 3.4 is the compiler we advise to use for 2.3 versions. For the
+ 2.4 release, GCC 3.4 or higher is required; as of this writing,
+ GCC 4.1 is the compiler we advise to use for current versions. On
+ certain machines including `powerpc64', compilers prior to GCC 4.0
+ have bugs that prevent them compiling the C library code in the
+ 2.4 release. On other machines, GCC 4.1 is required to build the C
+ library with support for the correct `long double' type format;
+ these include `powerpc' (32 bit), `s390' and `s390x'.
You can use whatever compiler you like to compile programs that
use GNU libc, but be aware that both GCC 2.7 and 2.8 have bugs in
@@ -316,7 +314,7 @@ build the GNU C library:
Check the FAQ for any special compiler issues on particular
platforms.
- * GNU `binutils' 2.13 or later
+ * GNU `binutils' 2.15 or later
You must use GNU `binutils' (as and ld) to build the GNU C library.
No other assembler or linker has the necessary functionality at the
@@ -330,11 +328,10 @@ build the GNU C library:
installation mechanism for the info files is not present or works
differently.
- * GNU `awk' 3.0, or some other POSIX awk
+ * GNU `awk' 3.0, or higher
- `Awk' is used in several places to generate files. The scripts
- should work with any POSIX-compliant `awk' implementation; `gawk'
- 3.0 and `mawk' 1.3 are known to work.
+ `Awk' is used in several places to generate files. `gawk' 3.0 is
+ known to work.
* Perl 5