%general-entities; ]> Cross GCC-&gcc-version; - Static GCC cross tools, static <para>The GCC package contains the GNU compiler collection, which includes the C and C++ compilers.</para> </sect2> <sect2 role="installation"> <title os="a">Installation of Cross GCC Compiler with Static libgcc and no Threads GCC requires the GMP, MPFR, and MPC packages to either be present on the host or to be present in source form within the gcc source tree. Unpack these into the GCC directory after unpacking GCC: tar xf ../mpfr-&mpfr-version;.tar.bz2 mv -v mpfr-&mpfr-version; mpfr tar xf ../gmp-&gmp-version;.tar.bz2 mv -v gmp-&gmp-version; gmp tar xf ../mpc-&mpc-version;.tar.gz mv -v mpc-&mpc-version; mpc The GCC documentation recommends building GCC outside of the source directory in a dedicated build directory: mkdir -v ../gcc-build cd ../gcc-build Prepare GCC for compilation: ../gcc-&gcc-version;/configure \ --prefix=${CLFS}/cross-tools \ --build=${CLFS_HOST} \ --host=${CLFS_HOST} \ --target=${CLFS_TARGET} \ --with-sysroot=${CLFS} \ --disable-nls \ --disable-shared \ --without-headers \ --with-newlib \ --disable-decimal-float \ --disable-libgomp \ --disable-libmudflap \ --disable-libssp \ --disable-threads \ --enable-languages=c \ --disable-multilib The meaning of the configure options: --prefix=${CLFS}/cross-tools This tells the configure script to prepare to install the package in the ${CLFS}/cross-tools directory. --build=${CLFS_HOST} This tells the configure script the triplet to use to build GCC. It will use ${CLFS_HOST} as that's where it's being built. --host=${CLFS_HOST} This tells the configure script the triplet of the machine GCC will be executed on when actually cross compiling. It will use ${CLFS_HOST} as that's where GCC will execute when cross compiling software later. --target=${CLFS_TARGET} This tells the configure script the triplet of the machine GCC will build executables for. It will use ${CLFS_TARGET} so that software compiled with this version of GCC can be executed on the embedded machine target. --with-sysroot=${CLFS} This tells configure that ${CLFS} is going to be the root of our system. It will now use the specified sysroot, ${CLFS}, as a prefix of the default search paths. --disable-nls This disables internationalization as i18n is not needed for the cross-compile tools. --disable-shared Disables the creation of the shared libraries. --without-headers Tells configure to not use any headers from any C libraries. This is needed as we haven't yet built the C library and to prevent influence from the host environment. --with-newlib Tells configure to build libgcc without needing any C libraries. --disable-decimal-float Tells configure to disable IEEE 754-2008 decimal floating point support. Decimal floating point support isn't needed yet. --disable-libgomp Tells configure to not build the GOMP run-time libraries. GOMP is the GNU implementation of OpenMP, a API for shared-memory parallel programming. --disable-libmudflap Tells configure to not build libmudflap. Mudflap is a library that can be used to help check for proper pointer usage. --disable-libssp Tells configure not to build run-time libraries for stack smashing detection. --disable-threads This will prevent GCC from looking for the multi-thread include files, since they haven't been created for this architecture yet. GCC will be able to find the multi-thread information after the glib headers are created. --enable-languages=c This option ensures that only the C compiler is built. --disable-multilib This option specifies that multiple target libraries should not be built. Continue with compiling the package: make all-gcc all-target-libgcc Install the package: make install-gcc install-target-libgcc <para>Details on this package are located in <xref linkend="contents-gcc" role="."/></para> </sect2> </sect1>