Estimated build time: 22 minutes Estimated required disk space: 168 MB
Install GCC by running the following commands:
patch -Np1 -i ../gcc-2.95.3-2.patch && mkdir ../gcc-build && cd ../gcc-build && ../gcc-2.95.3/configure --prefix=/usr --enable-languages=c,c++ \ --disable-nls --disable-shared && make BOOT_LDFLAGS=-static bootstrap && make prefix=$LFS/usr install && cd $LFS/lib && ln -sf ../usr/bin/cpp && cd $LFS/usr/lib && ln -sf ../bin/cpp && cd $LFS/usr/bin && ln -sf gcc cc
patch -Np1 -i ../gcc-2.95.3-2.patch: This new patch deals with incorrect handling of weak symbols, the over-optimization of calls to those weak symbols, an atexit issue and the __dso_handle symbol required for atexit's proper function.
make BOOT_LDFLAGS=-static: This is the equivalent to make LDFLAGS=-static as we use with other packages to compile them statically.
--prefix=/usr: This is NOT a typo. GCC hard codes some paths while compiling and so we need to pass /usr as the prefix during ./configure. We pass the real install prefix during the make install command later.
--enable-languages=c,c++: This only builds the C and C++ compilers and not the other available compilers as they are, on the average, not often used. If those other compilers are needed, the --enable-languages parameter can be omitted.
ln -sf ../usr/bin/cpp: This creates the $LFS/lib/cpp symlink. Some packages explicitly try to find cpp in /lib.
ln -sf ../bin/cpp: This creates the $LFS/usr/lib/cpp symlink as there are packages that expect cpp to be in /usr/lib.
The GCC package contains compilers, preprocessors and the GNU C++ Library.
A compiler translates source code in text format to a format that a computer understands. After a source code file is compiled into an object file, a linker will create an executable file from one or more of these compiler generated object files.
A preprocessor pre-processes a source file, such as including the contents of header files into the source file. It's a good idea to not do this manually to save a lot of time. Someone just inserts a line like #include <filename>. The preprocessor inserts the contents of that file into the source file. That's one of the things a preprocessor does.
The C++ library is used by C++ programs. The C++ library contains functions that are frequently used in C++ programs. This way the programmer doesn't have to write certain functions (such as writing a string of text to the screen) from scratch every time he creates a program.
GCC-2.95.3 needs the following to be installed:
sh from the bash package
ar from the binutils package
as from the binutils package
ld from the binutils package
nm from the binutils package
ranlib from the binutils package
cmp from the diffutils package
chmod from the fileutils package
cp from the fileutils package
ln from the fileutils package
ls from the fileutils package
mkdir from the fileutils package
mv from the fileutils package
rm from the fileutils package
touch from the fileutils package
find from the find package
gcc from the gcc package
cc from the gcc package
egrep from the grep package
grep from the grep package
make from the make package
mawk from the mawk package
sed from the sed package
basename from the sh-utils package
echo from the sh-util package
expr from the sh-utils package
sleep from the sh-utils package
true from the sh-utils package
uname from the sh-utils package
tar from the tar package
makeinfo from the texinfo package
cat from the textutils package
head from the textutils package
sort from the textutils package
tail from the textutils package
tr from the textutils package
uniq from the textutils package