I'm running FreeBSD with gcc 3.2.1 installed from the ports tree. So far
I've noticed no problems with it, until I tried to compile CommonC++.
Maybe it's a problem with my installation of gcc, but I have my doubts
about that given that these problems only seem to occur with CommonC++.
The problem that seems to be occurring, from what I can ascertain, is that
the compiler can't find symbols from C. For example, 'nanosleep' is found
just fine by configure, but at compile-time, it has no idea where to find
it. The same applies to a long list of functions from math.h, which is
included by cmath, which is itself eventually included by iostream. This
leads me to believe that somehow CommonC++ is hiding things from the
compiler, as these headers all work flawlessly in other cases.
Has anyone had a similar problem to this?
-- Ari Johnson
On Mon, 14 Oct 2002, Alex Pavloff wrote:
>
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Ari Johnson [mailto:address@hidden
> > Sent: Sunday, October 13, 2002 11:06 AM
> > To: address@hidden
> > Subject: GCC 3.x Compatibility
> >
> >
> >
> > Has anyone successfully built CommonC++ using the gcc 3.x C++
> > compiler? I seem to be having a few hangup points.
> > -- Ari Johnson
>
> I am using GCC 3.2 compiled from source on Red Hat 7.3 with
> --enable-threads=posix. Works fine.
>
> Alex Pavloff - address@hidden
> Eason Technology -- www.eason.com
>
>
>
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