Some commands executed when making the compiler may fail (return a nonzero status) and be ignored by make. These failures, which are often due to files that were not found, are expected, and can safely be ignored.
It is normal to have compiler warnings when compiling certain files. Unless you are a GCC developer, you can generally ignore these warnings unless they cause compilation to fail. Developers should attempt to fix any warnings encountered, however they can temporarily continue past warnings-as-errors by specifying the configure flag --disable-werror.
On certain old systems, defining certain environment variables such as CC can interfere with the functioning of make.
If you encounter seemingly strange errors when trying to build the compiler in a directory other than the source directory, it could be because you have previously configured the compiler in the source directory. Make sure you have done all the necessary preparations.
If you build GCC on a BSD system using a directory stored in an old System
V file system, problems may occur in running fixincludes if the
System V file system doesn't support symbolic links. These problems
result in a failure to fix the declaration of size_t
in
sys/types.h. If you find that size_t
is a signed type and
that type mismatches occur, this could be the cause.
The solution is not to use such a directory for building GCC.
Similarly, when building from SVN or snapshots, or if you modify *.l files, you need the Flex lexical analyzer generator installed. If you do not modify *.l files, releases contain the Flex-generated files and you do not need Flex installed to build them. There is still one Flex-based lexical analyzer (part of the build machinery, not of GCC itself) that is used even if you only build the C front end.
When building from SVN or snapshots, or if you modify Texinfo documentation, you need version 4.7 or later of Texinfo installed if you want Info documentation to be regenerated. Releases contain Info documentation pre-built for the unmodified documentation in the release.
For a native build, the default configuration is to perform a 3-stage bootstrap of the compiler when ‘make’ is invoked. This will build the entire GCC system and ensure that it compiles itself correctly. It can be disabled with the --disable-bootstrap parameter to ‘configure’, but bootstrapping is suggested because the compiler will be tested more completely and could also have better performance.
The bootstrapping process will complete the following steps:
If you are short on disk space you might consider ‘make bootstrap-lean’ instead. The sequence of compilation is the same described above, but object files from the stage1 and stage2 of the 3-stage bootstrap of the compiler are deleted as soon as they are no longer needed.
If you wish to use non-default GCC flags when compiling the stage2
and stage3 compilers, set BOOT_CFLAGS
on the command line when
doing ‘make’. For example, if you want to save additional space
during the bootstrap and in the final installation as well, you can
build the compiler binaries without debugging information as in the
following example. This will save roughly 40% of disk space both for
the bootstrap and the final installation. (Libraries will still contain
debugging information.)
make BOOT_CFLAGS='-O' bootstrap
You can place non-default optimization flags into BOOT_CFLAGS
; they
are less well tested here than the default of ‘-g -O2’, but should
still work. In a few cases, you may find that you need to specify special
flags such as -msoft-float here to complete the bootstrap; or,
if the native compiler miscompiles the stage1 compiler, you may need
to work around this, by choosing BOOT_CFLAGS
to avoid the parts
of the stage1 compiler that were miscompiled, or by using ‘make
bootstrap4’ to increase the number of stages of bootstrap.
BOOT_CFLAGS
does not apply to bootstrapped target libraries.
Since these are always compiled with the compiler currently being
bootstrapped, you can use CFLAGS_FOR_TARGET
to modify their
compilation flags, as for non-bootstrapped target libraries.
Again, if the native compiler miscompiles the stage1 compiler, you may
need to work around this by avoiding non-working parts of the stage1
compiler. Use STAGE1_TFLAGS
to this end.
If you used the flag --enable-languages=... to restrict the compilers to be built, only those you've actually enabled will be built. This will of course only build those runtime libraries, for which the particular compiler has been built. Please note, that re-defining LANGUAGES when calling ‘make’ does not work anymore!
If the comparison of stage2 and stage3 fails, this normally indicates that the stage2 compiler has compiled GCC incorrectly, and is therefore a potentially serious bug which you should investigate and report. (On a few systems, meaningful comparison of object files is impossible; they always appear “different”. If you encounter this problem, you will need to disable comparison in the Makefile.)
If you do not want to bootstrap your compiler, you can configure with
--disable-bootstrap. In particular cases, you may want to
bootstrap your compiler even if the target system is not the same as
the one you are building on: for example, you could build a
powerpc-unknown-linux-gnu
toolchain on a
powerpc64-unknown-linux-gnu
host. In this case, pass
--enable-bootstrap to the configure script.
BUILD_CONFIG
can be used to bring in additional customization
to the build. It can be set to a whitespace-separated list of names.
For each such NAME
, top-level config/NAME
.mk will
be included by the top-level Makefile, bringing in any settings
it contains. The default BUILD_CONFIG
can be set using the
configure option --with-build-config=NAME
.... Some
examples of supported build configurations are:
BOOT_CFLAGS
, and adds
-O1 to it. ‘BUILD_CONFIG=bootstrap-O1’ is equivalent to
‘BOOT_CFLAGS='-g -O1'’.
bootstrap-O1
.
bootstrap-lto
, but is intended for
hosts that do not support the linker plugin. Without the linker plugin
static libraries are not compiled with link-time optimizations. Since
the GCC middle end and back end are in libbackend.a this means
that only the front end is actually LTO optimized.
BOOT_CFLAGS
is overridden so as to not enable
debug information, stage2 will have it, and stage3 won't. This option
is enabled by default when GCC bootstrapping is enabled, if
strip
can turn object files compiled with and without debug
info into identical object files. In addition to better test
coverage, this option makes default bootstraps faster and leaner.
bootstrap-debug
, this option saves internal compiler dumps
during stage2 and stage3 and compares them as well, which helps catch
additional potential problems, but at a great cost in terms of disk
space. It can be specified in addition to ‘bootstrap-debug’.
bootstrap-debug-big
,
but at the expense of some recompilation. Instead of saving the dumps
of stage2 and stage3 until the final compare, it uses
-fcompare-debug to generate, compare and remove the dumps
during stage3, repeating the compilation that already took place in
stage2, whose dumps were not saved.
bootstrap-debug-lean
tests it on host programs. It builds stage3 libraries with
-fcompare-debug, and it can be used along with any of the
bootstrap-debug
options above.
There aren't -lean
or -big
counterparts to this option
because most libraries are only build in stage3, so bootstrap compares
would not get significant coverage. Moreover, the few libraries built
in stage2 are used in stage3 host programs, so we wouldn't want to
compile stage2 libraries with different options for comparison purposes.
bootstrap-debug-lean
and
bootstrap-debug-lib
.
When building a cross compiler, it is not generally possible to do a 3-stage bootstrap of the compiler. This makes for an interesting problem as parts of GCC can only be built with GCC.
To build a cross compiler, we recommend first building and installing a native compiler. You can then use the native GCC compiler to build the cross compiler. The installed native compiler needs to be GCC version 2.95 or later.
If the cross compiler is to be built with support for the Java programming language and the ability to compile .java source files is desired, the installed native compiler used to build the cross compiler needs to be the same GCC version as the cross compiler. In addition the cross compiler needs to be configured with --with-ecj-jar=....
Assuming you have already installed a native copy of GCC and configured your cross compiler, issue the command make, which performs the following steps:
Note that if an error occurs in any step the make process will exit.
If you are not building GNU binutils in the same source tree as GCC, you will need a cross-assembler and cross-linker installed before configuring GCC. Put them in the directory prefix/target/bin. Here is a table of the tools you should put in this directory:
The installation of GCC will find these programs in that directory, and copy or link them to the proper place to for the cross-compiler to find them when run later.
The easiest way to provide these files is to build the Binutils package. Configure it with the same --host and --target options that you use for configuring GCC, then build and install them. They install their executables automatically into the proper directory. Alas, they do not support all the targets that GCC supports.
If you are not building a C library in the same source tree as GCC,
you should also provide the target libraries and headers before
configuring GCC, specifying the directories with
--with-sysroot or --with-headers and
--with-libs. Many targets also require “start files” such
as crt0.o and
crtn.o which are linked into each executable. There may be several
alternatives for crt0.o, for use with profiling or other
compilation options. Check your target's definition of
STARTFILE_SPEC
to find out what start files it uses.
GNU Make 3.80 and above, which is necessary to build GCC, support building in parallel. To activate this, you can use ‘make -j 2’ instead of ‘make’. You can also specify a bigger number, and in most cases using a value greater than the number of processors in your machine will result in fewer and shorter I/O latency hits, thus improving overall throughput; this is especially true for slow drives and network filesystems.
In order to build GNAT, the Ada compiler, you need a working GNAT compiler (GCC version 4.0 or later). This includes GNAT tools such as gnatmake and gnatlink, since the Ada front end is written in Ada and uses some GNAT-specific extensions.
In order to build a cross compiler, it is suggested to install the new compiler as native first, and then use it to build the cross compiler.
configure does not test whether the GNAT installation works and has a sufficiently recent version; if too old a GNAT version is installed, the build will fail unless --enable-languages is used to disable building the Ada front end.
ADA_INCLUDE_PATH and ADA_OBJECT_PATH environment variables must not be set when building the Ada compiler, the Ada tools, or the Ada runtime libraries. You can check that your build environment is clean by verifying that ‘gnatls -v’ lists only one explicit path in each section.
It is possible to use profile feedback to optimize the compiler itself. This
should result in a faster compiler binary. Experiments done on x86 using gcc
3.3 showed approximately 7 percent speedup on compiling C programs. To
bootstrap the compiler with profile feedback, use make profiledbootstrap
.
When ‘make profiledbootstrap’ is run, it will first build a stage1
compiler. This compiler is used to build a stageprofile
compiler
instrumented to collect execution counts of instruction and branch
probabilities. Then runtime libraries are compiled with profile collected.
Finally a stagefeedback
compiler is built using the information collected.
Unlike standard bootstrap, several additional restrictions apply. The
compiler used to build stage1
needs to support a 64-bit integral type.
It is recommended to only use GCC for this.