The example I just sent was for building in centos 6, because 5 is gone.

docker run -it  --name centos6 centos:6 /bin/bash

Regards,

Juan

On 4/5/18 3:13 PM, Juan E. Sanchez wrote:
Hello,

Centos 5, Redhat 5 is EOL as of March 31, 2017.

Building cmake in docker:

cd /root;
curl -L -O https://cmake.org/files/v3.11/cmake-3.11.0.tar.gz;
tar xzvf cmake-3.11.0.tar.gz;
yum install -y centos-release-scl;
yum install -y devtoolset-6-gcc devtoolset-6-gcc-c++ devtoolset-6-libquadmath-devel devtoolset-6-gcc-gfortran;
source /opt/rh/devtoolset-6/enable;
cd cmake-3.11.0;
./bootstrap --prefix=/root/cmake --parallel=4;
make -j4;
make install;
cd /root;
tar czvf cmake.tgz;

Please note that cmake will silently ignore features for packages that haven't been installed into the image, (ncurses, curl).

Regards,

Juan

On 4/5/18 2:50 PM, Ben Sferrazza wrote:


On Thu, Apr 5, 2018 at 12:30 PM, Alexander Neundorf <neund...@kde.org <mailto:neund...@kde.org>> wrote:

    On 2018 M04 5, Thu 21:24:40 CEST Alexander Neundorf wrote:
    > On 2018 M04 5, Thu 16:15:17 CEST suzuki toshiya wrote:
    > > Dear Eric,
    > >
    > > # if anybody think "how C++11 environment should be prepared
    > > # on legacy GNU/Linux" is off-topic and should be discussed
    > > # in off-list, please let me know. I will do so.
    > >
    > > Eric Wing wrote:
    > > > Thanks for the responses. Yes, I just need this to run on Ubuntu 12.04     > > > (and some other old Linux's in that era). Yes, I think the probably is
    > > > the libstdc++ dependency.
    > > >
    > > > As pointed out, it is really hard to get a newer compiler on Ubuntu     > > > 12.04. I've been down this road before, and if memory serves, the gcc     > > > bootstrapping process to get a newer compiler doesn't seem to work     > > > with a compiler older than gcc 4.8. Same goes for clang, which also
    > > > weirdly relies on gcc 4.8 to bootstrap itself.
    > >
    > > At least, gcc-4.6.3, the last official gcc for Ubuntu-12.04, could
    > > build gcc-4.8.5 manually (without shared libstdc++, so confused
    > > dependency could be avoided). And, I could build cmake-3.11.0 by it.
    > > Now I'm checking "make test".
    >
    > I have recently built a gcc 4.9.5 on Centos 5, i.e. gcc 4.1. There were no
    > issues after getting the configure flags right.

    4.9.4 I mean.
    You can see the flags here:
https://hub.docker.com/r/aneundorf/docker-centos5-build-svn-gcc/~/dockerfile/ <https://hub.docker.com/r/aneundorf/docker-centos5-build-svn-gcc/~/dockerfile/>
    (but the docker image didn't build, it was killed by a dockerhub
    timeout).

    Alex


Were you able to actually build the newer versions of Cmake that require c++11 on Centos 5? I have built up a bootstrapped toolchain, following much of the guidance found in Linux From Scratch, on a Centos 5 system at work (which unfortunately cannot be upgrade due to the support of legacy software). The toolchain uses the latest gcc 7.3.0, binutils 2.30, and glibc 2.19 (the latest version of glibc supported by the 2.6.18 kernel of Centos 5). Yet cmake complains that my toolchain does not support c++11. Which kernel and glibc version do you have on your Centos 5 box? Thank you.




--

Powered by www.kitware.com

Please keep messages on-topic and check the CMake FAQ at: 
http://www.cmake.org/Wiki/CMake_FAQ

Kitware offers various services to support the CMake community. For more 
information on each offering, please visit:

CMake Support: http://cmake.org/cmake/help/support.html
CMake Consulting: http://cmake.org/cmake/help/consulting.html
CMake Training Courses: http://cmake.org/cmake/help/training.html

Visit other Kitware open-source projects at 
http://www.kitware.com/opensource/opensource.html

Follow this link to subscribe/unsubscribe:
https://cmake.org/mailman/listinfo/cmake

Reply via email to