Hi, sincerely, I have found installing ccc with alien and dpkg easier than using apt-get. After spending hours hunting for the right versions, I ended up downloading the latest versions from the HP web site and trying my luck with alien -c. The only package that made some trouble was ccc, as it was trying to do some cleanup work after previous installs. I had none, as it was a fresh woody and it failed.
You can find the summary of my ccc 'experience' at http://www.physik.tu-cottbus.de/~george/unix/ccc.html Good luck! Ionut On Thu, May 08, 2003 at 01:59:19PM -0400, Adam C Powell IV wrote: > Richard Fillion wrote: > > >I installed ccc on my box to see if i could get better performance out > >of some apps with it instead of gcc. I followed these instructions : > > > >http://www.geocrawler.com/archives/3/241/2001/3/0/5451555/ > > > This is ancient, you can now "apt-get install ccc" and follow the > instructions so its script installs the ccc RPM "properly". > > >And ccc now runs, but i cant compile anything. > > > >[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~/dev/C$ cat helloworld.c > > #include <stdio.h> > > main(){ > > printf("Hello World\n"); > > } > >[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~/dev/C$ ccc helloworld.c -o helloworld > >cc: Severe: /usr/include/stdio.h, line 34: Cannot find file <stddef.h> > >specified in #include directive. (noinclfilef) > ># include <stddef.h> > >--^ > > > I haven't seen this problem, but YMMV. > > Note that I can't get cxx to work in unstable, but that shouldn't affect > ccc. > > Please let me know if uninstalling the aliened rpm and reinstalling via > the .deb works. > > Thanks, > -- > > -Adam P. > > GPG fingerprint: D54D 1AEE B11C CE9B A02B C5DD 526F 01E8 564E E4B6 > > Welcome to the best software in the world today cafe! > <http://lyre.mit.edu/%7Epowell/The_Best_Stuff_In_The_World_Today_Cafe.ogg> > > > > -- > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > -- *************** * Ionut Georgescu * http://www.physik.tu-cottbus.de/~george/ * Registered Linux User #244479 * * "In Windows you can do everything Microsoft wants you to do; in Unix you * can do anything the computer is able to do."