On Sun, Feb 03, 2002 at 01:33:42AM -0500, Matt Zimmerman wrote: > It is odd that gcc supports this on some platforms and not on others. On > i386, it appears to merely add -lpthread to the command line. It doesn't > even produce a warning.
This has been a thorn in our (our == gcc maintainers) side for a long time. The idea at the time (as far as we can figure out) was to support whatever command-line options would make the most sense for a programmer used to a particular platform. Uniformity was a word lacking from the vocabulary of the early GCC developers... So for systems supporting POSIX threads, it's -pthread (which Does The Right Thing for whatever that platform needs). On systems supporting only one style of thread, some native package, it's just "-threads". You get the idea. I think this is documented somewhere, but don't recall where. > The versions of gcc are also different in this case, so it is possible that > this could be fixed with a newer version of gcc-3.0. If not, then either > gcc should be fixed to report an error (if appropriate) or the configure > test in libmikmod should be changed to detect this some other way. Nope, the 3.1 sources suffer from this same misfeature. And we're about to freeze those. Many of us would welcome some saner scheme, but you've got to fight the "once supported, always supported" folks (RMS is one of them; we're still supporting horrible crap in the preprocessor just for older versions of emacs). Most of us don't have that much time or energy. (Or in my case, that much patience.) Personally, I think the best that can be accomplished is to introduce some saner scheme (-threads=foo, maybe, similar to the --enable-threads configure options), and then make -threads/-mthreads/-pthreads synonyms for the sane versions. The latter would have to be done on a per-platform basis. Phil -- If ye love wealth greater than liberty, the tranquility of servitude greater than the animating contest for freedom, go home and leave us in peace. We seek not your counsel, nor your arms. Crouch down and lick the hand that feeds you; and may posterity forget that ye were our countrymen. - Samuel Adams