On Wednesday 14 March 2012 05:32:35 Joakim Tjernlund wrote: > Mike Frysinger <[email protected]> wrote on 2012/03/13 23:47:27: > > On Tuesday 13 March 2012 08:43:16 Joakim Tjernlund wrote: > > > Ed W <[email protected]> wrote on 2012/03/13 13:07:37: > > > > On 10/03/2012 20:58, Mike Frysinger wrote: > > > > > On Friday 09 March 2012 10:58:10 Joakim Tjernlund wrote: > > > > >> A "qfile /lib/libgcc_s.so.1" does not list any package, > > > > >> should it not belong to sys-devel/gcc ? > > > > > > > > > > gcc-config installs it from /usr/lib/gcc/..... to /lib > > > > > > > > So perhaps there is a case that gcc-config/eselect/webapp-config/etc > > > > should record what they do..? > > > > > > Would help some, I just noted that gcc-config does not install > > > libgcc_s.so.1 for cross gccs, a bug? > > > > not sure what you mean. afaik, it works fine. > > gentoo-qclli gcc # gcc-config powerpc-softfloat_4.5.3-linux-gnu-4.5.3 > * Switching cross-compiler to powerpc-softfloat_4.5.3-linux-gnu-4.5.3 ... > [ ok ] > gentoo-qclli gcc # find /usr/powerpc-softfloat_4.5.3-linux-gnu/ -name > "libgcc_s.*" > gentoo-qclli gcc # > > Should it not be a libgcc_s under there?
no. again, context matters. what you did above was pick a cross-compiler (CHOST=x86_64-pc-linux-gnu/whatever CTARGET=powerpc-xxx). you did not pick a native compiler and that is the only time libgcc_s and friends get copied. had you installed a native compiler into /usr/$CTARGET and then done something like `ROOT=/usr/$CTARGET gcc-config $CTARGET-ver`, you'd probably get a libgcc_s in /usr/$CTARGET/lib/. -mike
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