On Monday, August 12, 2013, Luboš Doležel wrote: > On 08/12/2013 06:36 PM, Fred Kiefer wrote: > >> BTW, GNUstep's build system is driving me crazy. I do ./configure > >> > --prefix=/usr (as ./configure --help advises) and it still installs > into > >> > /usr/local. > > You should select the prefix when configuring GNUstep make. From there > > it should work. > > And what do I do to build a 32-bit version on a 64-bit system with libs > installed into /usr/lib32? The configure script drops everything I pass > to it, which doesn't seem right. At least ./configure --help is then > quite confusing. > > I'm trying to write a Gentoo ebuild to compile gnustep-base+gui for > 64-bit and 32-bit at the same time. GNUstep has been very resistant so far. >
If you can't do it any other way, try looking at gnustep-make and its subfolder "FilesystemLayouts". Create a new layout in that folder, then pass it to --with-layout. > > The usual way is to add -m32 into CFLAGS, but that is dropped. An > alternative is to specify CC="clang -m32", but that is rejected: > > configure: error: You are running configure with the compiler (clang > -m32) set to a different value from that used by gnustep-make (clang). > Please run configure again with your environment set to match your > gnustep-make > > But it doesn't seem feasible to somehow have two separate gnustep-makes > in the system. > You seem to be passing this flag solely to a library and not to gnustep-make. Why not: cd gnustep/core/make CC="clang -m32" ./configure $OTHER_FLAGS_YOU_WANT_HERE && make && sudo -E make install cd - cd gnustep/core/base CC="clang -m32" ./configure $OTHER_FLAGS_YOU_WANT_HERE && make && sudo -E make install cd - ... etc ... Alternatively, export CC="clang -m32" before EVERYTHING. Note, I think once I deleted GNUstep manually, but something was picking up an old, stray GNUstep configuration file, which is (I think) installed in /etc/GNUstep. If, after you re-build everything (especially gnustep-make) using the above commands, you still have issues -- then you may want to wipe as much GNUstep from the system as possible (including any stray configuration files) before proceeding. I recommend playing around in a VM with an abundant use of snapshots, or on an hourly charged VPS where you can get a clean machine up within seconds. :-) -- Ivan Vučica [email protected]
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