On Fri, Jun 13, 2008 at 5:18 AM, Marcelo Horacek Majczak
<marcelo at randomwork.com> wrote:
>
> On Thu, 2008-05-29 at 10:07 -0700, Michael Schuster wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I'm seeing a command line like this in /tmp/FOSScapseo.log (as usual, doing
>> Sparc):
>>
>> pkgbuild: /opt/SUNWspro/bin/CC -ansi -pedantic -Wall -Wno-long-long ....
>> -Qoption ccfe -features=gcc ...
>>
>> as far as I know and can see from the man-page, -ansi, -pedantic etc. are
>> not valid options recognised by SUNSpro compilers, but are only valid with
>> gcc. The warnings following this invocation proves it:
>>
>> pkgbuild: CC: Warning: Option -ansi passed to ld, if ld is invoked, ignored
>> otherwise
>> pkgbuild: CC: Warning: Option -pedantic passed to ld, if ld is invoked,
>> ignored otherwise
>> pkgbuild: CC: Warning: Option -Wall passed to ld, if ld is invoked, ignored
>> otherwise
>> pkgbuild: CC: Warning: Option -Wno-long-long passed to ld, if ld is
>> invoked, ignored otherwise
>>
>> ...
>>
>> and then ld fails.
>>
>> I'll try 'svn up' on the offchance that I missed something, but I'd
>> appreciate thoughts.
>>
>> Michael
>
> [reusing this thread]
>
> I had the same problem and this fixed it (note this is the .am,
> not .in):
>
> Index: CAPSEO/0.3.0-158/tools/Makefile.am
> ===================================================================
> --- CAPSEO/0.3.0-158/tools/Makefile.am  (revision 2091)
> +++ CAPSEO/0.3.0-158/tools/Makefile.am  (working copy)
> @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
>  INCLUDES = -I$(top_srcdir)/src
>
> -ANSI_CXXFLAGS = -ansi -pedantic -Wall -Wno-long-long
> -Wno-unknown-pragmas
> +ANSI_CXXFLAGS =
>  AM_CXXFLAGS = $(ANSI_CXXFLAGS) $(CAPTURY_CFLAGS)
> -DVERSION="\"@capseo_vers...@\"" -dtheo...@theora@
>
>  bin_PROGRAMS = cpsinfo cpsplay cpsrecode
>

it's done in Stefan's initial set of patches ....in
Solaris/diffs/Makefile.in.3.diff


-- 
Lukas 'Luc' Oboril
IRC nickname: luc^ at freenode


When dealing with people, let us remember we are not dealing with
creatures of logic. We are dealing with creatures of emotions,
creatures bristling with prejudices and motivated by pride and vanity.
Dale Carnegie

Reply via email to