On Wed, Sep 24, 2003 at 04:16:45PM -0700, Andrew Terekhov wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> What is the right way to install gcc 3.3.1 on FreeBSD 5.1 Release as the
> default compiler suite?
Replacing the system compiler is not supported and will generally
cause your system sources to become
Hi all,
What is the right way to install gcc 3.3.1 on FreeBSD 5.1 Release as the
default compiler suite? I installed it from ports in /usr/local/bin/. C
compiler is gcc33 and C++ is g++33. Should I create soft links in the
/usr/bin to corresponding files in /usr/local/bin? Should I have used
On Sat, Sep 20, 2003 at 07:40:45PM -0700, Kris Kennaway wrote:
> On Sat, Sep 20, 2003 at 05:46:27PM -0500, Vulpes Velox wrote:
> > Do I have any thing to worry about upgrading versions of gcc, from ports, in
> > stable?
>
> Depends what your intentions are. You can use it to compile your own
> co
On Sat, Sep 20, 2003 at 05:46:27PM -0500, Vulpes Velox wrote:
> Do I have any thing to worry about upgrading versions of gcc, from ports, in
> stable?
Depends what your intentions are. You can use it to compile your own
code, and most ports, but some ports and the FreeBSD 4.x base system
cannot b
Do I have any thing to worry about upgrading versions of gcc, from ports, in
stable?
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Mo wrote:
If anyone knows how to make it use Pentium 4 optimizations, please let
me know. By the way, if this is a mailing list, I am not subscribed, so
please CC all replies to my e-mail address.
Hi Mo,
at first I consider you ask those questions in the current@ list,
because it's not a gener
I recently cvsupped my -CURRENT box (about a day ago), and I noticed
that GCC 3.3.1 had been imported, so I decided to buildworld so I can
use Pentium 4 optimizations when compiling ports and other things. I
have p4 set for CPUTYPE in /etc/make.conf , but when I compile anything,
it uses