On Tue, 22 Nov 2005 00:28:26 +0100, Matthias Langer wrote:
As I understand it, the first time you recompile new toolchain with
your old toolchain, and then the 2nd time you're recompiling the
toolchain with the new toolchain, with the idea that the new toolchain
will
On 11/22/05, Neil Bothwick [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The first command won't do anything, -D doesn't take account of of USE or
CFLAG changes.
It will update gcc or any dependancies of gcc to the current version.
Unless one of those things have been updated, there is no need to
build anything
On Tue, 2005-11-22 at 09:17 +, Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Tue, 22 Nov 2005 00:28:26 +0100, Matthias Langer wrote:
As I understand it, the first time you recompile new toolchain with
your old toolchain, and then the 2nd time you're recompiling the
toolchain with the new toolchain, with
-Original Message-
From: Allan Gottlieb [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, November 21, 2005 12:16 PM
To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
Subject: [gentoo-user] Re: default stage3
At Mon, 21 Nov 2005 14:13:14 +0100 Hemmann, Volker Armin
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Monday 21 November
I installed gentoo on a dual Opteron box this weekend, I've always done
stage1 installs, but this time decided to try the recommeded stage3 method.
I understand the concept of doing an emerge -e world in order to get the
optimization of a stage1 install, and I've done this ( one time ) on the
On Mon, 2005-11-21 at 17:01 -0500, Ryan Sims wrote:
I installed gentoo on a dual Opteron box this weekend, I've always done
stage1 installs, but this time decided to try the recommeded stage3 method.
I understand the concept of doing an emerge -e world in order to get the
optimization of a
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