>
> I've already installed it, I should have mentioned
> that--sorry. What I mean is
> there a way to where when I type 'gcc' or 'g++' it uses gcc41
> or g++41? I
> know I could use symlinks but that would entail removing the
> gcc 3.4.2
> binaries which I'm afraid might be insecure.
i don
I've already installed it, I should have mentioned that--sorry. What I mean is
there a way to where when I type 'gcc' or 'g++' it uses gcc41 or g++41? I
know I could use symlinks but that would entail removing the gcc 3.4.2
binaries which I'm afraid might be insecure.
___
--- Jim Stapleton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 7/10/06, Dan Nelson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
> > In the last episode (Jul 10), Jacob Jennings said:
> > > Hello, I am on FreeBSD 5.5-STABLE and was
> wondering if there is a way
> > > to replace the system's GCC, shipped with 5.5,
> (GCC 3.4.2)
On 7/10/06, Dan Nelson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
In the last episode (Jul 10), Jacob Jennings said:
> Hello, I am on FreeBSD 5.5-STABLE and was wondering if there is a way
> to replace the system's GCC, shipped with 5.5, (GCC 3.4.2) to GCC 4.1
> without upgrading the whole source tree to another
In the last episode (Jul 10), Jacob Jennings said:
> Hello, I am on FreeBSD 5.5-STABLE and was wondering if there is a way
> to replace the system's GCC, shipped with 5.5, (GCC 3.4.2) to GCC 4.1
> without upgrading the whole source tree to another release? Is there
> a way to do this that will not
Hello, I am on FreeBSD 5.5-STABLE and was wondering if there is a way to
replace the system's GCC, shipped with 5.5, (GCC 3.4.2) to GCC 4.1 without
upgrading the whole source tree to another release? Is there a way to do this
that will not include much risk of breaking my system? Thanks.
___