Install GCC

From Micro and Nano Mechanics Group
Revision as of 06:23, 1 March 2009 by Correaa (talk | contribs)
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GCC stands for GNU Compiler Collection. The tutorial is focused in obtaining 'g++' (GNU C++) among all the available compilers in the collection. This tutorial is based on this other guide. The typical need is that in older systems GCC 4 is not available while GCC 3 is. (Of course we can use GCC 3 to compile GCC 4.)

Preparation

The tutorial assumes that you want to install GCC/g++ in your userspace directories (i.e. in your home directory).

Download the sources to a local directory:

 mkdir ~/soft
 cd ~/soft
 wget http://gcc.releasenotes.org/releases/gcc-4.3.3/gcc-g++-4.3.3.tar.gz
 tar -zxvf gcc-g++-4.3.3.tar.gz

Also you will need the GMP library whose development (sources) are not installed in general (and in particular not in wcr). In normal cases I would give the instructions to compile and install GMP here but fortunately you can just put the GMP source inside GCC sources and that will allow to compile both at the same time.

 cd ~/soft
 wget ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gmp/gmp-4.2.4.tar.gz
 tar -zxvf gmp-4.2.4.tar.gz
 mv gmp-4.2.4/* gcc-4.3.3/

Compilation

Everything will be installed in ~/usr, including the executable compilers in ~/usr/bin and the library files in ~/usr/lib. To specify that you do

 cd ~/usr/gcc-4.3.3-build
 ../gcc-4.3.3/configure --prefix=$HOME/usr --with-local-prefix=$HOME/usr/local
 

It is important to check that the configure works (if it doesn't report it in this wiki) before doing

 make

Then

 make test-g++

to test that the compilation was succesfull and then do the final install:

 make install