aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/reproduce/software/bash/git-post-checkout
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorRaul Infante-Sainz <infantesainz@gmail.com>2019-04-30 17:56:46 +0100
committerRaul Infante-Sainz <infantesainz@gmail.com>2019-04-30 17:56:46 +0100
commit743637f54b99310defc2cc5bdbc1bbd8d3e09e0f (patch)
treec56e51ea8c42cbc72af4a14a4b9d3905b2a59f97 /reproduce/software/bash/git-post-checkout
parent811279df0101c76a8e892179e2c8ec1e0ac7414e (diff)
Better configure checks to see if GCC can be built
Until now, to test if GCC can use `sys/cdefs.h', we were building a small test program using it. But after testing on an Ubuntu 14.04, we noticed that the GCC test during the configure script passes, but GCC still can't be built. After some investigation we noticed its available in other directories, but during the build of GCC, those directories aren't used, and it only assumes it to be under `/usr/include'. So with this commit, we are only checking this particular location for this header, not a test run of GCC. After fixing this, we noticed that GCC's build crashed again because it couldn't link with `libc.a' (or `libc.so'). So we also added a for this library and added a new warning to inform the user what they might be able to do. Finally, we noticed that in one of the last steps of building GCC, we weren't using `&&', but `;', so the GCC name file would be built, even when the GCC build failed.
Diffstat (limited to 'reproduce/software/bash/git-post-checkout')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions