I thought I knew something about how the compiler looks for include files, but now I think maybe I don't know much. :-)
So here's what I'm pondering. When I build a library, like e.g. libc, where do the include files get pulled from? They can't (shouldn't) be the ones in /usr/include, but I don't see a -nostdinc like for the kernel. There are -I directives in the Makefile for -I${.CURDIR}/include -I${.CURDIR}/../../include, etc., but that won't remove /usr/include from the search path. I see in the gcc documentation that -I paths are searched before the standards paths. But isn't the lack of -nostdinc a bug (not just for libc, but for any library in /usr/src/lib)? It somewhat feels to me that all of the libraries and binaries in the source distribution should use -nostdinc and include only from the source distribution itself. This isn't always an issue, but for source upgrades it seems crucial, and for a hacker it saves difficulties with having to install headers before re-building. Is that the intent, and it's not fully implemented? How badly would things break if -nostdinc was included in e.g. bsd.lib.mk? (This would break non-base libraries, yes? But as a thought experiment for the base, how far off are we?) Thanks, matthew _______________________________________________ freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hackers To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-hackers-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"