I tried that but it didn't work.
Also on Solaris it typically uses the ld in /usr/ccs/bin/ld which uses "-64" as its flag for 64 bit
and if you put LDFLAGS out there it will fail as unrecognized unless gcc parses -64 to -m64.
Putting -m64 in CC will do the workaround but then I guess that's what CFLAGS
is for..
Regards,
Jignesh
Tom Lane wrote:
"Jignesh K. Shah" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
simple if I use -m64 for 64 bit then all end binaries are generated 64-bit and the shared libraries
are generated 32-bit and the compilation fails (ONLY ON SOLARIS) since that particular line is only
for the condition Solaris AND gcc.
If I use the COMPILER which is CC + CFLAGS it passes -m64 properly to it and generates shared
libraries 64-bit and the compile continues..
Hmm ... I see we're doing it that way already for some other platforms,
but I can't help thinking it's a kluge. Wouldn't the correct answer be
that -m64 needs to be in LDFLAGS?
regards, tom lane
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