Re: Building and installing gcc-3.0

2001-07-03 Thread Chan Siu On
Thank you for all those who have given my advice. I decide to build gcc-3.0 from tar ball in /usr/local/. But as the older version of gcc reside in /usr/bin and gcc-3.0 reside in /usr/local/bin, I will have two different versions of gcc in my path. Should I specify the binary directory in con

Re: Building and installing gcc-3.0

2001-07-02 Thread Lamer
ux Player Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - Original Message - From: "Shaul Karl" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "Chan Siu On" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Cc: Sent: Tuesday, July 03, 2001 7:45 AM Subject: Re: Building and installing gcc-3.0 > > Hi all, > > > > I

Re: Building and installing gcc-3.0

2001-07-02 Thread Shaul Karl
her than /usr/local/ (<- am I correct?). If I am > right, than should I install gcc-3.0 in /usr/ instead of /usr/local/? > _ > You are right about /usr and /usr/local. In fact, this is intentional and defined in

Building and installing gcc-3.0

2001-07-02 Thread Chan Siu On
Hi all, I want to build and install gcc-3.0 on my Debian "potato" 2.2r3. I have downloaded gcc-3.0.tar.gz. If I simply type "configure", "make" and "make install", would Debian realize that gcc has been upgraded? If not, what should I do? For some reasons, I don't want to apt-get it from the

Re: Installing GCC

1999-04-13 Thread Richard Harran
You need to run dpkg -i gcc_2.91.66-1.deb to install the .deb file. You may get some depends problems. If they are not already installed on your system, you will need: libc6 (I reckon you oughta have this) cpp (eg cpp_2.7.2.3-7.deb from interpreters) binutils (eg

Re: Installing GCC

1999-04-13 Thread Nils-Erik Svangård
Hi If I am not totally wrong, a 'dpkg -i gcc_2.91.66-1.deb' should solve your problems. Do it as root, and if complain about some package it depends on, get thoose packages ( in .deb format) and use dpkg -i to install them. If you have the debian cd-set, you can use dselect to install gcc. /nisse

Re: installing GCC on a Linux system

1999-04-13 Thread Stephen Pitts
On Tue, Apr 13, 1999 at 02:54:28PM -0400, Steve Girard wrote: > I am trying to install a GCC compiler on to a Linux system. I have > downloaded the file, decompressed it, and untarred it, but it now seems > that I need to compile the file. How do I compile a compiler w/o a > compiler? Or am I lo

Installing GCC

1999-04-13 Thread Steve Girard
I am trying to install a GCC compiler on to a Linux system. I have downloaded the file, decompressed it, and untarred it, but it now seems that I need to compile the file. How do I compile a compiler w/o a compiler? Or am I looking in the wrong direction. I have gcc_2.91.66-1.deb and gcc-2.8.1.

installing GCC on a Linux system

1999-04-13 Thread Steve Girard
I am trying to install a GCC compiler on to a Linux system. I have downloaded the file, decompressed it, and untarred it, but it now seems that I need to compile the file. How do I compile a compiler w/o a compiler? Or am I looking in the wrong direction. If you could help that would be great.

dpkg error installing gcc

1998-04-04 Thread Christopher J. McNicholas
Help!! :-) when I try to dpkg --install gcc.deb, I get the following error message: trying to overwrite ' /usr/bin/g++ ', which is also in package g++ dpkg-deb: subprocess paste killed by signal (Broken pipe) what do I do now?! -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject