I'm trying to build a GCC 3.1 cross compiler (from the head of GCC
CVS) from Mac OS X 10.1.2 to Win32 (MinGW). When I do so, get get
errors from the libtool script for the objc runtime (which I need).
This occurs whether I enable shared libraries or not (the erroring
section seems to be
Hello,
I have a question/problem with libtool and autoconf which I was hoping
someone here could help me with.
We've had this problem with earlier versions of libtool and autoconf and
I'm trying libtool-1.4.2 and autoconf-2.52 for our project. When working
on the SP3 machines (config.guess outpu
>
> and libtool.texi says
> @defvar old_archive_from_expsyms_cmds
> If a static library must be created from the export symbol list in order to
> correctly link with a shared library, @samp{old_archive_from_expsyms_cmds}
> contains the commands needed to create that static library. When thes
Es schrieb Robert Collins:
> >
> > and note that there are quite some other people on this list who would
> > love to see the things get sorted out once and for all. It just needs
> > someone with time enough to exchange the three dozen e-mails it will
> > take (atleast!) to get things right. Just
I get this when I run make on v1.4.1 and v1.4.2
gcc -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I. -I. -I. -g -O2 -c ltdl.c -fPIC -DPIC -o
.libs/ltdl.lo
ltdl.c: In function `argzize_path':
ltdl.c:2107: `ENOMEM' undeclared (first use in this function)
ltdl.c:2107: (Each undeclared identifier is reported only once
ltdl.c:
>>> "Bob" == Bob Friesenhahn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
[...]
Bob> % ./bootstrap
Bob> autoheader: config-h.in is unchanged
Bob> Can't call method "close" on an undefined value at /usr/local/bin/automake line
7751.
See these messages for a fix:
http://mail.gnu.org/pipermail/automake-patche
On Mon, 2002-01-07 at 11:45, Guido Draheim wrote:
> The lastest discussion was in october, and on 22.OCT.2001 I got
> an e-mail from "Gerrit P. Haase"
>
> > Guten Tag Guido Draheim,
> >
> > Am 2001-10-22 um 07:18 schriebst du:
> >
> > > I just do not know and I did not take the time to do so