From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: Andreas Jaeger To: GNU libc hacker Subject: Patch for manual/install.texi Date: Thu, 25 Nov 1999 08:07:00 -0000 Message-id: X-SW-Source: 1999-11/msg00031.html As a followup to an old bug report, Michael sent me the appended patch to clarify the /usr/include removal when upgrading from libc5. Andreas 1999-11-25 Andreas Jaeger * manual/install.texi (Running make install): Better describe update from libc5. Patch by Michael Deutschmann . ============================================================ Index: manual/install.texi --- manual/install.texi 1999/09/10 19:53:32 1.34 +++ manual/install.texi 1999/11/25 15:55:32 @@ -232,18 +232,29 @@ This minimizes the risk of breaking things when the library changes out from underneath. +If you're upgrading from Linux libc5 or some other C library, you need to +replace the @file{/usr/include} with a fresh directory before installing it. +The new @file{/usr/include} should contain the Linux headers, but nothing else. + +You must first build the library (@samp{make}), optionally check it +(@samp{make check}), switch the include directories and then install +(@samp{make install}). The steps must be done in this order. Not moving +the directory before install will result in an unusable mixture of header +files from both libraries, but configuring, building, and checking the +library requires the ability to compile and run programs against the old +library. + If you are upgrading from a previous installation of glibc 2.0 or 2.1, -@samp{make install} will do the entire job. If you're upgrading from -Linux libc5 or some other C library, you need to rename the old -@file{/usr/include} directory before running @samp{make install}, -or you will end up with a mixture of header files from both -libraries, and you won't be able to compile anything. You may also need -to reconfigure GCC to work with the new library. The easiest way to do -that is to figure out the compiler switches to make it work again -(@samp{-Wl,--dynamic-linker=/lib/ld-linux.so.2} should work on Linux -systems) and use them to recompile gcc. You can also edit the specs -file (@file{/usr/lib/gcc-lib/@var{TARGET}/@var{VERSION}/specs}), but -that is a bit of a black art. +@samp{make install} will do the entire job. You do not need to remove +the old includes -- if you want to do so anyway you must then follow the +order given above. + +You may also need to reconfigure GCC to work with the new library. The +easiest way to do that is to figure out the compiler switches to make it +work again (@samp{-Wl,--dynamic-linker=/lib/ld-linux.so.2} should work on +Linux systems) and use them to recompile gcc. You can also edit the specs +file (@file{/usr/lib/gcc-lib/@var{TARGET}/@var{VERSION}/specs}), but that +is a bit of a black art. You can install glibc somewhere other than where you configured it to go by setting the @code{install_root} variable on the command line for -- Andreas Jaeger SuSE Labs aj@suse.de private aj@arthur.rhein-neckar.de