[Date Prev][Date Next] [Thread Prev][Thread Next]
[Thread Index]
[Date Index]
[Author Index]
Re: First cut of PowerPC support in NPTL
- From: Jakub Jelinek <jakub redhat com>
- To: phil-list redhat com
- Subject: Re: First cut of PowerPC support in NPTL
- Date: Fri, 7 Mar 2003 18:13:10 -0500
On Fri, Mar 07, 2003 at 03:08:34PM -0800, Ulrich Drepper wrote:
> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
> Hash: SHA1
>
> Ian Wienand wrote:
>
> > ianw tartufi:/usr/src/ianw/libc/nptl$ gcc-snap -DDEFINE="part1 part2 part3"
> > gcc: part2: No such file or directory
> > gcc: part3: No such file or directory
> > gcc: no input files
>
> This doesn't look at all like a gcc problem.
>
> Run strace gcc-snap -DDEFINE="a b c" somefile.c. The very first line
> should be something like
>
> execve("/usr/bin/gcc", ["gcc-snap", "-DDEFINE=a b c"], [....]) = 0
>
> Note the second parameter. If this is not the case for you it's a shell
> problem. I very much doubt that the gcc driver is taking the -D
> parameter and splits it so that it can use parts of it as input file
> names. If it does some DOS-style in-program argument parsing
> incorrectly spilled over to the Unix side. Very unlikely.
Yeah, my bet is gcc-snap is some shell script which adds -B argument
to xgcc and doesn't use "$@" as it should.
Certainly -DDEFINE="part1 part2 part3" works just fine on gcc trunk
for me.
Jakub
[Date Prev][Date Next] [Thread Prev][Thread Next]
[Thread Index]
[Date Index]
[Author Index]