Configuration#
Like most GNU software, GCC must be configured before it can be built. This document describes the recommended configuration procedure for both native and cross targets.
We use srcdir
to refer to the toplevel source directory for
GCC; we use objdir
to refer to the toplevel build/object directory.
If you obtained the sources by cloning the repository, srcdir
must refer to the top gcc
directory, the one where the
MAINTAINERS
file can be found, and not its gcc
subdirectory, otherwise the build will fail.
If either srcdir
or objdir
is located on an automounted NFS
file system, the shell’s built-in pwd command will return
temporary pathnames. Using these can lead to various sorts of build
problems. To avoid this issue, set the PWDCMD
environment
variable to an automounter-aware pwd command, e.g.,
pawd or amq -w
, during the configuration and build
phases.
First, we highly recommend that GCC be built into a
separate directory from the sources which does not reside
within the source tree. This is how we generally build GCC; building
where srcdir
== objdir
should still work, but doesn’t
get extensive testing; building where objdir
is a subdirectory
of srcdir
is unsupported.
If you have previously built GCC in the same directory for a
different target machine, do make distclean
to delete all files
that might be invalid. One of the files this deletes is Makefile
;
if make distclean
complains that Makefile
does not exist
or issues a message like ‘don’t know how to make distclean’ it probably
means that the directory is already suitably clean. However, with the
recommended method of building in a separate objdir
, you should
simply use a different objdir
for each target.
Second, when configuring a native system, either cc or
gcc must be in your path or you must set CC
in
your environment before running configure. Otherwise the configuration
scripts may fail.
Note that the bootstrap compiler and the resulting GCC must be link compatible, else the bootstrap will fail with linker errors about incompatible object file formats. Several multilibed targets are affected by this requirement, see Specific, host/target specific installation notes. To configure GCC:
% mkdir objdir
% cd objdir
% srcdir/configure [options] [target]
Distributor options#
If you will be distributing binary versions of GCC, with modifications to the source code, you should use the options described in this section to make clear that your version contains modifications.
- --with-pkgversion=version#
Specify a string that identifies your package. You may wish to include a build number or build date. This version string will be included in the output of gcc --version. This suffix does not replace the default version string, only the
GCC
part.The default value is
GCC
.
- --with-bugurl=url#
Specify the URL that users should visit if they wish to report a bug. You are of course welcome to forward bugs reported to you to the FSF, if you determine that they are not bugs in your modifications.
The default value refers to the FSF’s GCC bug tracker.
- --with-documentation-root-url=url#
Specify the URL root that contains GCC option documentation. The
url
should end with a/
character.The default value is https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/.
- --with-changes-root-url=url#
Specify the URL root that contains information about changes in GCC releases like
gcc-version/changes.html
. Theurl
should end with a/
character.The default value is https://gcc.gnu.org/.
Host, Build and Target specification#
Specify the host, build and target machine configurations. You do this
when you run the configure
script.
The build machine is the system which you are using, the host machine is the system where you want to run the resulting compiler (normally the build machine), and the target machine is the system for which you want the compiler to generate code.
If you are building a compiler to produce code for the machine it runs
on (a native compiler), you normally do not need to specify any operands
to configure
; it will try to guess the type of machine you are on
and use that as the build, host and target machines. So you don’t need
to specify a configuration when building a native compiler unless
configure
cannot figure out what your configuration is or guesses
wrong.
In those cases, specify the build machine’s configuration name
with the --host
option; the host and target will default to be
the same as the host machine.
Here is an example:
./configure --host=x86_64-pc-linux-gnu
A configuration name may be canonical or it may be more or less
abbreviated (config.sub
script produces canonical versions).
A canonical configuration name has three parts, separated by dashes.
It looks like this: cpu-company-system
.
Here are the possible CPU types:
aarch64, aarch64_be, alpha, alpha64, amdgcn, arc, arceb, arm, armeb, avr, bfin, bpf, cris, csky, epiphany, fido, fr30, frv, ft32, h8300, hppa, hppa2.0, hppa64, i486, i686, ia64, iq2000, lm32, loongarch64, m32c, m32r, m32rle, m68k, mcore, microblaze, microblazeel, mips, mips64, mips64el, mips64octeon, mips64orion, mips64vr, mipsel, mipsisa32, mipsisa32r2, mipsisa64, mipsisa64r2, mipsisa64r2el, mipsisa64sb1, mipsisa64sr71k, mipstx39, mmix, mn10300, moxie, msp430, nds32be, nds32le, nios2, nvptx, or1k, pdp11, powerpc, powerpc64, powerpc64le, powerpcle, pru, riscv32, riscv32be, riscv64, riscv64be, rl78, rx, s390, s390x, sh, shle, sparc, sparc64, tic6x, v850, v850e, v850e1, vax, visium, x86_64, xstormy16, xtensa
Here is a list of system types:
aix version
, amdhsa, aout, cygwin, darwin version
,
eabi, eabialtivec, eabisim, eabisimaltivec, elf, elf32,
elfbare, elfoabi, freebsd version
, gnu, hpux, hpux version
,
kfreebsd-gnu, kopensolaris-gnu, linux-androideabi, linux-gnu,
linux-gnu_altivec, linux-musl, linux-uclibc, lynxos, mingw32, mingw32crt,
mmixware, msdosdjgpp, netbsd, netbsdelf version
, nto-qnx, openbsd,
rtems, solaris version
, symbianelf, tpf, uclinux, uclinux_eabi, vms,
vxworks, vxworksae, vxworksmils
Options specification#
Use options
to override several configure time options for
GCC. A list of supported options
follows; configure
--help
may list other options, but those not listed below may not
work and should not normally be used.
Note that each --enable
option has a corresponding
--disable
option and that each --with
option has a
corresponding --without
option.
- --prefix=dirname#
Specify the toplevel installation directory. This is the recommended way to install the tools into a directory other than the default. The toplevel installation directory defaults to
/usr/local
.We highly recommend against
dirname
being the same or a subdirectory ofobjdir
or vice versa. If specifying a directory beneath a user’s home directory tree, some shells will not expanddirname
correctly if it contains the~
metacharacter; use$HOME
instead.The following standard autoconf options are supported. Normally you should not need to use these options.
- --exec-prefix=dirname#
Specify the toplevel installation directory for architecture-dependent files. The default is
prefix
.
- --bindir=dirname#
Specify the installation directory for the executables called by users (such as gcc and g++). The default is
exec-prefix/bin
.
- --libdir=dirname#
Specify the installation directory for object code libraries and internal data files of GCC. The default is
exec-prefix/lib
.
- --libexecdir=dirname#
Specify the installation directory for internal executables of GCC. The default is
exec-prefix/libexec
.
- --with-slibdir=dirname#
Specify the installation directory for the shared libgcc library. The default is
libdir
.
- --datarootdir=dirname#
Specify the root of the directory tree for read-only architecture-independent data files referenced by GCC. The default is
prefix/share
.
- --infodir=dirname#
Specify the installation directory for documentation in info format. The default is
datarootdir/info
.
- --datadir=dirname#
Specify the installation directory for some architecture-independent data files referenced by GCC. The default is
datarootdir
.
- --docdir=dirname#
Specify the installation directory for documentation files (other than Info) for GCC. The default is
datarootdir/doc
.
- --htmldir=dirname#
Specify the installation directory for HTML documentation files. The default is
docdir
.
- --pdfdir=dirname#
Specify the installation directory for PDF documentation files. The default is
docdir
.
- --mandir=dirname#
Specify the installation directory for manual pages. The default is
datarootdir/man
.
- --with-gxx-include-dir=dirname#
Specify the installation directory for G++ header files. The default depends on other configuration options, and differs between cross and native configurations.
- --with-specs=specs#
Specify additional command line driver SPECS. This can be useful if you need to turn on a non-standard feature by default without modifying the compiler’s source code, for instance
--with-specs=%{!fcommon:%{!fno-common:-fno-common}}
. See ‘Spec Files’ in the main manual
- --program-prefix=prefix#
GCC supports some transformations of the names of its programs when installing them. This option prepends
prefix
to the names of programs to install inbindir
(see above). For example, specifying--program-prefix=foo-
would result ingcc
being installed as/usr/local/bin/foo-gcc
.
- --program-suffix=suffix#
Appends
suffix
to the names of programs to install inbindir
(see above). For example, specifying--program-suffix=-3.1
would result ingcc
being installed as/usr/local/bin/gcc-3.1
.
- --program-transform-name=pattern#
Applies the
sed
scriptpattern
to be applied to the names of programs to install inbindir
(see above).pattern
has to consist of one or more basicsed
editing commands, separated by semicolons. For example, if you want thegcc
program name to be transformed to the installed program/usr/local/bin/myowngcc
and theg++
program name to be transformed to/usr/local/bin/gspecial++
without changing other program names, you could use the pattern--program-transform-name='s/^gcc$/myowngcc/; s/^g++$/gspecial++/'
to achieve this effect.All three options can be combined and used together, resulting in more complex conversion patterns. As a basic rule,
prefix
(andsuffix
) are prepended (appended) before further transformations can happen with a special transformation scriptpattern
.As currently implemented, this option only takes effect for native builds; cross compiler binaries’ names are not transformed even when a transformation is explicitly asked for by one of these options.
For native builds, some of the installed programs are also installed with the target alias in front of their name, as in
i686-pc-linux-gnu-gcc
. All of the above transformations happen before the target alias is prepended to the name—so, specifying--program-prefix=foo-
and program-suffix=-3.1, the resulting binary would be installed as/usr/local/bin/i686-pc-linux-gnu-foo-gcc-3.1
.As a last shortcoming, none of the installed Ada programs are transformed yet, which will be fixed in some time.
- --with-local-prefix=dirname#
Specify the installation directory for local include files. The default is
/usr/local
. Specify this option if you want the compiler to search directorydirname/include
for locally installed header files instead of/usr/local/include
.You should specify
--with-local-prefix
only if your site has a different convention (not/usr/local
) for where to put site-specific files.The default value for
--with-local-prefix
is/usr/local
regardless of the value of--prefix
. Specifying--prefix
has no effect on which directory GCC searches for local header files. This may seem counterintuitive, but actually it is logical.The purpose of
--prefix
is to specify where to install GCC. The local header files in/usr/local/include
—if you put any in that directory—are not part of GCC. They are part of other programs—perhaps many others. (GCC installs its own header files in another directory which is based on the--prefix
value.)Both the local-prefix include directory and the GCC-prefix include directory are part of GCC’s ‘system include’ directories. Although these two directories are not fixed, they need to be searched in the proper order for the correct processing of the include_next directive. The local-prefix include directory is searched before the GCC-prefix include directory. Another characteristic of system include directories is that pedantic warnings are turned off for headers in these directories.
Some autoconf macros add
-I directory
options to the compiler command line, to ensure that directories containing installed packages’ headers are searched. Whendirectory
is one of GCC’s system include directories, GCC will ignore the option so that system directories continue to be processed in the correct order. This may result in a search order different from what was specified but the directory will still be searched.GCC automatically searches for ordinary libraries using
GCC_EXEC_PREFIX
. Thus, when the same installation prefix is used for both GCC and packages, GCC will automatically search for both headers and libraries. This provides a configuration that is easy to use. GCC behaves in a manner similar to that when it is installed as a system compiler in/usr
.Sites that need to install multiple versions of GCC may not want to use the above simple configuration. It is possible to use the
--program-prefix
,--program-suffix
and--program-transform-name
options to install multiple versions into a single directory, but it may be simpler to use different prefixes and the--with-local-prefix
option to specify the location of the site-specific files for each version. It will then be necessary for users to specify explicitly the location of local site libraries (e.g., withLIBRARY_PATH
).The same value can be used for both
--with-local-prefix
and--prefix
provided it is not/usr
. This can be used to avoid the default search of/usr/local/include
.Do not specify
/usr
as the--with-local-prefix
! The directory you use for--with-local-prefix
must not contain any of the system’s standard header files. If it did contain them, certain programs would be miscompiled (including GNU Emacs, on certain targets), because this would override and nullify the header file corrections made by the fixincludes script.Indications are that people who use this option use it based on mistaken ideas of what it is for. People use it as if it specified where to install part of GCC. Perhaps they make this assumption because installing GCC creates the directory.
- --with-gcc-major-version-only#
Specifies that GCC should use only the major number rather than
major.minor.patchlevel
in filesystem paths.
- --with-native-system-header-dir=dirname#
Specifies that
dirname
is the directory that contains native system header files, rather than/usr/include
. This option is most useful if you are creating a compiler that should be isolated from the system as much as possible. It is most commonly used with the--with-sysroot
option and will cause GCC to searchdirname
inside the system root specified by that option.
Build shared versions of libraries, if shared libraries are supported on the target platform. Unlike GCC 2.95.x and earlier, shared libraries are enabled by default on all platforms that support shared libraries.
If a list of packages is given as an argument, build shared libraries only for the listed packages. For other packages, only static libraries will be built. Package names currently recognized in the GCC tree are
libgcc
(also known asgcc
),libstdc++
(notlibstdc++-v3
),libffi
,zlib
,boehm-gc
,ada
,libada
,libgo
,libobjc
, andlibphobos
. Notelibiberty
does not support shared libraries at all.Use
--disable-shared
to build only static libraries. Note that--disable-shared
does not accept a list of package names as argument, only--enable-shared
does.Contrast with
--enable-host-shared
, which affects host code.
Specify that the host code should be built into position-independent machine code (with -fPIC), allowing it to be used within shared libraries, but yielding a slightly slower compiler.
This option is required when building the libgccjit.so library.
Contrast with
--enable-shared
, which affects target libraries.
- --with-gnu-as#
Specify that the compiler should assume that the assembler it finds is the GNU assembler. However, this does not modify the rules to find an assembler and will result in confusion if the assembler found is not actually the GNU assembler. (Confusion may also result if the compiler finds the GNU assembler but has not been configured with
--with-gnu-as
.) If you have more than one assembler installed on your system, you may want to use this option in connection with--with-as=pathname
or--with-build-time-tools=pathname
.The following systems are the only ones where it makes a difference whether you use the GNU assembler. On any other system,
--with-gnu-as
has no effect.
hppa1.0-any-any
hppa1.1-any-any
sparc-sun-solaris2.any
sparc64-any-solaris2.any
- --with-as=pathname#
Specify that the compiler should use the assembler pointed to by
pathname
, rather than the one found by the standard rules to find an assembler, which are:Unless GCC is being built with a cross compiler, check the
libexec/gcc/target/version
directory.libexec
defaults toexec-prefix/libexec
;exec-prefix
defaults toprefix
, which defaults to/usr/local
unless overridden by the--prefix=pathname
switch described above.target
is the target system triple, such assparc-sun-solaris2.7
, andversion
denotes the GCC version, such as 3.0.If the target system is the same that you are building on, check operating system specific directories (e.g.
/usr/ccs/bin
on Solaris 2).Check in the
PATH
for a tool whose name is prefixed by the target system triple.Check in the
PATH
for a tool whose name is not prefixed by the target system triple, if the host and target system triple are the same (in other words, we use a host tool if it can be used for the target as well).
You may want to use
--with-as
if no assembler is installed in the directories listed above, or if you have multiple assemblers installed and want to choose one that is not found by the above rules.
- --with-gnu-ld#
Same as
--with-gnu-as
but for the linker.
- --with-dsymutil=pathname#
Same as
--with-as
but for the debug linker (only used on Darwin platforms so far).
- --with-tls=dialect#
Specify the default TLS dialect, for systems were there is a choice. For ARM targets, possible values for
dialect
aregnu
orgnu2
, which select between the original GNU dialect and the GNU TLS descriptor-based dialect.
- --enable-multiarch#
Specify whether to enable or disable multiarch support. The default is to check for glibc start files in a multiarch location, and enable it if the files are found. The auto detection is enabled for native builds, and for cross builds configured with
--with-sysroot
, and without--with-native-system-header-dir
. More documentation about multiarch can be found at https://wiki.debian.org/Multiarch.
- --enable-sjlj-exceptions#
Force use of the
setjmp
/longjmp
-based scheme for exceptions.configure
ordinarily picks the correct value based on the platform. Only use this option if you are sure you need a different setting.
- --enable-vtable-verify#
Specify whether to enable or disable the vtable verification feature. Enabling this feature causes libstdc++ to be built with its virtual calls in verifiable mode. This means that, when linked with libvtv, every virtual call in libstdc++ will verify the vtable pointer through which the call will be made before actually making the call. If not linked with libvtv, the verifier will call stub functions (in libstdc++ itself) and do nothing. If vtable verification is disabled, then libstdc++ is not built with its virtual calls in verifiable mode at all. However the libvtv library will still be built (see
--disable-libvtv
to turn off building libvtv).--disable-vtable-verify
is the default.
- --disable-gcov#
Specify that the run-time library used for coverage analysis and associated host tools should not be built.
- --disable-multilib#
Specify that multiple target libraries to support different target variants, calling conventions, etc. should not be built. The default is to build a predefined set of them.
Some targets provide finer-grained control over which multilibs are built (e.g.,
--disable-softfloat
):arm-*-*
fpu, 26bit, underscore, interwork, biendian, nofmult.
m68*-*-*
softfloat, m68881, m68000, m68020.
mips*-*-*
single-float, biendian, softfloat.
msp430-*-*
no-exceptions
powerpc*-*-*, rs6000*-*-*
aix64, pthread, softfloat, powercpu, powerpccpu, powerpcos, biendian, sysv, aix.
- --with-multilib-list=list#
Specify what multilibs to build.
list
is a comma separated list of values, possibly consisting of a single value. Currently only implemented for aarch64*-*-*, arm*-*-*, loongarch64-*-*, riscv*-*-*, sh*-*-* and x86-64-*-linux*. The accepted values and meaning for each target is given below.aarch64*-*-*
list
is a comma separated list ofilp32
, andlp64
to enable ILP32 and LP64 run-time libraries, respectively. Iflist
is empty, then there will be no multilibs and only the default run-time library will be built. Iflist
isdefault
or –with-multilib-list= is not specified, then the default set of libraries is selected based on the value of--target
.arm*-*-*
list
is a comma separated list ofaprofile
andrmprofile
to build multilibs for A or R and M architecture profiles respectively. Note that, due to some limitation of the current multilib framework, using the combinedaprofile,rmprofile
multilibs selects in some cases a less optimal multilib than when using the multilib profile for the architecture targetted. The special valuedefault
is also accepted and is equivalent to omitting the option, i.e., only the default run-time library will be enabled.list
may instead contain@name
, to use the multilib configuration Makefile fragmentname
ingcc/config/arm
in the source tree (it is part of the corresponding sources, after all). It is recommended, but not required, that files used for this purpose to be named starting witht-ml-
, to make their intended purpose self-evident, in line with GCC conventions. Such files enable custom, user-chosen multilib lists to be configured. Whether multiple such files can be used together depends on the contents of the supplied files. Seegcc/config/arm/t-multilib
and its supplementarygcc/config/arm/t-*profile
files for an example of what such Makefile fragments might look like for this version of GCC. The macros expected to be defined in these fragments are not stable across GCC releases, so make sure they define theMULTILIB
-related macros expected by the version of GCC you are building. See Target Makefile Fragments.The table below gives the combination of ISAs, architectures, FPUs and floating-point ABIs for which multilibs are built for each predefined profile. The union of these options is considered when specifying both
aprofile
andrmprofile
.Option
aprofile
rmprofile
ISAs
-marm
and-mthumb
-mthumb
Architectures
default architecture
-march=armv7-a
-march=armv7ve
-march=armv8-a
default architecture
-march=armv6s-m
-march=armv7-m
-march=armv7e-m
-march=armv8-m.base
-march=armv8-m.main
-march=armv7
FPUs
none
-mfpu=vfpv3-d16
-mfpu=neon
-mfpu=vfpv4-d16
-mfpu=neon-vfpv4
-mfpu=neon-fp-armv8
none
-mfpu=vfpv3-d16
-mfpu=fpv4-sp-d16
-mfpu=fpv5-sp-d16
-mfpu=fpv5-d16
floating-point ABIs
-mfloat-abi=soft
-mfloat-abi=softfp
-mfloat-abi=hard
-mfloat-abi=soft
-mfloat-abi=softfp
-mfloat-abi=hard
loongarch*-*-*
list
is a comma-separated list of the following ABI identifiers:lp64d[/base]
lp64f[/base]
lp64d[/base]
, where the/base
suffix may be omitted, to enable their respective run-time libraries. Iflist
is empty ordefault
, or if--with-multilib-list
is not specified, then the default ABI as specified by--with-abi
or implied by--target
is selected.riscv*-*-*
list
is a single ABI name. The target architecture must be eitherrv32gc
orrv64gc
. This will build a single multilib for the specified architecture and ABI pair. If--with-multilib-list
is not given, then a default set of multilibs is selected based on the value of--target
. This is usually a large set of multilibs.sh*-*-*
list
is a comma separated list of CPU names. These must be of the formsh*
orm*
(in which case they match the compiler option for that processor). The list should not contain any endian options - these are handled by--with-endian
.If
list
is empty, then there will be no multilibs for extra processors. The multilib for the secondary endian remains enabled.As a special case, if an entry in the list starts with a
!
(exclamation point), then it is added to the list of excluded multilibs. Entries of this sort should be compatible withMULTILIB_EXCLUDES
(once the leading!
has been stripped).If
--with-multilib-list
is not given, then a default set of multilibs is selected based on the value of--target
. This is usually the complete set of libraries, but some targets imply a more specialized subset.Example 1: to configure a compiler for SH4A only, but supporting both endians, with little endian being the default:
--with-cpu=sh4a
--with-endian=little,big
--with-multilib-list=
Example 2: to configure a compiler for both SH4A and SH4AL-DSP, but with only little endian SH4AL:--with-cpu=sh4a
--with-endian=little,big
--with-multilib-list=sh4al,!mb/m4al
x86-64-*-linux*
list
is a comma separated list ofm32
,m64
andmx32
to enable 32-bit, 64-bit and x32 run-time libraries, respectively. Iflist
is empty, then there will be no multilibs and only the default run-time library will be enabled.If
--with-multilib-list
is not given, then only 32-bit and 64-bit run-time libraries will be enabled.
- --with-multilib-generator=config#
Specify what multilibs to build.
config
is a semicolon separated list of values, possibly consisting of a single value. Currently only implemented for riscv*-*-elf*. The accepted values and meanings are given below.Every config is constructed with four components: architecture string, ABI, reuse rule with architecture string and reuse rule with sub-extension.
Example 1: Add multi-lib suppport for rv32i with ilp32.
rv32i-ilp32--
Example 2: Add multi-lib suppport for rv32i with ilp32 and rv32imafd with ilp32.
rv32i-ilp32--;rv32imafd-ilp32--
Example 3: Add multi-lib suppport for rv32i with ilp32; rv32im with ilp32 and rv32ic with ilp32 will reuse this multi-lib set.
rv32i-ilp32-rv32im-c
Example 4: Add multi-lib suppport for rv64ima with lp64; rv64imaf with lp64, rv64imac with lp64 and rv64imafc with lp64 will reuse this multi-lib set.
rv64ima-lp64--f,c,fc
--with-multilib-generator
have an optional configuration argument--cmodel=val
for code model, this option will expand with other config options,val
is a comma separated list of possible code model, currently we support medlow and medany.Example 5: Add multi-lib suppport for rv64ima with lp64; rv64ima with lp64 and medlow code model
rv64ima-lp64--;--cmodel=medlow
Example 6: Add multi-lib suppport for rv64ima with lp64; rv64ima with lp64 and medlow code model; rv64ima with lp64 and medany code model
rv64ima-lp64--;--cmodel=medlow,medany
- --with-endian=endians#
Specify what endians to use. Currently only implemented for sh*-*-*.
endians
may be one of the following:big
Use big endian exclusively.
little
Use little endian exclusively.
big,little
Use big endian by default. Provide a multilib for little endian.
little,big
Use little endian by default. Provide a multilib for big endian.
- --enable-threads#
Specify that the target supports threads. This affects the Objective-C compiler and runtime library, and exception handling for other languages like C++. On some systems, this is the default.
In general, the best (and, in many cases, the only known) threading model available will be configured for use. Beware that on some systems, GCC has not been taught what threading models are generally available for the system. In this case,
--enable-threads
is an alias for--enable-threads=single
.
- --disable-threads#
Specify that threading support should be disabled for the system. This is an alias for
--enable-threads=single
.
- --enable-threads=lib#
Specify that
lib
is the thread support library. This affects the Objective-C compiler and runtime library, and exception handling for other languages like C++. The possibilities forlib
are:aix
AIX thread support.
dce
DCE thread support.
lynx
LynxOS thread support.
mipssde
MIPS SDE thread support.
no
This is an alias for
single
.posix
Generic POSIX/Unix98 thread support.
rtems
RTEMS thread support.
single
Disable thread support, should work for all platforms.
tpf
TPF thread support.
vxworks
VxWorks thread support.
win32
Microsoft Win32 API thread support.
- --enable-tls#
Specify that the target supports TLS (Thread Local Storage). Usually configure can correctly determine if TLS is supported. In cases where it guesses incorrectly, TLS can be explicitly enabled or disabled with
--enable-tls
or--disable-tls
. This can happen if the assembler supports TLS but the C library does not, or if the assumptions made by the configure test are incorrect.
- --disable-tls#
Specify that the target does not support TLS. This is an alias for
--enable-tls=no
.
- --disable-tm-clone-registry#
Disable TM clone registry in libgcc. It is enabled in libgcc by default. This option helps to reduce code size for embedded targets which do not use transactional memory.
- --with-cpu=cpu#
Specify which cpu variant the compiler should generate code for by default.
cpu
will be used as the default value of the-mcpu=
switch. This option is only supported on some targets, including ARC, ARM, i386, M68k, PowerPC, and SPARC. It is mandatory for ARC. The--with-cpu-32
and--with-cpu-64
options specify separate default CPUs for 32-bit and 64-bit modes; these options are only supported for aarch64, i386, x86-64, PowerPC, and SPARC.
- --with-schedule=cpu#
These configure options provide default values for the
-mschedule=
,-march=
,-mtune=
,-mabi=
, and-mfpu=
options and for-mhard-float
or-msoft-float
. As with--with-cpu
, which switches will be accepted and acceptable values of the arguments depend on the target.
- --with-mode=mode#
Specify if the compiler should default to
-marm
or-mthumb
. This option is only supported on ARM targets.
- --with-stack-offset=num#
This option sets the default for the -mstack-offset=
num
option, and will thus generally also control the setting of this option for libraries. This option is only supported on Epiphany targets.
- --with-fpmath=isa#
This options sets
-mfpmath=sse
by default and specifies the default ISA for floating-point arithmetics. You can select eithersse
which enables-msse2
oravx
which enables-mavx
by default. This option is only supported on i386 and x86-64 targets.
- --with-fp-32=mode#
On MIPS targets, set the default value for the
-mfp
option when using the o32 ABI. The possibilities formode
are:32
Use the o32 FP32 ABI extension, as with the
-mfp32
command-line option.xx
Use the o32 FPXX ABI extension, as with the
-mfpxx
command-line option.64
Use the o32 FP64 ABI extension, as with the
-mfp64
command-line option.In the absence of this configuration option the default is to use the o32 FP32 ABI extension.
- --with-odd-spreg-32#
On MIPS targets, set the
-modd-spreg
option by default when using the o32 ABI.
- --without-odd-spreg-32#
On MIPS targets, set the
-mno-odd-spreg
option by default when using the o32 ABI. This is normally used in conjunction with--with-fp-32=64
in order to target the o32 FP64A ABI extension.
- --with-nan=encoding#
On MIPS targets, set the default encoding convention to use for the special not-a-number (NaN) IEEE 754 floating-point data. The possibilities for
encoding
are:legacy
Use the legacy encoding, as with the
-mnan=legacy
command-line option.2008
Use the 754-2008 encoding, as with the
-mnan=2008
command-line option.
To use this configuration option you must have an assembler version installed that supports the
-mnan=
command-line option too. In the absence of this configuration option the default convention is the legacy encoding, as when neither of the-mnan=2008
and-mnan=legacy
command-line options has been used.
- --with-divide=type#
Specify how the compiler should generate code for checking for division by zero. This option is only supported on the MIPS target. The possibilities for
type
are:traps
Division by zero checks use conditional traps (this is the default on systems that support conditional traps).
breaks
Division by zero checks use the break instruction.
- --with-compact-branches=policy#
Specify how the compiler should generate branch instructions. This option is only supported on the MIPS target. The possibilities for
type
are:optimal
Cause a delay slot branch to be used if one is available in the current ISA and the delay slot is successfully filled. If the delay slot is not filled, a compact branch will be chosen if one is available.
never
Ensures that compact branch instructions will never be generated.
always
Ensures that a compact branch instruction will be generated if available. If a compact branch instruction is not available, a delay slot form of the branch will be used instead. This option is supported from MIPS Release 6 onwards. For pre-R6/microMIPS/MIPS16, this option is just same as never/optimal.
- --with-llsc#
On MIPS targets, make
-mllsc
the default when no-mno-llsc
option is passed. This is the default for Linux-based targets, as the kernel will emulate them if the ISA does not provide them.
- --without-llsc#
On MIPS targets, make
-mno-llsc
the default when no-mllsc
option is passed.
- --with-synci#
On MIPS targets, make
-msynci
the default when no-mno-synci
option is passed.
- --without-synci#
On MIPS targets, make
-mno-synci
the default when no-msynci
option is passed. This is the default.
- --with-lxc1-sxc1#
On MIPS targets, make
-mlxc1-sxc1
the default when no-mno-lxc1-sxc1
option is passed. This is the default.
- --without-lxc1-sxc1#
On MIPS targets, make
-mno-lxc1-sxc1
the default when no-mlxc1-sxc1
option is passed. The indexed load/store instructions are not directly a problem but can lead to unexpected behaviour when deployed in an application intended for a 32-bit address space but run on a 64-bit processor. The issue is seen because all known MIPS 64-bit Linux kernels execute o32 and n32 applications with 64-bit addressing enabled which affects the overflow behaviour of the indexed addressing mode. GCC will assume that ordinary 32-bit arithmetic overflow behaviour is the same whether performed as anaddu
instruction or as part of the address calculation inlwxc1
type instructions. This assumption holds true in a pure 32-bit environment and can hold true in a 64-bit environment if the address space is accurately set to be 32-bit for o32 and n32.
- --with-madd4#
On MIPS targets, make
-mmadd4
the default when no-mno-madd4
option is passed. This is the default.
- --without-madd4#
On MIPS targets, make
-mno-madd4
the default when no-mmadd4
option is passed. Themadd4
instruction family can be problematic when targeting a combination of cores that implement these instructions differently. There are two known cores that implement these as fused operations instead of unfused (where unfused is normally expected). Disabling these instructions is the only way to ensure compatible code is generated; this will incur a performance penalty.
- --with-mips-plt#
On MIPS targets, make use of copy relocations and PLTs. These features are extensions to the traditional SVR4-based MIPS ABIs and require support from GNU binutils and the runtime C library.
- --with-stack-clash-protection-guard-size=size#
On certain targets this option sets the default stack clash protection guard size as a power of two in bytes. On AArch64
size
is required to be either 12 (4KB) or 16 (64KB).
- --with-isa-spec=ISA-spec-string#
On RISC-V targets specify the default version of the RISC-V Unprivileged (formerly User-Level) ISA specification to produce code conforming to. The possibilities for
ISA-spec-string
are:2.2
Produce code conforming to version 2.2.
20190608
Produce code conforming to version 20190608.
20191213
Produce code conforming to version 20191213.
In the absence of this configuration option the default version is 20191213.
- --enable-__cxa_atexit#
Define if you want to use __cxa_atexit, rather than atexit, to register C++ destructors for local statics and global objects. This is essential for fully standards-compliant handling of destructors, but requires __cxa_atexit in libc. This option is currently only available on systems with GNU libc. When enabled, this will cause
-fuse-cxa-atexit
to be passed by default.
- --enable-gnu-indirect-function#
Define if you want to enable the
ifunc
attribute. This option is currently only available on systems with GNU libc on certain targets.
- --enable-target-optspace#
Specify that target libraries should be optimized for code space instead of code speed. This is the default for the m32r platform.
- --with-cpp-install-dir=dirname#
Specify that the user visible cpp program should be installed in
prefix/dirname/cpp
, in addition tobindir
.
- --enable-comdat#
Enable COMDAT group support. This is primarily used to override the automatically detected value.
- --enable-initfini-array#
Force the use of sections
.init_array
and.fini_array
(instead of.init
and.fini
) for constructors and destructors. Option--disable-initfini-array
has the opposite effect. If neither option is specified, the configure script will try to guess whether the.init_array
and.fini_array
sections are supported and, if they are, use them.
- --enable-link-mutex#
When building GCC, use a mutex to avoid linking the compilers for multiple languages at the same time, to avoid thrashing on build systems with limited free memory. The default is not to use such a mutex.
- --enable-link-serialization#
When building GCC, use make dependencies to serialize linking the compilers for multiple languages, to avoid thrashing on build systems with limited free memory. The default is not to add such dependencies and thus with parallel make potentially link different compilers concurrently. If the argument is a positive integer, allow that number of concurrent link processes for the large binaries.
- --enable-maintainer-mode#
The build rules that regenerate the Autoconf and Automake output files as well as the GCC master message catalog
gcc.pot
are normally disabled. This is because it can only be rebuilt if the complete source tree is present. If you have changed the sources and want to rebuild the catalog, configuring with--enable-maintainer-mode
will enable this. Note that you need a recent version of thegettext
tools to do so.
- --disable-bootstrap#
For a native build, the default configuration is to perform a 3-stage bootstrap of the compiler when
make
is invoked, testing that GCC can compile itself correctly. If you want to disable this process, you can configure with--disable-bootstrap
.
- --enable-bootstrap#
In special cases, you may want to perform a 3-stage build even if the target and host triplets are different. This is possible when the host can run code compiled for the target (e.g. host is i686-linux, target is i486-linux). Starting from GCC 4.2, to do this you have to configure explicitly with
--enable-bootstrap
.
- --enable-generated-files-in-srcdir#
Neither the .c and .h files that are generated from Bison and flex nor the info manuals and man pages that are built from the .texi files are present in the repository development tree. When building GCC from that development tree, or from one of our snapshots, those generated files are placed in your build directory, which allows for the source to be in a readonly directory.
If you configure with
--enable-generated-files-in-srcdir
then those generated files will go into the source directory. This is mainly intended for generating release or prerelease tarballs of the GCC sources, since it is not a requirement that the users of source releases to have flex, Bison, or makeinfo.
- --enable-version-specific-runtime-libs#
Specify that runtime libraries should be installed in the compiler specific subdirectory (
libdir/gcc
) rather than the usual places. In addition,libstdc++
’s include files will be installed intolibdir
unless you overruled it by using--with-gxx-include-dir=dirname
. Using this option is particularly useful if you intend to use several versions of GCC in parallel. The default isyes
forlibada
, andno
for the remaining libraries.
- --with-aix-soname=aix, svr4 or both#
Traditional AIX shared library versioning (versioned
Shared Object
files as members of unversionedArchive Library
files namedlib.a
) causes numerous headaches for package managers. However,Import Files
as members ofArchive Library
files allow for filename-based versioning of shared libraries as seen on Linux/SVR4, where this is called the “SONAME”. But as they prevent static linking,Import Files
may be used withRuntime Linking
only, where the linker does search forlibNAME.so
beforelibNAME.a
library filenames with the-lNAME
linker flag.
For detailed information please refer to the AIX ld Command reference.
As long as shared library creation is enabled, upon:
- --with-aix-soname=aix#
- --with-aix-soname=both#
A (traditional AIX)
Shared Archive Library
file is created:
using the
libNAME.a
filename schemewith the
Shared Object
file as archive member namedlibNAME.so.V
(except forlibgcc_s
, where theShared Object
file is namedshr.o
for backwards compatibility), which
is used for runtime loading from inside the
libNAME.a
fileis used for dynamic loading via
dlopen("libNAME.a(libNAME.so.V)", RTLD_MEMBER)
is used for shared linking
is used for static linking, so no separate
Static Archive Library
file is needed
- --with-aix-soname=both#
- --with-aix-soname=svr4#
A (second)
Shared Archive Library
file is created:
using the
libNAME.so.V
filename schemewith the
Shared Object
file as archive member namedshr.o
, which
is created with the
-G linker flag
has the
F_LOADONLY
flag setis used for runtime loading from inside the
libNAME.so.V
fileis used for dynamic loading via
dlopen("libNAME.so.V(shr.o)", RTLD_MEMBER)
with the
Import File
as archive member namedshr.imp
, which * refers tolibNAME.so.V(shr.o)
as the “SONAME”, to be recorded in theLoader Section
of subsequent binaries * indicates whetherlibNAME.so.V(shr.o)
is 32 or 64 bit * lists all the public symbols exported bylib.so.V(shr.o)
, eventually decorated with theweak Keyword
* is necessary for shared linking againstlib.so.V(shr.o)
A symbolic link using the
libNAME.so
filename scheme is created: * pointing to thelibNAME.so.V
Shared Archive Library
file * to permit theld Command
to findlib.so.V(shr.imp)
via the-lNAME
argument (requiresRuntime Linking
to be enabled) * to permit dynamic loading oflib.so.V(shr.o)
without the need to specify the version number viadlopen("libNAME.so(shr.o)", RTLD_MEMBER)
As long as static library creation is enabled, upon:
- --with-aix-soname=svr4#
A
Static Archive Library
is created:
using the
libNAME.a
filename schemewith all the
Static Object
files as archive members, which
are used for static linking
While the aix-soname=
svr4
option does not createShared Object
files as members of unversionedArchive Library
files any more, package managers still are responsible to transferShared Object
files found as member of a previously installed unversionedArchive Library
file into the newly installedArchive Library
file with the same filename.Warning
Creating
Shared Object
files withRuntime Linking
enabled may bloat the TOC, eventually leading toTOC overflow
errors, requiring the use of either the-Wl,-bbigtoc
linker flag (seen to break with theGDB
debugger) or some of the TOC-related compiler flags, see IBM RS/6000 and PowerPC Options.
--with-aix-soname
is currently supported bylibgcc_s
only, so this option is still experimental and not for normal use yet.Default is the traditional behavior
--with-aix-soname=aix
.
- --enable-languages=lang1,lang2,...#
Specify that only a particular subset of compilers and their runtime libraries should be built. For a list of valid values for
langN
you can issue the following command in thegcc
directory of your GCC source tree:grep ^language= */config-lang.in
Currently, you can use any of the following:
all
,default
,ada
,c
,c++
,d
,fortran
,go
,jit
,lto
,objc
,obj-c++
. Building the Ada compiler has special requirements, see below. If you do not pass this flag, or specify the optiondefault
, then the default languages available in thegcc
sub-tree will be configured. Ada, D, Go, Jit, and Objective-C++ are not default languages. LTO is not a default language, but is built by default because--enable-lto
is enabled by default. The other languages are default languages. Ifall
is specified, then all available languages are built. An exception isjit
language, which requires--enable-host-shared
to be included withall
.
- --enable-stage1-languages=lang1,lang2,...#
Specify that a particular subset of compilers and their runtime libraries should be built with the system C compiler during stage 1 of the bootstrap process, rather than only in later stages with the bootstrapped C compiler. The list of valid values is the same as for
--enable-languages
, and the optionall
will select all of the languages enabled by--enable-languages
. This option is primarily useful for GCC development; for instance, when a development version of the compiler cannot bootstrap due to compiler bugs, or when one is debugging front ends other than the C front end. When this option is used, one can then build the target libraries for the specified languages with the stage-1 compiler by using make stage1-bubble all-target, or run the testsuite on the stage-1 compiler for the specified languages using make stage1-start check-gcc.
- --disable-libada#
Specify that the run-time libraries and tools used by GNAT should not be built. This can be useful for debugging, or for compatibility with previous Ada build procedures, when it was required to explicitly do a
make -C gcc gnatlib_and_tools
.
- --disable-libsanitizer#
Specify that the run-time libraries for the various sanitizers should not be built.
- --disable-libssp#
Specify that the run-time libraries for stack smashing protection should not be built or linked against. On many targets library support is provided by the C library instead.
- --disable-libquadmath#
Specify that the GCC quad-precision math library should not be built. On some systems, the library is required to be linkable when building the Fortran front end, unless
--disable-libquadmath-support
is used.
- --disable-libquadmath-support#
Specify that the Fortran front end and
libgfortran
do not add support forlibquadmath
on systems supporting it.
- --disable-libgomp#
Specify that the GNU Offloading and Multi Processing Runtime Library should not be built.
- --disable-libvtv#
Specify that the run-time libraries used by vtable verification should not be built.
- --with-dwarf2#
Specify that the compiler should use DWARF 2 debugging information as the default.
- --with-advance-toolchain=at#
On 64-bit PowerPC Linux systems, configure the compiler to use the header files, library files, and the dynamic linker from the Advance Toolchain release
at
instead of the default versions that are provided by the Linux distribution. In general, this option is intended for the developers of GCC, and it is not intended for general use.
- --enable-targets=all#
Some GCC targets, e.g. powerpc64-linux, build bi-arch compilers. These are compilers that are able to generate either 64-bit or 32-bit code. Typically, the corresponding 32-bit target, e.g. powerpc-linux for powerpc64-linux, only generates 32-bit code. This option enables the 32-bit target to be a bi-arch compiler, which is useful when you want a bi-arch compiler that defaults to 32-bit, and you are building a bi-arch or multi-arch binutils in a combined tree. On mips-linux, this will build a tri-arch compiler (ABI o32/n32/64), defaulted to o32. Currently, this option only affects sparc-linux, powerpc-linux, x86-linux, mips-linux and s390-linux.
- --enable-secureplt#
This option enables
-msecure-plt
by default for powerpc-linux. See IBM RS/6000 and PowerPC Options.
- --enable-default-ssp#
Turn on
-fstack-protector-strong
by default.
- --enable-cld#
This option enables
-mcld
by default for 32-bit x86 targets. See x86 Options.
- --enable-large-address-aware#
The
--enable-large-address-aware
option arranges for MinGW executables to be linked using the--large-address-aware
option, that enables the use of more than 2GB of memory. If GCC is configured with this option, its effects can be reversed by passing the-Wl,--disable-large-address-aware
option to the so-configured compiler driver.
- --enable-win32-registry#
The
--enable-win32-registry
option enables Microsoft Windows-hosted GCC to look up installations paths in the registry using the following key:HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Free Software Foundation\key
key
defaults to GCC version number, and can be overridden by the--enable-win32-registry=key
option. Vendors and distributors who use custom installers are encouraged to provide a different key, perhaps one comprised of vendor name and GCC version number, to avoid conflict with existing installations. This feature is enabled by default, and can be disabled by--disable-win32-registry
option. This option has no effect on the other hosts.
- --nfp#
Specify that the machine does not have a floating point unit. This option only applies to
m68k-sun-sunosn
. On any other system,--nfp
has no effect.
- --enable-werror#
When you specify this option, it controls whether certain files in the compiler are built with
-Werror
in bootstrap stage2 and later. If you don’t specify it,-Werror
is turned on for the main development trunk. However it defaults to off for release branches and final releases. The specific files which get-Werror
are controlled by the Makefiles.
- --enable-checking#
This option controls performing internal consistency checks in the compiler. It does not change the generated code, but adds error checking of the requested complexity. This slows down the compiler and may only work properly if you are building the compiler with GCC.
When the option is not specified, the active set of checks depends on context. Namely, bootstrap stage 1 defaults to
--enable-checking=yes
, builds from release branches or release archives default to--enable-checking=release
, and otherwise--enable-checking=yes,extra
is used. When the option is specified without alist
, the result is the same as--enable-checking=yes
. Likewise,--disable-checking
is equivalent to--enable-checking=no
.The categories of checks available in
list
areyes
(most common checksassert,misc,gc,gimple,rtlflag,runtime,tree,types
),no
(no checks at all),all
(all butvalgrind
),release
(cheapest checksassert,runtime
) ornone
(same asno
).release
checks are always on and to disable them--disable-checking
or--enable-checking=no[,<other checks>]
must be explicitly requested. Disabling assertions makes the compiler and runtime slightly faster but increases the risk of undetected internal errors causing wrong code to be generated.Individual checks can be enabled with these flags:
assert
,df
,extra
,fold
,gc
,gcac
,gimple
,misc
,rtl
,rtlflag
,runtime
,tree
,types
andvalgrind
.extra
extendsmisc
checking with extra checks that might affect code generation and should therefore not differ between stage1 and later stages in bootstrap.The
valgrind
check requires the external valgrind simulator, available from https://valgrind.org. Thertl
checks are expensive and thedf
,gcac
andvalgrind
checks are very expensive.
- --disable-stage1-checking#
This option affects only bootstrap build. If no
--enable-checking
option is specified the stage1 compiler is built withyes
checking enabled, otherwise the stage1 checking flags are the same as specified by--enable-checking
. To build the stage1 compiler with different checking options use--enable-stage1-checking
. The list of checking options is the same as for--enable-checking
. If your system is too slow or too small to bootstrap a released compiler with checking for stage1 enabled, you can use--disable-stage1-checking
to disable checking for the stage1 compiler.
- --enable-coverage#
With this option, the compiler is built to collect self coverage information, every time it is run. This is for internal development purposes, and only works when the compiler is being built with gcc. The
level
argument controls whether the compiler is built optimized or not, values areopt
andnoopt
. For coverage analysis you want to disable optimization, for performance analysis you want to enable optimization. When coverage is enabled, the default level is without optimization.
- --enable-gather-detailed-mem-stats#
When this option is specified more detailed information on memory allocation is gathered. This information is printed when using
-fmem-report
.
- --enable-valgrind-annotations#
Mark selected memory related operations in the compiler when run under valgrind to suppress false positives.
- --enable-nls#
The
--enable-nls
option enables Native Language Support (NLS), which lets GCC output diagnostics in languages other than American English. Native Language Support is enabled by default if not doing a canadian cross build. The--disable-nls
option disables NLS.
- --with-included-gettext#
If NLS is enabled, the
--with-included-gettext
option causes the build procedure to prefer its copy of GNU gettext.
- --with-catgets#
If NLS is enabled, and if the host lacks
gettext
but has the inferiorcatgets
interface, the GCC build procedure normally ignorescatgets
and instead uses GCC’s copy of the GNUgettext
library. The--with-catgets
option causes the build procedure to use the host’scatgets
in this situation.
- --with-libiconv-prefix=dir#
Search for libiconv header files in
dir/include
and libiconv library files indir/lib
.
- --enable-obsolete#
Enable configuration for an obsoleted system. If you attempt to configure GCC for a system (build, host, or target) which has been obsoleted, and you do not specify this flag, configure will halt with an error message.
All support for systems which have been obsoleted in one release of GCC is removed entirely in the next major release, unless someone steps forward to maintain the port.
- --enable-decimal-float#
Enable (or disable) support for the C decimal floating point extension that is in the IEEE 754-2008 standard. This is enabled by default only on PowerPC, i386, and x86_64 GNU/Linux systems. Other systems may also support it, but require the user to specifically enable it. You can optionally control which decimal floating point format is used (either
bid
ordpd
). Thebid
(binary integer decimal) format is default on i386 and x86_64 systems, and thedpd
(densely packed decimal) format is default on PowerPC systems.
- --enable-fixed-point#
Enable (or disable) support for C fixed-point arithmetic. This option is enabled by default for some targets (such as MIPS) which have hardware-support for fixed-point operations. On other targets, you may enable this option manually.
- --with-long-double-128#
Specify if
long double
type should be 128-bit by default on selected GNU/Linux architectures. If using--without-long-double-128
,long double
will be by default 64-bit, the same asdouble
type. When neither of these configure options are used, the default will be 128-bitlong double
when built against GNU C Library 2.4 and later, 64-bitlong double
otherwise.
- --with-long-double-format=ibm#
Specify whether
long double
uses the IBM extended double format or the IEEE 128-bit floating point format on PowerPC Linux systems. This configuration switch will only work on little endian PowerPC Linux systems and on big endian 64-bit systems where the default cpu is at least power7 (i.e.--with-cpu=power7
,--with-cpu=power8
, or--with-cpu=power9
is used).If you use the
--with-long-double-64
configuration option, the--with-long-double-format=ibm
and--with-long-double-format=ieee
options are ignored.The default
long double
format is to use IBM extended double. Until all of the libraries are converted to use IEEE 128-bit floating point, it is not recommended to use--with-long-double-format=ieee
.
- --enable-fdpic#
On SH Linux systems, generate ELF FDPIC code.
- --with-gmp=pathname#
If you want to build GCC but do not have the GMP library, the MPFR library and/or the MPC library installed in a standard location and do not have their sources present in the GCC source tree then you can explicitly specify the directory where they are installed (
--with-gmp=gmpinstalldir
,--with-mpfr=mpfrinstalldir
,--with-mpc=mpcinstalldir
). The--with-gmp=gmpinstalldir
option is shorthand for--with-gmp-lib=gmpinstalldir/lib
and--with-gmp-include=gmpinstalldir/include
. Likewise the--with-mpfr=mpfrinstalldir
option is shorthand for--with-mpfr-lib=mpfrinstalldir/lib
and--with-mpfr-include=mpfrinstalldir/include
, also the--with-mpc=mpcinstalldir
option is shorthand for--with-mpc-lib=mpcinstalldir/lib
and--with-mpc-include=mpcinstalldir/include
. If these shorthand assumptions are not correct, you can use the explicit include and lib options directly. You might also need to ensure the shared libraries can be found by the dynamic linker when building and using GCC, for example by setting the runtime shared library path variable (LD_LIBRARY_PATH
on GNU/Linux and Solaris systems).These flags are applicable to the host platform only. When building a cross compiler, they will not be used to configure target libraries.
- --with-isl=pathname#
If you do not have the isl library installed in a standard location and you want to build GCC, you can explicitly specify the directory where it is installed (
--with-isl=islinstalldir
). The--with-isl=islinstalldir
option is shorthand for--with-isl-lib=islinstalldir/lib
and--with-isl-include=islinstalldir/include
. If this shorthand assumption is not correct, you can use the explicit include and lib options directly.These flags are applicable to the host platform only. When building a cross compiler, they will not be used to configure target libraries.
- --with-stage1-ldflags=flags#
This option may be used to set linker flags to be used when linking stage 1 of GCC. These are also used when linking GCC if configured with
--disable-bootstrap
. If--with-stage1-libs
is not set to a value, then the default is-static-libstdc++ -static-libgcc
, if supported.
- --with-stage1-libs=libs#
This option may be used to set libraries to be used when linking stage 1 of GCC. These are also used when linking GCC if configured with
--disable-bootstrap
.
- --with-boot-ldflags=flags#
This option may be used to set linker flags to be used when linking stage 2 and later when bootstrapping GCC. If –with-boot-libs is not is set to a value, then the default is
-static-libstdc++ -static-libgcc
.
- --with-boot-libs=libs#
This option may be used to set libraries to be used when linking stage 2 and later when bootstrapping GCC.
- --with-debug-prefix-map=map#
Convert source directory names using
-fdebug-prefix-map
when building runtime libraries.map
is a space-separated list of maps of the formold=new
.
- --enable-linker-build-id#
Tells GCC to pass
--build-id
option to the linker for all final links (links performed without the-r
or--relocatable
option), if the linker supports it. If you specify--enable-linker-build-id
, but your linker does not support--build-id
option, a warning is issued and the--enable-linker-build-id
option is ignored. The default is off.
- --with-linker-hash-style=choice#
Tells GCC to pass
--hash-style=choice
option to the linker for all final links.choice
can be one ofsysv
,gnu
, andboth
wheresysv
is the default.
- --enable-gnu-unique-object#
Tells GCC to use the gnu_unique_object relocation for C++ template static data members and inline function local statics. Enabled by default for a toolchain with an assembler that accepts it and GLIBC 2.11 or above, otherwise disabled.
- --with-diagnostics-color=choice#
Tells GCC to use
choice
as the default for-fdiagnostics-color=
option (if not used explicitly on the command line).choice
can be one ofnever
,auto
,always
, andauto-if-env
whereauto
is the default.auto-if-env
makes-fdiagnostics-color=auto
the default ifGCC_COLORS
is present and non-empty in the environment of the compiler, and-fdiagnostics-color=never
otherwise.
- --with-diagnostics-urls=choice#
Tells GCC to use
choice
as the default for-fdiagnostics-urls=
option (if not used explicitly on the command line).choice
can be one ofnever
,auto
,always
, andauto-if-env
whereauto
is the default.auto-if-env
makes-fdiagnostics-urls=auto
the default ifGCC_URLS
orTERM_URLS
is present and non-empty in the environment of the compiler, and-fdiagnostics-urls=never
otherwise.
- --enable-lto#
Enable support for link-time optimization (LTO). This is enabled by default, and may be disabled using
--disable-lto
.
- --enable-linker-plugin-configure-flags=FLAGS#
By default, linker plugins (such as the LTO plugin) are built for the host system architecture. For the case that the linker has a different (but run-time compatible) architecture, these flags can be specified to build plugins that are compatible to the linker. For example, if you are building GCC for a 64-bit x86_64 (
x86_64-pc-linux-gnu
) host system, but have a 32-bit x86 GNU/Linux (i686-pc-linux-gnu
) linker executable (which is executable on the former system), you can configure GCC as follows for getting compatible linker plugins:% srcdir/configure \ --host=x86_64-pc-linux-gnu \ --enable-linker-plugin-configure-flags=--host=i686-pc-linux-gnu \ --enable-linker-plugin-flags='CC=gcc\ -m32\ -Wl,-rpath,[...]/i686-pc-linux-gnu/lib'
- --with-plugin-ld=pathname#
Enable an alternate linker to be used at link-time optimization (LTO) link time when
-fuse-linker-plugin
is enabled. This linker should have plugin support such as gold starting with version 2.20 or GNU ld starting with version 2.21. See-fuse-linker-plugin
for details.
- --enable-canonical-system-headers#
Enable system header path canonicalization for
libcpp
. This can produce shorter header file paths in diagnostics and dependency output files, but these changed header paths may conflict with some compilation environments. Enabled by default, and may be disabled using--disable-canonical-system-headers
.
- --with-glibc-version=major.minor#
Tell GCC that when the GNU C Library (glibc) is used on the target it will be version
major
.minor
or later. Normally this can be detected from the C library’s header files, but this option may be needed when bootstrapping a cross toolchain without the header files available for building the initial bootstrap compiler.If GCC is configured with some multilibs that use glibc and some that do not, this option applies only to the multilibs that use glibc. However, such configurations may not work well as not all the relevant configuration in GCC is on a per-multilib basis.
- --enable-as-accelerator-for=target#
Build as offload target compiler. Specify offload host triple by
target
.
- --enable-offload-targets=target1[=path1],...,targetN[=pathN]#
Enable offloading to targets
target1
, …,targetN
. Offload compilers are expected to be already installed. Default search path for them isexec-prefix
, but it can be changed by specifying pathspath1
, …,pathN
.% srcdir/configure \ --enable-offload-targets=amdgcn-amdhsa,nvptx-none
- --enable-offload-defaulted#
Tell GCC that configured but not installed offload compilers and libgomp plugins are silently ignored. Useful for distribution compilers where those are in separate optional packages and where the presence or absence of those optional packages should determine the actual supported offloading target set rather than the GCC configure-time selection.
- --enable-cet#
Enable building target run-time libraries with control-flow instrumentation, see
-fcf-protection
option. When--enable-cet
is specified target libraries are configured to add-fcf-protection
and, if needed, other target specific options to a set of building options.--enable-cet
=auto
is default. CET is enabled on Linux/x86 if target binutils supportsIntel CET
instructions and disabled otherwise. In this case, the target libraries are configured to get additional-fcf-protection
option.
- --with-riscv-attribute=yes, no or default#
Generate RISC-V attribute by default, in order to record extra build information in object.
The option is disabled by default. It is enabled on RISC-V/ELF (bare-metal) target if target binutils supported.
- --enable-s390-excess-float-precision#
On s390(x) targets, enable treatment of float expressions with double precision when in standards-compliant mode (e.g., when
--std=c99
or-fexcess-precision=standard
are given).For a native build and cross compiles that have target headers, the option’s default is derived from glibc’s behavior. When glibc clamps float_t to double, GCC follows and enables the option. For other cross compiles, the default is disabled.
- --with-zstd=pathname#
If you do not have the
zstd
library installed in a standard location and you want to build GCC, you can explicitly specify the directory where it is installed (--with-zstd=zstdinstalldir
). The--with-zstd=zstdinstalldir
option is shorthand for--with-zstd-lib=zstdinstalldir/lib
and--with-zstd-include=zstdinstalldir/include
. If this shorthand assumption is not correct, you can use the explicit include and lib options directly.
- --with-sphinx-build#
The documentation depends on
Sphinx
version 5.3 and you can provide an alternative path tosphinx-build
which can be easily installed in a virtual environment. For more information, please see Sphinx Install.
These flags are applicable to the host platform only. When building a cross compiler, they will not be used to configure target libraries.
Cross-Compiler-Specific Options#
The following options only apply to building cross compilers.
- --with-toolexeclibdir=dir#
Specify the installation directory for libraries built with a cross compiler. The default is
${gcc_tooldir}/lib
.
- --with-sysroot#
Tells GCC to consider
dir
as the root of a tree that contains (a subset of) the root filesystem of the target operating system. Target system headers, libraries and run-time object files will be searched for in there. More specifically, this acts as if--sysroot=dir
was added to the default options of the built compiler. The specified directory is not copied into the install tree, unlike the options--with-headers
and--with-libs
that this option obsoletes. The default value, in case--with-sysroot
is not given an argument, is ${gcc_tooldir}/sys-root. If the specified directory is a subdirectory of ${exec_prefix}, then it will be found relative to the GCC binaries if the installation tree is moved.This option affects the system root for the compiler used to build target libraries (which runs on the build system) and the compiler newly installed with
make install
; it does not affect the compiler which is used to build GCC itself.If you specify the
--with-native-system-header-dir=dirname
option then the compiler will search that directory withindirname
for native system headers rather than the default/usr/include
.
- --with-build-sysroot#
Tells GCC to consider
dir
as the system root (see--with-sysroot
) while building target libraries, instead of the directory specified with--with-sysroot
. This option is only useful when you are already using--with-sysroot
. You can use--with-build-sysroot
when you are configuring with--prefix
set to a directory that is different from the one in which you are installing GCC and your target libraries.This option affects the system root for the compiler used to build target libraries (which runs on the build system); it does not affect the compiler which is used to build GCC itself.
If you specify the
--with-native-system-header-dir=dirname
option then the compiler will search that directory withindirname
for native system headers rather than the default/usr/include
.
- --with-headers#
Deprecated in favor of
--with-sysroot
. Specifies that target headers are available when building a cross compiler. Thedir
argument specifies a directory which has the target include files. These include files will be copied into thegcc
install directory. This option with thedir
argument is required when building a cross compiler, ifprefix/target/sys-include
doesn’t pre-exist. Ifprefix/target/sys-include
does pre-exist, thedir
argument may be omitted. fixincludes will be run on these files to make them compatible with GCC.
- --without-headers#
Tells GCC not use any target headers from a libc when building a cross compiler. When crossing to GNU/Linux, you need the headers so GCC can build the exception handling for libgcc.
- --with-libs#
Deprecated in favor of
--with-sysroot
. Specifies a list of directories which contain the target runtime libraries. These libraries will be copied into thegcc
install directory. If the directory list is omitted, this option has no effect.
- --with-newlib#
Specifies that
newlib
is being used as the target C library. This causes__eprintf
to be omitted fromlibgcc.a
on the assumption that it will be provided bynewlib
.
- --with-avrlibc#
Only supported for the AVR target. Specifies that
AVR-Libc
is being used as the target C library. This causes float support functions like__addsf3
to be omitted fromlibgcc.a
on the assumption that it will be provided bylibm.a
. For more technical details, cf. PR54461. It is not supported for RTEMS configurations, which currently use newlib. The option is supported since version 4.7.2 and is the default in 4.8.0 and newer.
- --with-double=32|64|32,64|64,32#
Only supported for the AVR target since version 10. Specify the default layout available for the C/C++
double
andlong double
type, respectively. The following rules apply:The first value after the
=
specifies the default layout (in bits) of the type and also the default for the-mdouble=
resp.-mlong-double=
compiler option.If more than one value is specified, respective multilib variants are available, and
-mdouble=
resp.-mlong-double=
acts as a multilib option.If
--with-long-double=double
is specified,double
andlong double
will have the same layout.The defaults are
--with-long-double=64,32
and--with-double=32,64
. The defaultdouble
layout imposed by the latter is compatible with older versions of the compiler that implementdouble
as a 32-bit type, which does not comply to the language standard.
Not all combinations of
--with-double=
and--with-long-double=
are valid. For example, the combination--with-double=32,64
--with-long-double=32
will be rejected because the first option specifies the availability of multilibs fordouble
, whereas the second option implies thatlong double
— and hence alsodouble
— is always 32 bits wide.
- --with-double-comparison=tristate|bool|libf7#
Only supported for the AVR target since version 10. Specify what result format is returned by library functions that compare 64-bit floating point values (
DFmode
). The GCC default istristate
. If the floating point implementation returns a boolean instead, set it tobool
.
- --with-libf7=libgcc|math|math-symbols|no#
Only supported for the AVR target since version 10. Specify to which degree code from LibF7 is included in libgcc. LibF7 is an ad-hoc, AVR-specific, 64-bit floating point emulation written in C and (inline) assembly.
libgcc
adds support for functions that one would usually expect in libgcc like double addition, double comparisons and double conversions.math
also adds routines that one would expect inlibm.a
, but with__
(two underscores) prepended to the symbol names as specified bymath.h
.math-symbols
also defines weak aliases for the functions declared inmath.h
. However,--with-libf7
won’t install nomath.h
header file whatsoever, this file must come from elsewhere. This option sets--with-double-comparison
tobool
.
- --with-nds32-lib=library#
Specifies that
library
setting is used for buildinglibgcc.a
. Currently, the validlibrary
isnewlib
ormculib
. This option is only supported for the NDS32 target.
- --with-build-time-tools=dir#
Specifies where to find the set of target tools (assembler, linker, etc.) that will be used while building GCC itself. This option can be useful if the directory layouts are different between the system you are building GCC on, and the system where you will deploy it.
For example, on an
ia64-hp-hpux
system, you may have the GNU assembler and linker in/usr/bin
, and the native tools in a different path, and build a toolchain that expects to find the native tools in/usr/bin
.When you use this option, you should ensure that
dir
includes ar, as, ld, nm, ranlib and strip if necessary, and possibly objdump. Otherwise, GCC may use an inconsistent set of tools.
Overriding configure test results#
Sometimes, it might be necessary to override the result of some configure test, for example in order to ease porting to a new system or work around a bug in a test. The toplevel configure script provides three variables for this:
build_configargs
The contents of this variable is passed to all build configure scripts.
host_configargs
The contents of this variable is passed to all host configure scripts.
target_configargs
The contents of this variable is passed to all target configure scripts.
In order to avoid shell and make quoting issues for complex overrides, you can pass a setting for
CONFIG_SITE
and set variables in the site file.
Objective-C-Specific Options#
The following options apply to the build of the Objective-C runtime library.
- --enable-objc-gc#
Specify that an additional variant of the GNU Objective-C runtime library is built, using an external build of the Boehm-Demers-Weiser garbage collector (https://www.hboehm.info/gc/). This library needs to be available for each multilib variant, unless configured with
--enable-objc-gc=auto
in which case the build of the additional runtime library is skipped when not available and the build continues.
- --with-target-bdw-gc=list#
Specify search directories for the garbage collector header files and libraries.
list
is a comma separated list of key value pairs of the formmultilibdir=path
, where the default multilib key is named as.
(dot), or is omitted (e.g.--with-target-bdw-gc=/opt/bdw-gc,32=/opt-bdw-gc32
).The options
--with-target-bdw-gc-include
and--with-target-bdw-gc-lib
must always be specified together for each multilib variant and they take precedence over--with-target-bdw-gc
. If--with-target-bdw-gc-include
is missing values for a multilib, then the value for the default multilib is used (e.g.--with-target-bdw-gc-include=/opt/bdw-gc/include
--with-target-bdw-gc-lib=/opt/bdw-gc/lib64,32=/opt-bdw-gc/lib32
). If none of these options are specified, the library is assumed in default locations.
D-Specific Options#
The following options apply to the build of the D runtime library.
- --enable-libphobos-checking#
This option controls whether run-time checks and contracts are compiled into the D runtime library. When the option is not specified, the library is built with
release
checking. When the option is specified without alist
, the result is the same as--enable-libphobos-checking=yes
. Likewise,--disable-libphobos-checking
is equivalent to--enable-libphobos-checking=no
.The categories of checks available in
list
areyes
(compiles libphobos with-fno-release
),no
(compiles libphobos with-frelease
),all
(same asyes
),none
orrelease
(same asno
).Individual checks available in
list
areassert
(compiles libphobos with an extra option-fassert
).
- --with-libphobos-druntime-only#
Specify whether to build only the core D runtime library (druntime), or both the core and standard library (phobos) into libphobos. This is useful for targets that have full support in druntime, but no or incomplete support in phobos.
choice
can be one ofauto
,yes
, andno
whereauto
is the default.When the option is not specified, the default choice
auto
means that it is inferred whether the target has support for the phobos standard library. When the option is specified without achoice
, the result is the same as--with-libphobos-druntime-only=yes
.
- --with-target-system-zlib#
Use installed
zlib
rather than that included with GCC. This needs to be available for each multilib variant, unless configured with--with-target-system-zlib=auto
in which case the GCCincludedzlib
is only used when the system installed library is not available.