❯ qfile /usr/include/sys/ustat.h
sys-libs/glibc (/usr/include/sys/ustat.h)

~ 36s
❯ eix -e glibc
[I] sys-libs/glibc
     Available versions:  (2.2) [M]**2.19-r2^s [M]2.21-r2^s [M]2.22-r4^s
[M]2.23-r4^s [M]~2.24-r4^s [M]2.25-r11^s [M]2.26-r7^s 2.27-r6^s ~2.28-r4^s
**9999^s
       {audit caps cet compile-locales debug doc gd hardened headers-only
+multiarch multilib nscd profile +rpc selinux suid systemtap test vanilla}
     Installed versions:  2.27-r6(2.2)^s(09:53:17 25.10.2018)(multiarch
multilib -audit -caps -compile-locales -doc -gd -hardened -headers-only
-nscd -profile -selinux -suid -systemtap -vanilla)
     Homepage:            https://www.gnu.org/software/libc/
     Description:         GNU libc C library

Am Mi., 2. Jan. 2019 um 12:46 Uhr schrieb Nikos Chantziaras <
rea...@gmail.com>:

> On 02/01/2019 12:27, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > I'm trying to compile gcc-7.3.0-r3 to test a hypothesis, but I get this
> > failure:
> >
> >
> /var/tmp/portage/sys-devel/gcc-7.3.0-r3/work/gcc-7.3.0/libsanitizer/sanitizer_common/sanitizer_platform_limits_posix.cc:157:10:
> fatal error: sys/ustat.h: No such file or directory
> >   #include <sys/ustat.h>
> >
> > I thought it might be in sys-kernel/linux-headers, but installing a
> > contemporaneous version didn't help. Google doesn't, either.
> >
> > Can anyone point me in the right direction?
>
> It seems it was provided by old glibc versions. It doesn't exist anymore.
>
>
>

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