Once installed, 3.4 is available as /usr/bin/gcc-3.4. /usr/bin/gcc is
symlinked to 4.0. There is no executable called gccselect, although
there may be another mechanism available to choose between installed
version of the gcc toolchain.
 
two possibilities for ubuntu gcc selection..
 
1) gcc -V 3.4 ... the manpage says
       -V version
           The argument version specifies which version of GCC to run.  This
           is useful when multiple versions are installed.  For example, verĂ¢
           sion might be 2.0, meaning to run GCC version 2.0.
 
no idea if this works for gcj or what
 
2) maybe use debian's update-alternatives system, thats a wild guess though
 
Brendan

 
On 2/19/06, Davor Cubranic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Heikki Toivonen wrote:

>Mike Taylor wrote:
>
>
>>Ubuntu (breezy) does not by default include 3.4 but that doesn't mean
>>it's not available.
>>
>>
>
>I was unable to find it with Synaptic. Did you mean compile 3.4
>ourselves or tell Synaptic to look in Hoary's packages or something else?
>
>
I already sort of responded in a different thread, but here are more
specifics: on kUbuntu Breezy, Adept found gcc 3.4 no problem. The only
repositories I had defined were breezy (main, restricted) and
breezy-updates (main, restricted) on ca.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu.

Once installed, 3.4 is available as /usr/bin/gcc-3.4. /usr/bin/gcc is
symlinked to 4.0. There is no executable called gccselect, although
there may be another mechanism available to choose between installed
version of the gcc toolchain.

Davor
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