Recently, I've posted several build errors that only I seemed to run into. The errors
were based on "incompatible/missing declarations". The bottom line of those is
actually the following, as I gather:
I, without any compilers in /usr/bin, was trying to build the world and kernel
by setting CC to basically /home/me/my_compilers/bin/clang.
As the handbook says, the FreeBSD build system uses the compiler in /usr/obj, ie., the one "just built
for further purposes". As I can see, that compiler is specifically crafted to use the include files in
${WORLDTMP}, ie., in /usr/obj/usr/src/tmp/usr/include (not /usr/include), where "new" headers are
placed in an early phase of the build process. This is required for when the source tree has been
"significantly" changed since the last installworld -- the new code won't build with the headers in
/usr/include. In such cases, of course compilation breaks when an unaware compiler (eg., /usr/bin/cc,
/home/me/my_compilers/bin/clang, etc.) is used.
I was able to compile the world and kernel by changing CC from
/home/me/my_compilers/bin/clang to /usr/obj/usr/src/tmp/usr/bin/cc upon the
first compilation error, by which time the latter compiler was available.
However, after a successful build and install, and no following update of the
source tree, an external compiler can be used, because by then, the new headers
will have been installed in /usr/include.
So it appears that specifying an external compiler as CC in /etc/make.conf is
not supposed to work in general. Life sux. Is there any intention to remedy
this?
_______________________________________________
[email protected] mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-current
To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[email protected]"