On April 10, 2017 12:41:54 PM GMT+02:00, Andrew Lowe <a...@wht.com.au> wrote:
>On 10/04/17 18:08, Neil Bothwick wrote:
>> On Mon, 10 Apr 2017 17:13:28 +0800, Andrew Lowe wrote:
>>
>>>     Do we have any clang users out there? I've had clang installed
>>> on my machine for ages and a simple "clang test.c" will result in an
>>> executable. I can even nearly build my whole machine using clang, so
>>> its up and running. I've now just updated clang, from a working
>3.9.1
>>> to a 4.0.0-r1 and clang has now disappeared. If I type in "clang
>>> --version", I get "command not found". "whereis clang" only gives me
>>> the library dir. Doing "ls -la /usr/bin/cla*" gives me "No such file
>or
>>> directory"
>>
>> Try "qlist clang" so see what is installed, "qlist clang | grep bin/"
>> should find the executables.
>>
>> qlist is part of portage-utils, which you probably already have.
>>
>>
>
>       Done as requested. There are 41 files found with clang in their name 
>and they are all on the dir:
>
>       /usr/lib/llvm/4/bin/
>
>       I'm no whiz bang sys-admin but that doesn't seem right to me. There is
>
>clang and clang++ and a whole lot of stuff sym linked to provide all
>the 
>various permutations and combinations of names in there. But there is 
>nothing in my path that points to that dir. I'll have to have a look at
>
>the ebuild to see if a symlink or something is not being applied.
>
>       Any other thoughts appreciated,
>
>               Andrew

Try those and see if they respond correctly.
If yes, add that dir to your PATH.

--
Joost
-- 
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