Terry Phelps <tgphelp...@gmail.com> writes: > Thank you for your help. That resolved the problem. My bad. > The build ran much further and then got another error, which I'll mention > here, and go research it, since it could be just my bleeding edge source > code.
> cc -Wall -Wmissing-prototypes -Wpointer-arith -Wdeclaration-after-statement > -Wendif-labels -Wmissing-format-attribute -Wformat-security > -fno-strict-aliasing -fwrapv -Wno-unused-command-line-argument > -I/usr/local/include -D_THREAD_SAFE -pthread -D_REENTRANT -D_THREAD_SAFE > -D_POSIX_PTHREAD_SEMANTICS -fPIC -DPIC -I../include > -I../../../../src/interfaces/ecpg/include -DFRONTEND > -I../../../../src/include -DSO_MAJOR_VERSION=3 -c -o datetime.o > datetime.c > datetime.c:332:1: error: conflicting types for 'PGTYPESdate_defmt_asc' > PGTYPESdate_defmt_asc(date * d, const char *fmt, const char *str) > ^ > /usr/local/include/pgtypes_date.h:24:12: note: previous declaration is here > extern int PGTYPESdate_defmt_asc(date *, const char *, char *); > ^ > 1 error generated. It looks like you've got -I/usr/local/include in front of the build's own -I switches, and that's allowing it to pull in back-version copies of PG-related include files instead of the ones in the source tree. I'm not totally sure, but if you inject -I/usr/local/include through CPPFLAGS not CFLAGS, configure might do the right thing automatically. Otherwise, you could manually edit CPPFLAGS in src/Makefile.global after configuring to get the right -I order. regards, tom lane