On 4/5/18, Robert Maynard wrote:
> The official CMake binaries do the same thing as you and build with a
> static libstdc++ and libgcc.
> As far as dependencies we use static builds of those too, with most
> being the version provided inside CMake, and an external openssl.
>
> You can find the mor
When use Devtoolset of CentOS, don't forget to install the *binutils* from
that devtoolset, or else, the compilation might generate strange error.
On Fri, Apr 6, 2018 at 6:13 AM, Alexander Neundorf wrote:
> On 2018 M04 5, Thu 15:15:21 CEST Juan E. Sanchez wrote:
> > The example I just sent was f
On 2018 M04 5, Thu 15:15:21 CEST Juan E. Sanchez wrote:
> The example I just sent was for building in centos 6, because 5 is gone.
not really gone, it's still in vault.centos.org :-)
https://hub.docker.com/r/aneundorf/centos5-build-base/~/dockerfile/
Alex
--
Powered by www.kitware.com
Please
On 2018 M04 5, Thu 12:50:04 CEST Ben Sferrazza wrote:
>
> Were you able to actually build the newer versions of Cmake that require
> c++11 on Centos 5?
I didn't try that.
Alex
--
Powered by www.kitware.com
Please keep messages on-topic and check the CMake FAQ at:
http://www.cmake.org/Wiki/
The example I just sent was for building in centos 6, because 5 is gone.
docker run -it --name centos6 centos:6 /bin/bash
Regards,
Juan
On 4/5/18 3:13 PM, Juan E. Sanchez wrote:
Hello,
Centos 5, Redhat 5 is EOL as of March 31, 2017.
Building cmake in docker:
cd /root;
curl -L -O https://c
Hello,
Centos 5, Redhat 5 is EOL as of March 31, 2017.
Building cmake in docker:
cd /root;
curl -L -O https://cmake.org/files/v3.11/cmake-3.11.0.tar.gz;
tar xzvf cmake-3.11.0.tar.gz;
yum install -y centos-release-scl;
yum install -y devtoolset-6-gcc devtoolset-6-gcc-c++
devtoolset-6-libquadmat
On Thu, Apr 5, 2018 at 12:30 PM, Alexander Neundorf
wrote:
> On 2018 M04 5, Thu 21:24:40 CEST Alexander Neundorf wrote:
> > On 2018 M04 5, Thu 16:15:17 CEST suzuki toshiya wrote:
> > > Dear Eric,
> > >
> > > # if anybody think "how C++11 environment should be prepared
> > > # on legacy GNU/Linux"
On 2018 M04 5, Thu 21:24:40 CEST Alexander Neundorf wrote:
> On 2018 M04 5, Thu 16:15:17 CEST suzuki toshiya wrote:
> > Dear Eric,
> >
> > # if anybody think "how C++11 environment should be prepared
> > # on legacy GNU/Linux" is off-topic and should be discussed
> > # in off-list, please let me k
On 2018 M04 5, Thu 16:15:17 CEST suzuki toshiya wrote:
> Dear Eric,
>
> # if anybody think "how C++11 environment should be prepared
> # on legacy GNU/Linux" is off-topic and should be discussed
> # in off-list, please let me know. I will do so.
>
> Eric Wing wrote:
> > Thanks for the responses.
Hello,
SHORT VERSION:
BTW, Ubuntu 12 is officially End of Life on April 28, 2017
http://releases.ubuntu.com/12.04/
So unless you are paying them for support, you should really upgrade to
Ubuntu 14.
LONG VERSION:
I recommend starting a docker image of centos 6 in a newer version of
Ubuntu.
I had a similar problem on 14.04 and solved it by installing gcc 4.9 (other
version are also available) from the ubuntu-toolchain-r PPA.
This worked for me. YMMV:
$ sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ubuntu-toolchain-r/test
$ sudo apt-get update
$ sudo apt-get install gcc-4.9
$ sudo apt-get install g++-
The official CMake binaries do the same thing as you and build with a
static libstdc++ and libgcc.
As far as dependencies we use static builds of those too, with most
being the version provided inside CMake, and an external openssl.
You can find the more information on the exact flags we are using
Hi Suzuki,
(Note: to other CMake mailing list readers, this pertains very little to CMake
itself. I’m sending it to the mailing list so that future users with this
issue may also have a possible solution).
Getting a newer version of GCC is quite challenging by yourself indeed, but you
may be
Dear Eric,
# if anybody think "how C++11 environment should be prepared
# on legacy GNU/Linux" is off-topic and should be discussed
# in off-list, please let me know. I will do so.
Eric Wing wrote:
> Thanks for the responses. Yes, I just need this to run on Ubuntu 12.04
> (and some other old Linu
Thanks for the responses. Yes, I just need this to run on Ubuntu 12.04
(and some other old Linux's in that era). Yes, I think the probably is
the libstdc++ dependency.
As pointed out, it is really hard to get a newer compiler on Ubuntu
12.04. I've been down this road before, and if memory serves,
Dear Bo Zhou,
Thank you for the info! Now I'm checking Ubuntu 12.04 in LXC.
So, gcc-4.8.5 or later would be needed for C++11, it seems that the last version
of gcc officially provided for Ubuntu-12 was 4.7. oh.
According to https://clang.llvm.org/cxx_status.html , clang-3.3 supports C++11,
and the
The latest CMake requires C++11 compiler, so what you need is just a newer
GCC which supports C++11 at your platform, that's it.
Usually the ABI is not the problem but the libstdc++, you can use a old
Ubuntu with old libstdc++ but build CMake with new compiler and make sure
it links with old libst
I just discovered that CMake no longer builds on my Ubuntu 12.04. I
need to build binaries that are compatible with that ABI.
I see that your binary distribution of CMake 3.11 still works on
Ubuntu 12.04. Can you tell me what you do to achieve this? What are
you doing for your official builds?
Ar
18 matches
Mail list logo