Installing GCC-&gcc-version; - Pass 1 &buildtime; &gcc-time-tools-pass1; &diskspace; &gcc-compsize-tools-pass1; Official download location for GCC (&gcc-version;): &aa-gcc-dep;    Installation of GCC Unpack only the GCC-core tarball, as we won't be needing the C++ compiler nor the test suite at the moment. This package is known to behave badly when you change its default optimization flags (including the -march and -mcpu options). Therefore, if you have defined any environment variables that override default optimizations, such as CFLAGS and CXXFLAGS, we recommend unsetting them when building GCC. The GCC documentation recommends building GCC outside of the source directory in a dedicated build directory: mkdir ../gcc-build cd ../gcc-build Prepare GCC for compilation: ../&gcc-dir;/configure --prefix=/tools \     --with-local-prefix=/tools \     --disable-nls --enable-shared \     --enable-languages=c The meaning of the configure options: --with-local-prefix=/tools: The purpose of this switch is to remove /usr/local/include from gcc's include search path. This is not absolutely essential; however, we want to try to minimize the influence of the host system, thus making this a sensible thing to do. --enable-shared: This switch may seem counter-intuitive at first. But using it allows the building of libgcc_s.so.1 and libgcc_eh.a, and having libgcc_eh.a available ensures that the configure script for Glibc (the next package we compile) produces the proper results. Note that the gcc binaries will still be linked statically, as this is controlled by the -static value of BOOT_LDFLAGS in the next step. --enable-languages=c: This option ensures that only the C compiler is built. The option is only needed when you have downloaded and unpacked the full GCC tarball. Continue with compiling the package: make BOOT_LDFLAGS="-static" bootstrap The meaning of the make parameters: BOOT_LDFLAGS="-static": This tells GCC to link its programs statically. bootstrap: This target doesn't just compile GCC, but compiles it several times. It uses the programs compiled in a first round to compile itself a second time, and then again a third time. It then compares these second and third compiles to make sure it can reproduce itself flawlessly, which most probably means that it was compiled correctly. Compilation is now complete, and at this point we would normally run the test suite. But, as mentioned before, the test suite framework is not in place yet. And there would be little point in running the tests anyhow, since the programs from this first pass will soon be replaced. And install the package: make install As a finishing touch we'll create a symlink. Many programs and scripts run cc instead of gcc, a thing meant to keep programs generic and therefore usable on all kinds of Unix systems. Not everybody has the GNU C compiler installed. Simply running cc leaves the system administrator free to decide what C compiler to install, as long as there's a symlink pointing to it: ln -s gcc /tools/bin/cc    The details on this package are found in .