Date: Thu, 10 Jun 1999 21:58:54 +0200 From: Martin Cracauer <cracauer@cons.org> To: Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@scc.nl> Cc: Charles Henrich <henrich@flnet.com>, emulation@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: Linux Development environtment Message-ID: <19990610215854.A87959@cons.org> In-Reply-To: <owner-freebsd-emulationATFreeBSD.ORG--375FCBBE.308B7A36@scc.nl>; from Marcel Moolenaar on Thu, Jun 10, 1999 at 06:44:42PM %2B0200 References: <19990604174535.E14176@orbit.flnet.com> <owner-freebsd-emulationATFreeBSD.ORG--375FCBBE.308B7A36@scc.nl>
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Charles Henrich wrote: > The compilers and linkers insist on referencing the FreeBSD libraries... Since FreeBSD is ELF now, you will face the problem that Libraries are gotten in roughly this order /comat/linux/usr/lib /usr/lib [without the compiler wanting it, the emulator does it] /comat/linux/lib [compiler want it] /lib [ harmless ] /comat/linux/usr/local/lib /usr/local/lib [harmful and hidden from the compiler again] Since libc in in /lib on Linux systems, the FreeBSD libc in /usr/lib is found first ==> BOOM. To do any Linux crosscompiling with custom libraries on a FreeBSD ELF system, the best solution is to symlink all Linux libraries you have into the first directory that the compiler searches. I sent a longer explanation to -port or -emulation a few months ago. Martin -- %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% Martin Cracauer <cracauer@bik-gmbh.de> http://www.bik-gmbh.de/~cracauer/ "Where do you want to do today?" Hard to tell running your calendar program on a junk operating system, eh? To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-emulation" in the body of the message
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