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A build of gcc
might fail due to one or more tools
being called upon by make
(during the build or install process),
when those tools are not installed on your system.
This situation can result from any of the following actions (performed by you or someone else):
The reason these activities cause make
to try and
invoke tools that it probably wouldn't when building
from a perfectly "clean" source directory containing
gcc
and g77
is that some files in the
source directory (and the corresponding distribution)
aren't really source files, but derived files
that are produced by running tools with the corresponding
source files as input.
These derived files depend, in make
terminology,
on the corresponding source files.
make
determines that a file that depends on another
needs to be updated if the date-time-modified information for
the source file shows that it is newer than the corresponding
information for the derived file.
If it makes that determination, make
runs the appropriate
commands (specified in the "Makefile") to update the
derived file, and this process typically calls upon one or
more installed tools to do the work.
The "safest" approach to dealing with this situation
is to recreate the gcc
and g77
source
directories from complete gcc
and g77
distributions
known to be provided by the FSF.
Another fairly "safe" approach is to simply install the tools you need to complete the build process. This is especially appropriate if you've changed the source code or applied a patch to do so.
However, if you're certain that the problem is limited entirely to incorrect date-time-modified information, that there are no discrepancies between the contents of source files and files derived from them in the source directory, you can often update the date-time-modified information for the derived files to work around the problem of not having the appropriate tools installed.
On UNIX systems, the simplest way to update the date-time-modified information of a file is to use the use the `touch' command.
How to use `touch' to update the derived files
updated by each of the tools is described below.
Note: New versions of g77
might change the set of
files it generates by invoking each of these tools.
If you cannot figure
out for yourself how to handle such a situation, try an
older version of g77
until you find someone who can
(or until you obtain and install the relevant tools).
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