These options specify directories to search for header files, for libraries and for parts of the compiler:
-I
dir
-isystem
for that). If you use more than
one -I
option, the directories are scanned in left-to-right
order; the standard system directories come after.
If a standard system include directory, or a directory specified with
-isystem
, is also specified with -I
, the -I
option will be ignored. The directory will still be searched but as a
system directory at its normal position in the system include chain.
This is to ensure that GCC's procedure to fix buggy system headers and
the ordering for the include_next directive are not inadvertently changed.
If you really need to change the search order for system directories,
use the -nostdinc
and/or -isystem
options.
-I-
-I
options before the -I-
option are searched only for the case of #include "
file"
;
they are not searched for #include <
file>
.
If additional directories are specified with -I
options after
the -I-
, these directories are searched for all #include
directives. (Ordinarily all -I
directories are used
this way.)
In addition, the -I-
option inhibits the use of the current
directory (where the current input file came from) as the first search
directory for #include "
file"
. There is no way to
override this effect of -I-
. With -I.
you can specify
searching the directory which was current when the compiler was
invoked. That is not exactly the same as what the preprocessor does
by default, but it is often satisfactory.
-I-
does not inhibit the use of the standard system directories
for header files. Thus, -I-
and -nostdinc
are
independent.
-L
dir
-l
.
-B
prefix
The compiler driver program runs one or more of the subprograms
cpp
, cc1
, as
and ld
. It tries
prefix as a prefix for each program it tries to run, both with and
without machine
/
version/
(see Target Options).
For each subprogram to be run, the compiler driver first tries the
-B
prefix, if any. If that name is not found, or if -B
was not specified, the driver tries two standard prefixes, which are
/usr/lib/gcc/
and /usr/local/lib/gcc-lib/
. If neither of
those results in a file name that is found, the unmodified program
name is searched for using the directories specified in your
PATH
environment variable.
The compiler will check to see if the path provided by the -B
refers to a directory, and if necessary it will add a directory
separator character at the end of the path.
-B
prefixes that effectively specify directory names also apply
to libraries in the linker, because the compiler translates these
options into -L
options for the linker. They also apply to
includes files in the preprocessor, because the compiler translates these
options into -isystem
options for the preprocessor. In this case,
the compiler appends include
to the prefix.
The run-time support file libgcc.a
can also be searched for using
the -B
prefix, if needed. If it is not found there, the two
standard prefixes above are tried, and that is all. The file is left
out of the link if it is not found by those means.
Another way to specify a prefix much like the -B
prefix is to use
the environment variable GCC_EXEC_PREFIX
. See Environment Variables.
As a special kludge, if the path provided by -B
is
[dir/]stage
N/
, where N is a number in the range 0 to
9, then it will be replaced by [dir/]include
. This is to help
with boot-strapping the compiler.
-specs=
file
specs
file, in order to override the defaults that the gcc
driver
program uses when determining what switches to pass to cc1
,
cc1plus
, as
, ld
, etc. More than one
-specs=
file
can be specified on the command line, and they
are processed in order, from left to right.