Mike Kenny wrote:

> I am trying to install gentoo from the web by following the steps in
> the  Gentoo Linux x86 Handbook for a stage 1 install. This works well
> up to a point.
>
> When I execute
> # emerge --emptytree system
> after some time the process terminates with a message similar to
>
> cd ../obj_s;   -I../c++ -I../include
> -I/var/tmp/portage/ncurses-5.4-r6/work/ncurses-5.4/c++ -DHAVE_CONFIG_H
> -I/var/tmp/portage/ncurses-5.4-r6/work/ncurses-5.4/c++/../include -I.
> -I../include  -D_GNU_SOURCE -DNDEBUG -O2 -mcpu=i686
> -fomit-frame-pointer -fPIC -c
> /var/tmp/portage/ncurses-5.4-r6/work/ncurses-5.4/c++/cursesf.cc
> /bin/sh: line 1: -I../c++: No such file or directory
> make: *** [../obj_s/cursesf.o] Error 127
>
> (I say similar because the output above is from executing make within
> the relevant directory -var/tmp/portage/ncurses-5.4-r6/work/narrowc/c++)
>
> Inspecting the Makefile shows that there is no value defind for CXX.
> As g++ does not appear to exist within my chrooted environment I did
> attempt to set this to gcc, but this failed with a notice the c++ was
> not installed.
>
> I believe I must have messed up something in creating my chroot
> environment as g++ exists elsewhere. But I can't figure what that
> might have been.
>
> I have also tried executing the instructions for installing gcc 3.4 in
> the hope that this would give me a c++ compiler, but this failed with
> the same error as above.
>
> Any ideas on how I should proceed? I am loathe to restart as a) I
> don't yet see what I can do differently and b) I have a 2GB cap on my
> bandwidth for December and have already used over 25% of this.
>
> Thanks,
>
Well, I may have ran into this before.  Type in df and see if your disk
is full.  It is worth a try at least.

Dale
:-)

-- 
To err is human, I'm most certainly human.

 

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