On Wednesday 28 November 2007 17:24, Jonathan Wakely wrote:
> On 28/11/2007, Stephane Hockenhull <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On Wednesday 28 November 2007 14:01, 'Daniel Jacobowitz' wrote:
> > > On Wed, Nov 28, 2007 at 01:56:58PM -0500, Stephane Hockenhull wrote:
> > > > hence my question: where
On Wednesday 28 November 2007 16:25, Andrew Pinski wrote:
> On 11/28/07, Stephane Hockenhull <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > is there a way to disable this behaviour for stl templates and have them
> > compiled every time?
> >
> > I can't find a command line option for it.
>
> It is a source level o
On 28/11/2007, Stephane Hockenhull <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wednesday 28 November 2007 14:01, 'Daniel Jacobowitz' wrote:
> > On Wed, Nov 28, 2007 at 01:56:58PM -0500, Stephane Hockenhull wrote:
> > > hence my question: where is it?
> >
> > In libstdc++. You have to link with libstdc++ to us
On 11/28/07, Stephane Hockenhull <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> is there a way to disable this behaviour for stl templates and have them
> compiled every time?
>
> I can't find a command line option for it.
It is a source level option. Remove all the use of "extern template"
in the headers of libst
On Wednesday 28 November 2007 14:01, 'Daniel Jacobowitz' wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 28, 2007 at 01:56:58PM -0500, Stephane Hockenhull wrote:
> > hence my question: where is it?
>
> In libstdc++. You have to link with libstdc++ to use the STL, for
> many reasons including this one.
ar x ../libstdc++.a
g
On Wed, Nov 28, 2007 at 03:38:50PM -0500, Stephane Hockenhull wrote:
> On Wednesday 28 November 2007 14:01, 'Daniel Jacobowitz' wrote:
> > On Wed, Nov 28, 2007 at 01:56:58PM -0500, Stephane Hockenhull wrote:
> > > hence my question: where is it?
> >
> > In libstdc++. You have to link with libstdc+
On Wednesday 28 November 2007 14:01, 'Daniel Jacobowitz' wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 28, 2007 at 01:56:58PM -0500, Stephane Hockenhull wrote:
> > hence my question: where is it?
>
> In libstdc++. You have to link with libstdc++ to use the STL, for
> many reasons including this one.
is there a way to dis
On 28 November 2007 18:57, Stephane Hockenhull wrote:
> if you actually read my email
Of course I read your email.
> I said :
>>> the std::string template is > NOT < compiled into the .s
>>> file
Well, yes, but you also said they weren't anywhere else either.
So it wasn
On Wed, Nov 28, 2007 at 01:56:58PM -0500, Stephane Hockenhull wrote:
> hence my question: where is it?
In libstdc++. You have to link with libstdc++ to use the STL, for
many reasons including this one.
--
Daniel Jacobowitz
CodeSourcery
On Wednesday 28 November 2007 12:35, Dave Korn wrote:
> On 28 November 2007 17:33, Stephane Hockenhull wrote:
> > something just occured to me ... the std::string template is not compiled
> > into the .s file
> >
> > are those templates pre-compiled into some "magical" hidden library?
> > I could n
On 28 November 2007 17:33, Stephane Hockenhull wrote:
> something just occured to me ... the std::string template is not compiled
> into the .s file
>
> are those templates pre-compiled into some "magical" hidden library?
> I could not find them in my gcc installations both native and
> i386-unkn
On Tuesday 27 November 2007 15:50, Andreas Schwab wrote:
> Stephane Hockenhull <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > now, if only someone actually knew where in the g++ source code the
> > special case for std::string is
>
> grep is your friend. Look for find_substitution in cp/mangle.c.
>
> Andreas.
s
On Tuesday 27 November 2007 15:50, Andreas Schwab wrote:
> Stephane Hockenhull <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > now, if only someone actually knew where in the g++ source code the
> > special case for std::string is
>
> grep is your friend. Look for find_substitution in cp/mangle.c.
>
> Andreas.
*
On Tuesday 27 November 2007 15:40, Andrew Pinski wrote:
> On 11/27/07, Stephane Hockenhull <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > no, it would not.
> > because for one simple fact: COFF format lacks many features of ELF.
>
> What features are missing? COFF is not used for Windows 32 anyways,
> it is PE-CO
Stephane Hockenhull <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> now, if only someone actually knew where in the g++ source code the special
> case for std::string is I could fix that, provide a patch, and make the world
> a little bit better.
Actually I think you rather want to look for places that use
USER_
Stephane Hockenhull <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> now, if only someone actually knew where in the g++ source code the special
> case for std::string is
grep is your friend. Look for find_substitution in cp/mangle.c.
Andreas.
--
Andreas Schwab, SuSE Labs, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
SuSE Linux Products
On 11/27/07, Stephane Hockenhull <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> no, it would not.
> because for one simple fact: COFF format lacks many features of ELF.
What features are missing? COFF is not used for Windows 32 anyways,
it is PE-COFF. I am just wondering what exactly is missing that you
think you
On Tuesday 27 November 2007 14:00, Dave Korn wrote:
> On 27 November 2007 18:47, 'Daniel Jacobowitz' wrote:
> > On Tue, Nov 27, 2007 at 06:39:09PM -, Dave Korn wrote:
> >>> joking aside, we need to generate ELF object files for running on
> >>> windows.
> >>
> >> OK, you are now attempting so
On 27 November 2007 18:47, 'Daniel Jacobowitz' wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 27, 2007 at 06:39:09PM -, Dave Korn wrote:
>>> joking aside, we need to generate ELF object files for running on windows.
>>
>> OK, you are now attempting something very very wrong indeed. The win32
>> version of the assem
19 matches
Mail list logo