1<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook" version="5.0" 2 xml:id="manual.intro.setup.configure" xreflabel="Configuring"> 3<?dbhtml filename="configure.html"?> 4 5<info><title>Configure</title> 6 <keywordset> 7 <keyword>ISO C++</keyword> 8 <keyword>configure</keyword> 9 <keyword>options</keyword> 10 </keywordset> 11</info> 12 13 14 15<para> 16 When configuring libstdc++, you'll have to configure the entire 17 <emphasis>gccsrcdir</emphasis> directory. Consider using the 18 toplevel gcc configuration option 19 <literal>--enable-languages=c++</literal>, which saves time by only 20 building the C++ toolchain. 21</para> 22 23<para> 24 Here are all of the configure options specific to libstdc++. Keep 25 in mind that 26 <!-- This SECnn should be the "Choosing Package Options" section. --> 27 <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="http://sourceware.org/autobook/autobook/autobook_14.html">they 28 all have opposite forms as well</link> (enable/disable and 29 with/without). The defaults are for the <emphasis>current 30 development sources</emphasis>, which may be different than those 31 for released versions. 32</para> 33<para>The canonical way to find out the configure options that are 34 available for a given set of libstdc++ sources is to go to the 35 source directory and then type: <command>./configure --help</command>. 36</para> 37 38<variablelist> 39 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-multilib</code>[default]</term> 40 <listitem><para>This is part of the generic multilib support for building cross 41 compilers. As such, targets like "powerpc-elf" will have 42 libstdc++ built many different ways: "-msoft-float" 43 and not, etc. A different libstdc++ will be built for each of 44 the different multilib versions. This option is on by default. 45 </para> 46 </listitem></varlistentry> 47 48 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-version-specific-runtime-libs</code></term> 49 <listitem><para>Specify that run-time libraries should be installed in the 50 compiler-specific subdirectory (i.e., 51 <code>${libdir}/gcc-lib/${target_alias}/${gcc_version}</code>) 52 instead of <code>${libdir}</code>. This option is useful if you 53 intend to use several versions of gcc in parallel. In addition, 54 libstdc++'s include files will be installed in 55 <code>${libdir}/gcc-lib/${target_alias}/${gcc_version}/include/g++</code>, 56 unless you also specify 57 <literal>--with-gxx-include-dir=</literal><filename class="directory">dirname</filename> during configuration. 58 </para> 59 </listitem></varlistentry> 60 61 <varlistentry><term><code>--with-gxx-include-dir=<include-files dir></code></term> 62 <listitem><para>Adds support for named libstdc++ include directory. For instance, 63 the following puts all the libstdc++ headers into a directory 64 called "4.4-20090404" instead of the usual 65 "c++/(version)". 66 </para> 67 <programlisting> 68 --with-gxx-include-dir=/foo/H-x86-gcc-3-c-gxx-inc/include/4.4-20090404</programlisting> </listitem></varlistentry> 69 70 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-cstdio</code></term> 71 <listitem><para>This is an abbreviated form of <code>'--enable-cstdio=stdio'</code> 72 (described next). 73 </para> 74 </listitem></varlistentry> 75 76 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-cstdio=OPTION</code></term> 77 <listitem><para>Select a target-specific I/O package. The choices are 'stdio' 78 which is a generic abstraction using POSIX file I/O APIs 79 (<function>read</function>, <function>write</function>, 80 <function>lseek</function>, etc.), and 'stdio_pure' which is similar 81 but only uses standard C file I/O APIs (<function>fread</function>, 82 <function>fwrite</function>, <function>fseek</function>, etc.). 83 The 'stdio_posix' choice is a synonym for 'stdio'. 84 The default is 'stdio'. This option can change the library ABI. 85 </para> 86 </listitem></varlistentry> 87 88 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-clocale</code></term> 89 <listitem><para>This is an abbreviated form of <code>'--enable-clocale=generic'</code> 90 (described next). 91 </para> 92 </listitem></varlistentry> 93 94 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-clocale=OPTION</code></term> 95 <listitem><para>Select a target-specific underlying locale package. The 96 choices are 'ieee_1003.1-2001' to specify an X/Open, Standard Unix 97 (IEEE Std. 1003.1-2001) model based on langinfo/iconv/catgets, 98 'gnu' to specify a model based on functionality from the GNU C 99 library (langinfo/iconv/gettext) (from <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://www.gnu.org/software/libc/">glibc</link>, the GNU C 100 library), 'generic' to use a generic "C" abstraction which consists 101 of "C" locale info, 'newlib' to specify the Newlib C library model 102 which only differs from the 'generic' model in the handling of 103 ctype, or 'darwin' which omits the <type>wchar_t</type> specializations 104 needed by the 'generic' model. 105 </para> 106 107 <para>If not explicitly specified, the configure process tries 108 to guess the most suitable package from the choices above. The 109 default is 'generic'. On glibc-based systems of sufficient 110 vintage (2.3 and newer), 'gnu' is automatically selected. On newlib-based 111 systems (<code>'--with_newlib=yes'</code>) and OpenBSD, 'newlib' is 112 automatically selected. On Mac OS X 'darwin' is automatically selected. 113 This option can change the library ABI. 114 </para> 115 </listitem></varlistentry> 116 117 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-libstdcxx-allocator</code></term> 118 <listitem><para>This is an abbreviated form of 119 <code>'--enable-libstdcxx-allocator=auto'</code> (described 120 next). 121 </para> 122 </listitem></varlistentry> 123 124 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-libstdcxx-allocator=OPTION </code></term> 125 <listitem><para>Select a target-specific underlying std::allocator. The 126 choices are 'new' to specify a wrapper for new, and 'malloc' to 127 specify a wrapper for malloc. 128 See <xref linkend="allocator.ext"/> for more information. 129 This option can change the library ABI. 130 </para> 131 </listitem></varlistentry> 132 133 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-cheaders=OPTION</code></term> 134 <listitem><para>This allows the user to define the approach taken for C header 135 compatibility with C++. Options are c, c_std, and c_global. 136 These correspond to the source directory's include/c, 137 include/c_std, and include/c_global, and may also include 138 include/c_compatibility. The default is 'c_global'. 139 </para> 140 </listitem></varlistentry> 141 142 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-threads</code></term> 143 <listitem><para>This is an abbreviated form of <code>'--enable-threads=yes'</code> 144 (described next). 145 </para> 146 </listitem></varlistentry> 147 148 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-threads=OPTION</code></term> 149 <listitem><para>Select a threading library. A full description is 150 given in the 151 general <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="http://gcc.gnu.org/install/configure.html">compiler 152 configuration instructions</link>. This option can change the 153 library ABI. 154 </para> 155 </listitem></varlistentry> 156 157 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-libstdcxx-threads</code></term> 158 <listitem><para>Enable C++11 threads support. If not explicitly specified, 159 the configure process enables it if possible. This 160 option can change the library ABI. 161 </para> 162 </listitem></varlistentry> 163 164 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-libstdcxx-time</code></term> 165 <listitem><para>This is an abbreviated form of 166 <code>'--enable-libstdcxx-time=yes'</code>(described next). 167 </para> 168 </listitem></varlistentry> 169 170 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-libstdcxx-time=OPTION</code></term> 171 <listitem><para>Enables link-type checks for the availability of the 172 <function>clock_gettime</function> clocks, used in the implementation 173 of [time.clock], and of the <function>nanosleep</function> and 174 <function>sched_yield</function> functions, used in the 175 implementation of [thread.thread.this] of the 2011 ISO C++ standard. 176 The choice OPTION=yes checks for the availability of the facilities 177 in libc. OPTION=rt also checks in 178 librt (and, if it's needed, links to it). Note that linking to librt 179 is not always desirable because for glibc it requires linking to 180 libpthread too, which causes all reference counting to use atomic 181 operations, resulting in a potentially large overhead for 182 single-threaded programs. OPTION=no skips the tests completely. 183 The default is OPTION=auto, which skips the checks and enables the 184 features only for targets known to support them. 185 For Linux targets, if <function>clock_gettime</function> is not used 186 then the [time.clock] implementation will use a system call to access 187 the realtime and monotonic clocks, which is significantly slower than 188 the C library's <function>clock_gettime</function> function. 189 </para> 190 </listitem></varlistentry> 191 192 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-libstdcxx-debug</code></term> 193 <listitem><para>Build separate debug libraries in addition to what is normally built. 194 By default, the debug libraries are compiled with 195 <code> CXXFLAGS='-g3 -O0 -fno-inline'</code> 196 , are installed in <code>${libdir}/debug</code>, and have the 197 same names and versioning information as the non-debug 198 libraries. This option is off by default. 199 </para> 200 <para>Note this make command, executed in 201 the build directory, will do much the same thing, without the 202 configuration difference and without building everything twice: 203 <code>make CXXFLAGS='-g3 -O0 -fno-inline' all</code> 204 </para> 205 </listitem></varlistentry> 206 207 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-libstdcxx-debug-flags=FLAGS</code></term> 208 209 <listitem><para>This option is only valid when 210 <code>--enable-libstdcxx-debug</code> 211 is also specified, and applies to the debug builds only. With 212 this option, you can pass a specific string of flags to the 213 compiler to use when building the debug versions of libstdc++. 214 FLAGS is a quoted string of options, like 215 </para> 216 <programlisting> 217 --enable-libstdcxx-debug-flags='-g3 -O1 -fno-inline'</programlisting> 218 </listitem></varlistentry> 219 220 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-cxx-flags=FLAGS</code></term> 221 <listitem><para>With this option, you can pass a string of -f (functionality) 222 flags to the compiler to use when building libstdc++. This 223 option can change the library ABI. FLAGS is a quoted string of 224 options, like 225 </para> 226 <programlisting> 227 --enable-cxx-flags='-fvtable-gc -fomit-frame-pointer -ansi'</programlisting> 228 <para> 229 Note that the flags don't necessarily have to all be -f flags, 230 as shown, but usually those are the ones that will make sense 231 for experimentation and configure-time overriding. 232 </para> 233 <para>The advantage of --enable-cxx-flags over setting CXXFLAGS in 234 the 'make' environment is that, if files are automatically 235 rebuilt, the same flags will be used when compiling those files 236 as well, so that everything matches. 237 </para> 238 <para>Fun flags to try might include combinations of 239 </para> 240 <programlisting> 241 -fstrict-aliasing 242 -fno-exceptions 243 -ffunction-sections 244 -fvtable-gc</programlisting> 245 <para>and opposite forms (-fno-) of the same. Tell us (the libstdc++ 246 mailing list) if you discover more! 247 </para> 248 </listitem></varlistentry> 249 250 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-c99</code></term> 251 <listitem><para>The <type>long long</type> type was introduced in C99, along 252 with many other functions for wide characters, and math 253 classification macros, etc. If enabled, all C99 functions not 254 specified by the C++ standard will be put into <code>namespace 255 __gnu_cxx</code>, and then all these names will 256 be injected into namespace std, so that C99 functions can be 257 used "as if" they were in the C++ standard (as they 258 will eventually be in some future revision of the standard, 259 without a doubt). By default, C99 support is on, assuming the 260 configure probes find all the necessary functions and bits 261 necessary. This option can change the library ABI. 262 </para> 263 </listitem></varlistentry> 264 265 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-wchar_t</code>[default]</term> 266 <listitem><para>Template specializations for the <type>wchar_t</type> type are 267 required for wide character conversion support. Disabling 268 wide character specializations may be expedient for initial 269 porting efforts, but builds only a subset of what is required by 270 ISO, and is not recommended. By default, this option is on. 271 This option can change the library ABI. 272 </para> 273 </listitem></varlistentry> 274 275 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-long-long </code></term> 276 <listitem><para>The <type>long long</type> type was introduced in C99. It is 277 provided as a GNU extension to C++98 in g++. This flag builds 278 support for "long long" into the library (specialized 279 templates and the like for iostreams). This option is on by default: 280 if enabled, users will have to either use the new-style "C" 281 headers by default (i.e., <cmath> not <math.h>) 282 or add appropriate compile-time flags to all compile lines to 283 allow "C" visibility of this feature (on GNU/Linux, 284 the flag is -D_ISOC99_SOURCE, which is added automatically via 285 CPLUSPLUS_CPP_SPEC's addition of _GNU_SOURCE). 286 This option can change the library ABI. 287 </para> 288 </listitem></varlistentry> 289 290 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-fully-dynamic-string</code></term> 291 <listitem><para>This option enables a special version of basic_string avoiding 292 the optimization that allocates empty objects in static memory. 293 Mostly useful together with shared memory allocators, see PR 294 libstdc++/16612 for details. 295 </para> 296 </listitem></varlistentry> 297 298 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-concept-checks</code></term> 299 <listitem><para>This turns on additional compile-time checks for instantiated 300 library templates, in the form of specialized templates described in 301 the <link linkend="std.diagnostics.concept_checking">Concept 302 Checking</link> section. They 303 can help users discover when they break the rules of the STL, before 304 their programs run. These checks are based on C++03 rules and some of 305 them are not compatible with correct C++11 code. 306 </para> 307 </listitem></varlistentry> 308 309 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-symvers[=style]</code></term> 310 311 <listitem><para>In 3.1 and later, tries to turn on symbol versioning in the 312 shared library (if a shared library has been 313 requested). Values for 'style' that are currently supported 314 are 'gnu', 'gnu-versioned-namespace', 'darwin', 315 'darwin-export', and 'sun'. Both gnu- options require that a recent 316 version of the GNU linker be in use. Both darwin options are 317 equivalent. With no style given, the configure script will try 318 to guess correct defaults for the host system, probe to see if 319 additional requirements are necessary and present for 320 activation, and if so, will turn symbol versioning on. This 321 option can change the library ABI. 322 </para> 323 324 </listitem></varlistentry> 325 326 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-libstdcxx-visibility</code></term> 327 <listitem><para> In 4.2 and later, enables or disables visibility 328 attributes. If enabled (as by default), and the compiler seems 329 capable of passing the simple sanity checks thrown at it, adjusts 330 items in namespace std, namespace std::tr1, namespace std::tr2, 331 and namespace __gnu_cxx to have <code>visibility ("default")</code> 332 so that -fvisibility options can be used without affecting the 333 normal external-visibility of namespace std entities. 334 Prior to 4.7 this option was spelled <code>--enable-visibility</code>. 335 </para> 336 </listitem></varlistentry> 337 338 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-libstdcxx-pch</code></term> 339 <listitem><para>In 3.4 and later, tries to turn on the generation of 340 stdc++.h.gch, a pre-compiled file including all the standard 341 C++ includes. If enabled (as by default), and the compiler 342 seems capable of passing the simple sanity checks thrown at 343 it, try to build stdc++.h.gch as part of the make process. 344 In addition, this generated file is used later on (by appending 345 <code>-include bits/stdc++.h</code> to CXXFLAGS) when running the 346 testsuite. 347 </para> 348 </listitem></varlistentry> 349 350 351 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-extern-template</code>[default]</term> 352 <listitem><para>Use extern template to pre-instantiate all required 353 specializations for certain types defined in the standard libraries. 354 These types include <classname>string</classname> and dependents like 355 <classname>char_traits</classname>, the templatized IO classes, 356 <classname>allocator</classname>, and others. 357 Disabling means that implicit 358 template generation will be used when compiling these types. By 359 default, this option is on. This option can change the library ABI. 360 </para> 361 </listitem></varlistentry> 362 363 <varlistentry><term><code>--disable-hosted-libstdcxx</code></term> 364 <listitem> 365 <para> 366 By default, a complete <emphasis>hosted</emphasis> C++ library is 367 built. The C++ Standard also describes a 368 <emphasis>freestanding</emphasis> environment, in which only a 369 minimal set of headers are provided. This option builds such an 370 environment. 371 </para> 372 </listitem></varlistentry> 373 374<varlistentry><term><code>--disable-libstdcxx-verbose</code></term> 375 <listitem> 376 <para> 377 By default, the library is configured to write descriptive messages 378 to standard error for certain events such as calling a pure virtual 379 function or the invocation of the standard terminate handler. Those 380 messages cause the library to depend on the demangler and standard I/O 381 facilities, which might be undesirable in a low-memory environment or 382 when standard error is not available. This option disables those 383 messages. This option does not change the library ABI. 384 </para> 385 </listitem></varlistentry> 386 387<varlistentry><term><code>--disable-libstdcxx-dual-abi</code></term> 388 <listitem> 389 <para> 390 Disable support for the new, C++11-conforming implementations of 391 <code>std::string</code>, <code>std::list</code> etc. so that the 392 library only provides definitions of types using the old ABI 393 (see <xref linkend="manual.intro.using.abi"/>). 394 This option changes the library ABI. 395 </para> 396 </listitem></varlistentry> 397 398<varlistentry><term><code>--with-default-libstdcxx-abi=</code><replaceable>OPTION</replaceable></term> 399 <listitem> 400 <para> 401 Set the default value for the <symbol>_GLIBCXX_USE_CXX11_ABI</symbol> 402 macro (see <xref linkend="manual.intro.using.macros"/>). 403 The default is <option>OPTION=new</option> which sets the macro to 404 <literal>1</literal>, 405 use <option>OPTION=gcc4-compatible</option> to set it to 406 <literal>0</literal>. 407 This option does not change the library ABI. 408 </para> 409 </listitem></varlistentry> 410 411 <varlistentry><term><code>--with-libstdcxx-lock-policy=OPTION</code></term> 412 <listitem><para>Sets the lock policy that controls how 413 <classname>shared_ptr</classname> reference counting is 414 synchronized. 415 The choice OPTION=atomic enables use of atomics for updates to 416 <classname>shared_ptr</classname> reference counts. 417 The choice OPTION=mutex enables use of a mutex to synchronize updates 418 to <classname>shared_ptr</classname> reference counts. 419 If the compiler's thread model is "single" then this option has no 420 effect, as no synchronization is used for the reference counts. 421 The default is OPTION=auto, which checks for the availability of 422 compiler built-ins for 2-byte and 4-byte atomic compare-and-swap, 423 and uses OPTION=atomic if they're available, OPTION=mutex otherwise. 424 This option can change the library ABI. 425 If the library is configured to use atomics and user programs are 426 compiled using a target that doesn't natively support the atomic 427 operations (e.g. the library is configured for armv7 and then code 428 is compiled with <option>-march=armv5t</option>) then the program 429 might rely on support in libgcc to provide the atomics. 430 </para> 431 </listitem></varlistentry> 432 433 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-vtable-verify</code>[default]</term> 434 <listitem> 435 <para>Use <code>-fvtable-verify=std</code> to compile the C++ 436 runtime with instrumentation for vtable verification. All virtual 437 functions in the standard library will be verified at runtime. 438 Types impacted include <classname>locale</classname> and 439 <classname>iostream</classname>, and others. Disabling means that 440 the C++ runtime is compiled without support for vtable 441 verification. By default, this option is off. 442 </para> 443 </listitem></varlistentry> 444 445 <varlistentry><term><code>--enable-libstdcxx-filesystem-ts</code>[default]</term> 446 <listitem> 447 <para>Build <filename class="libraryfile">libstdc++fs.a</filename> as well 448 as the usual libstdc++ and libsupc++ libraries. This is enabled by 449 default on select POSIX targets where it is known to work and disabled 450 otherwise. 451 </para> 452 </listitem></varlistentry> 453 454</variablelist> 455 456</section> 457