One MinGW, many GCC versions - how to do it? - c++

Is it possible to have different GCC installations working with one MinGW installation?
By MinGW I mean the common base which is always needed regardless which version of GCC compiler we're going to install and use;
MinGW runtime
binutils
make
MinGW API for MS-Windows
and many other components which are part of MinGW but are not even required by GCC.

MinGW is a GCC installation. Are you asking "can I have multiple versions of MinGW installed?" - Yes you can. Simply download and install the different MinGW vertsions in different directories. MinGW comes with a .BAT file that when run sets up the local environment for that particular version.
If this isn't the answer you are after, please expand your question.
To anwer which:
There is no MinGW runtime - it uses the Windows libraries.
if you don't want make, delete it or use an alternative
binutils - there may be dependencies between these and the compiler, I'd recommend keeping separate versions for each MinGW installation.
The Windowsheaders? I guess you could centralise them.
But why would you want to do this? It's much easier and convenient to have completely separate installations. And the space they take up is nothing on even a half-modern PC.

Do you mean you want to have multiple versions of GCC available to your MinGW environment? I don't believe that would be a problem, GCC is just a set binaries that come with a MinGW install.
You should be able to download older/newer versions of the binaries and put them in the $BIN path and they should work properly. You'd obviously have to make sure to have different names for the different versions.
Otherwise, I'm not completely sure what you mean about multiple "GCC installations."

Related

Compiling C/C++ for an old Ubuntu version in a newer Ubuntu version

I have build servers that run Ubuntu 18.04 (in a Docker container), but I need to build binaries (various static and shared libraries and executables) for older versions of Ubuntu (e.g. 16.04), without having to install an older version of the OS.
Currently we use sysroot toolchains (that include compiler and libraries etc) and CMake toolchain files for building for other targets (e.g. ARM Poky/Yocto), and it would be ideal if we could use the same approach for building for older (or potentially newer) versions of Ubuntu.
Is it possible?
Anything is possible, but the easiest thing you can do is create a new Docker image (or some other type of machine) with an older OS on it. Then everything will "just work."
If you really don't want to do that, you need to identify all the dependencies, starting with libc, which have symbols missing on the older platform, then figure out how to avoid using those symbols. This will probably waste a ton of time, especially considering you already have one build container (making a second one shouldn't be hard).

Install gcc 4.9 on windows and configure it in Netbeans

Preamble
If anything I wrote is not correct, please be so kind and correct me. I am a php developer mainly - I am not into this compiling stuff. I know there are a lot of topics around the www but they seems to be either old/outdated, very complex or links to a bunch of files on sourceforge (I have no clue what files I should download and what to do with them after downloading them).
Searching a couple of days by now
I am researching for a couple of days by now and tried different compilers and settings but I don't get a standalone executable for a c++14 programme.
First compiler
The first compiler I used was cygwin. I was able to compile it with c++14 but on other computers cygwin had to be installed as well as a cygwin dll was missing. I googled and figured out that programmes compiled using Cygwin requires this dll but cannot be included to the programme itself - or did I missed something?
Current compiler
I then switched to MinGW which seems to be a better choice as it allows to compile standalone executables which is correct as I am able to do so. Well, the MinGW setup I downloaded from http://www.mingw.org/ installed among other the gcc version 4.8.1. I need 4.9.1 for c++14.
As the title says I want to configure it in Netbeans but if there is a proper tutorial for a command line compiling it's no problem either but I try to avoid using another IDE as we use it at work, too.
drangon.org
I also heard about http://www.drangon.org/mingw/ but there are tons of links linking to similiar stuff.
My goals
Get a better understanding about gcc and this compiling stuff in general.
Install gcc 4.9.1 (preferred into MinGW as it's currently installed)
Configure it in Netbeans 8.
I suggest you to try MinGW-w64. (Download.)
It's similar to MinGW, but have better multitreading support, can easily compile x64 applications, and what's more important, at this moment it uses GCC 4.9.2.
By the way, MinGW applications require some .dlls to work too. Usually you just provide these libraries with your application, but another option is to add -static flag at linking phase. Applications that are compiled with it do not require any external library files (unless you're using 3rd party libraries that don't support static linking).

Install libcurl for C++ in Windows

this is my first time trying to install a library, and I have next-to-no idea as to how I'd do that. I'm using GCC in codeblocks. Do I download the MinGW64 binary or development build? From there where do/should I extract it to. After that, I believe I have to link it to GCC, how do I accomplish that? Is there anything else after that? I found results on Google, but all they did for me was confuse me.
Downloading MinGW binaries for windows should be sufficient. Dev build from source is only necessary if you want to contribute to the GCC toolchain itself, or change build parameters for it (which is unlikely for the context you're asking for).
When you have installed your MinGW GCC toolchain properly, you should be able to download libcurl as source distribution and compile it with this toolchain.

How to build and install GCC on Windows 7, ver. 4.8.1

I would like to upgrade my old GCC compiler to v. 4.8.1.
Currently I'm using Code::Blocks IDE (nightly build, svn 8982), and my compiler is GCC 4.4.1.
I downloaded fresh GCC from their site - gcc.gnu.org
From what I've read in documentation, they say that I should first build compiler by myself. Afterwards, they throw something like this:
% mkdir objdir
% cd objdir
% srcdir/configure [options] [target]
However, I completly have no idea what to do with these lines.
And even if I did, afterwards come maaany lines with some additional options, where I am even more lost then before.
I don't know if there is any easy way of installing it, but from what I've read here, I can download MSYS from MinGW and it will do everything(I hope?) for me. However, from what I see there, it says that MinGW comes with already built version of GCC, meaning I won't be able to use mine anyway. Am I right? If yes, what should I do to build and use GCC? If not, then will I be able to easily install GCC after downloading MSYS?
Thanks in advance.
I can download MSYS from MinGW
YOu can.
and it will do everything(I hope?) for me.
It won't. MSys provides environment for building software that requires unix-like environment. To be more precise - autotools. If you aren't familiar with *nix build process (configure script), Mingw won't really help you.
However, from what I see there, it says that MinGW comes with already built version of GCC,
Yes, version 4.7.2 at the moment.
meaning I won't be able to use mine anyway. Am I right?
No. If you don't add Mingw/MSys to your PATH, you can keep multiple different installations on the same machine. It also SHOULD be possible to use multiple different versions of gcc within the same installation of mingw, but things can get messy here. (gcc3 and gcc4 should be able to exist, not sure about 4.7.2 and 4.8.1)
If yes, what should I do to build and use GCC?
You should search for precompiled binaries provided by somebody else. Compiling gcc yourself is possible, but for you (i.e. if you aren't arleady familiar with msys) it might not be worth the effort.
Either you could try http://mingw-w64.sourceforge.net/ or mingw-nuwen. Mingw provided by nuwen is 32bit only, but is very easy to install. The problem is that standard mingw distribution includes update tool (with "mingw uppdate" and "mingw upgrade" you can upgrade installed packages to their latest version), bug "mingw-nuwen" doesn't have such tool.
Because you say
However, I completly have no idea what to do with these lines.
You should either use precompiled mingw provded by somebody else, or use another compiler. If you don't really need bleeding-edge C++11 support ON WINDOWS, use visual studio express.

How to compile C++ programs in codeblocks for 32bit computers with the dual targets MinGw compiler [duplicate]

I've downloaded MinGW with mingw-get-inst, and now I've noticed that it cannot compile for x64.
So is there any 32-bit binary version of the MinGW compiler that can both compile for 32-bit Windows and also for 64-bit Windows?
I don't want a 64-bit version that can generate 32-bit code, since I want the compiler to also run on 32-bit Windows, and I'm only looking for precompiled binaries here, not source files, since I've spent countless hours compiling GCC and failing, and I've given up for a while. :(
AFAIK mingw targets either 32 bit windows or 64 bit windows, but not both, so you would need two installs. And the latter is still considered beta.
For you what you want is either mingw-w64-bin_i686-mingw or mingw-w64-bin_i686-cygwin if you want to compile for windows 64. For win32, just use what you get with mingw-get-inst.
See http://sourceforge.net/apps/trac/mingw-w64/wiki/download%20filename%20structure for an explanation of file names.
I realize this is an old question. However it's linked to the many times the question has been repeated.
I have found, after lots of research that, by now, years later, both compilers are commonly installed by default when installing mingw from your repository (i.e. synaptic).
You can check and verify by running Linux's locate command:
$ locate -r "mingw32.*[cg]++$"
On my Ubuntu (13.10) install I have by default the following compilers to choose from... found by issuing the locate command.
/usr/bin/amd64-mingw32msvc-c++
/usr/bin/amd64-mingw32msvc-g++
/usr/bin/i586-mingw32msvc-c++
/usr/bin/i586-mingw32msvc-g++
/usr/bin/i686-w64-mingw32-c++
/usr/bin/i686-w64-mingw32-g++
/usr/bin/x86_64-w64-mingw32-c++
/usr/bin/x86_64-w64-mingw32-g++
Finally, the least you'd have to do on many systems is run:
$ sudo apt-get install gcc-mingw32
I hope the many links to this page can spare a lot of programmers some search time.
for you situation, you can download multilib (include lib32 and lib64) version for Mingw64:
Multilib Toolchains(Targetting Win32 and Win64)
By default it is compiled for 64bit.You can add -m32 flag to compile for 32bit program.
But sadly,no gdb provided,you ought to add it manually.
Because according to mingw-64's todo list, gcc multilib version is done,but gdb
multilib version is still in progress,you could use it maybe in the future.
Support of multilib build in configure and in gcc. Parts are already present in gcc's 4.5 version by using target triplet -w64-mingw32.
gdb -- Native support is present, but some features like multi-arch support (debugging 32-bit and 64-bit by one gdb) are still missing features.
mingw-64-todo-list