Details on this package are located in Section 8.26.2, “Contents of GCC.”
When building gcc-pass2 we had to defer the installation of the C++ standard library because no suitable compiler was available to compile it. We could not use the compiler built in that section because it is a native compiler and should not be used outside of chroot and risks polluting the libraries with some host components.
Libstdc++ is part of the GCC
sources. You should first unpack the GCC tarball and change to
the gcc-11.2.0
directory.
Create a link which exists when building libstdc++ in the gcc tree:
ln -s gthr-posix.h libgcc/gthr-default.h
Create a separate build directory for libstdc++ and enter it:
mkdir -v build cd build
Prepare libstdc++ for compilation:
../libstdc++-v3/configure \ CXXFLAGS="-g -O2 -D_GNU_SOURCE" \ --prefix=/usr \ --disable-multilib \ --disable-nls \ --host=mips64el-lfs-linux-gnuabi64 \ --disable-libstdcxx-pch
The meaning of the configure options:
CXXFLAGS="-g -O2
-D_GNU_SOURCE"
These flags are passed by the top level Makefile when doing a full build of GCC.
--host=$(uname
-m)-lfs-linux-gnu
We have to mimic what would happen if this package were built as part of a full compiler build. This switch would be passed to configure by GCC's build machinery.
--disable-libstdcxx-pch
This switch prevents the installation of precompiled include files, which are not needed at this stage.
Compile libstdc++ by running:
make
Install the library:
make install
Details on this package are located in Section 8.26.2, “Contents of GCC.”