Re: Freeze Please?
- To: David Schleef <ds@schleef.org>
- Cc: Debian development list <debian-devel@lists.debian.org>
- Subject: Re: Freeze Please?
- From: Junichi Uekawa <dancer@netfort.gr.jp>
- Date: Mon, 03 Mar 2003 00:16:31 +0900
- Message-id: <[🔎] 87n0kd23zk.wl@vivare.dancer.pr.jp.doshisha.ac.jp>
- In-reply-to: <20030207201620.GA4283@comedi.org>
- References: <E18gVqQ-0002Oa-00@snot.cs.unm.edu> <1044587382.29889.19.camel@laptop4jeff> <20030207034739.GA31328@crystal> <20030207105240.GB1020@wonderland.linux.it> <1044617536.12381.8.camel@leom181.leom.ec-lyon.fr> <20030207115423.GA6908@evbergen.xs4all.nl> <20030207172019.GH27668@netexpress.net> <20030207183049.GA12805@nevyn.them.org> <20030207201620.GA4283@comedi.org>
I'm responding to a very old thread, but:
> > Actually, that's sound. GCC is the most likely software to
> > cross-compile correctly, because people spend a lot of time making it
> > work.
>
> I've considered writing a simple gcc wrapper script that, when
> executed on a m68k machine, would transfer the relevant files
> to a faster machine, cross-compile them, and transfer the
> results back. Of course, the transferring would be done most
> conveniently via NFS. This method would likely work immediately
> for a large number of packages, without the widespread problems
> typical with full cross compilation.
DODES is probably what you are looking for, which was a system for
SuperH, but nevertheless.
regards,
junichi
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