From f378ebf14df0952eae870c9865bab8326aa8f137 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Dan Albert Date: Wed, 17 Jun 2015 11:09:54 -0700 Subject: Delete old versions of GCC. Change-Id: I710f125d905290e1024cbd67f48299861790c66c --- gcc-4.2.1-5666.3/gcc/doc/headerdirs.texi | 32 -------------------------------- 1 file changed, 32 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 gcc-4.2.1-5666.3/gcc/doc/headerdirs.texi (limited to 'gcc-4.2.1-5666.3/gcc/doc/headerdirs.texi') diff --git a/gcc-4.2.1-5666.3/gcc/doc/headerdirs.texi b/gcc-4.2.1-5666.3/gcc/doc/headerdirs.texi deleted file mode 100644 index bc7f07f36..000000000 --- a/gcc-4.2.1-5666.3/gcc/doc/headerdirs.texi +++ /dev/null @@ -1,32 +0,0 @@ -@c Copyright (C) 1988, 1989, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc. -@c This is part of the GCC manual. -@c For copying conditions, see the file gcc.texi. - -@node Header Dirs -@chapter Standard Header File Directories - -@code{GCC_INCLUDE_DIR} means the same thing for native and cross. It is -where GCC stores its private include files, and also where GCC -stores the fixed include files. A cross compiled GCC runs -@code{fixincludes} on the header files in @file{$(tooldir)/include}. -(If the cross compilation header files need to be fixed, they must be -installed before GCC is built. If the cross compilation header files -are already suitable for GCC, nothing special need be done). - -@code{GPLUSPLUS_INCLUDE_DIR} means the same thing for native and cross. It -is where @command{g++} looks first for header files. The C++ library -installs only target independent header files in that directory. - -@code{LOCAL_INCLUDE_DIR} is used only by native compilers. GCC -doesn't install anything there. It is normally -@file{/usr/local/include}. This is where local additions to a packaged -system should place header files. - -@code{CROSS_INCLUDE_DIR} is used only by cross compilers. GCC -doesn't install anything there. - -@code{TOOL_INCLUDE_DIR} is used for both native and cross compilers. It -is the place for other packages to install header files that GCC will -use. For a cross-compiler, this is the equivalent of -@file{/usr/include}. When you build a cross-compiler, -@code{fixincludes} processes any header files in this directory. -- cgit v1.2.3