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authorJoseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com>2012-03-08 01:27:38 +0000
committerJoseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com>2012-03-08 01:27:38 +0000
commita7a93d5086103f52367d3e9776976eb0b0bc6c7b (patch)
treea6c659fdb9c384d56bd8c01a55c9332e791f1341 /INSTALL
parentFix .ctors/.dtors header configure test for bootstrapping. (diff)
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Clean up glibc manual references to "GNU system" (bug 6911).
Diffstat (limited to 'INSTALL')
-rw-r--r--INSTALL13
1 files changed, 7 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/INSTALL b/INSTALL
index 737a44d462..e0433d459b 100644
--- a/INSTALL
+++ b/INSTALL
@@ -339,7 +339,7 @@ patches, although we try to avoid this.
Specific advice for GNU/Linux systems
=====================================
-If you are installing the GNU C Library on a GNU/Linux system, you need
+If you are installing the GNU C Library on GNU/Linux systems, you need
to have the header files from a 2.6.19.1 or newer kernel around for
reference. These headers must be installed using `make
headers_install'; the headers present in the kernel source directory
@@ -370,11 +370,12 @@ required if not compiling programs using those interfaces. You do not
need to copy kernel headers if you did not specify an alternate kernel
header source using `--with-headers'.
- GNU/Linux expects some components of the GNU C Library installation
-to be in `/lib' and some in `/usr/lib'. This is handled automatically
-if you configure the GNU C Library with `--prefix=/usr'. If you set
-some other prefix or allow it to default to `/usr/local', then all the
-components are installed there.
+ The Filesystem Hierarchy Standard for GNU/Linux systems expects some
+components of the GNU C Library installation to be in `/lib' and some
+in `/usr/lib'. This is handled automatically if you configure the GNU
+C Library with `--prefix=/usr'. If you set some other prefix or allow
+it to default to `/usr/local', then all the components are installed
+there.
You cannot use `nscd' with 2.0 kernels, due to bugs in the
kernel-side thread support. `nscd' happens to hit these bugs