Mail Archives: djgpp/1997/04/17/23:22:21
Adam Bracey wrote:
>
> Hello!
>
> I downloaded grx20.zip and I unzipped it all in its respective directories. The readme file that comes along
> with it claims that I must first build the library. I ran make under the ...\contrib\grx20 directory, and I get an
> error like this:
I don't know why the readme file says this; you do not need to rebuild
GRX once you install it. The package comes with a prebuild library that
goes in the contrib/grx20/lib directory, and the LIBRARY_PATH variable
in the standard 'djgpp.env' is preset with this directory. In short,
you should be able to start using GRX 2.0 right out of the box.
> /SRC --------------------------------------------------------------------------
> /SRC --------------------------------------------------------------------------
> The system cannot find the path specified.
> /SRC --------------------------------------------------------------------------
> The system cannot find the path specified.
> /SRC --------------------------------------------------------------------------
> The system cannot find the path specified.
>
> etc. etc. etc..... (It continues this until Ctrl-Break is hit)
This is not the output of GNU make. You probably have some other Make
program in your PATH before the DJGPP make program, and this is causing
all sorts of problems. Get 'v2gnu/mak375b.zip' from SimTel, and make
sure that you don't have any other compilers in your PATH.
In any case, I don't see any reason why GRX can't be build as
distributed. When I tried it just now, I got output that looked like
this:
---snip---
cd src
d:/djgpp/bin/make.exe
make.exe[1]: Entering directory `d:/djgpp/contrib/grx20/src'
gcc -c -O6 -Wall -m486 -I. -I./include -I../include draw/bitblt.c -o
draw/bitblt.o
gcc -c -O6 -Wall -m486 -I. -I./include -I../include draw/box.c -o
draw/box.o
---snip---
and more along the same line. If this isn't what you see when you run
make, you're doing something wrong.
--
John M. Aldrich <fighteer AT cs DOT com>
* Anything that happens, happens.
* Anything that, in happening, causes something else to happen,
causes something else to happen.
* Anything that, in happening, causes itself to happen again, happens
again.
* It doesn't necessarily do it in chronological order, though.
--- Douglas Adams
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