Mail Archives: djgpp/1998/06/21/13:16:22
Eli Zaretskii <eliz AT is DOT elta DOT co DOT il> wrote, and I reply...
>On Sat, 20 Jun 1998, Sunil Rao wrote:
>
>> >> Headers/exprNode.h:277: virtual memory exhausted
>[snip]
>> DPMI memory available: 12311 Kb
>> DPMI swap space available: 0 Kb
>
>That is your real problem, and GCC clearly tells you so.
You're right. it disappeared when i set my virtual memory higher in the
PIF file. thanks!
and it compiled all right - all 120 source files! i did have to hack
another one of the makefiles to make it LINK properly though... it was
trying to use -ll instead of -lfl for flex... IN SPITE OF the configure
script supposedly already having checked for it!
but it still doesn't work! it's complaining about uninitialised
environment variables. when i try it on "hello, world"...
bash$ set
<SNIP>
LARCH_PATH = c:/djgpp/lclint-2.4/lib/
LCLIMPORTDIR = c:/djgpp/lclint-2.4/imports/
SYSTEMDIRS = /
bash$ lclint hello.c
LCLint 2.4 --- 14 Apr 98
Cannot find standard library: ansi.lcd
Check LARCH_PATH environment variable.
hello.c: (in function main)
hello.c:5:9: Unrecognized identifier: printf
Identifier used in code has not been declared. (-unrecog will
suppress
message)
Finished LCLint checking --- 1 code error found
bash$
any ideas this time????? ansi.lcd *IS* in c:/djgpp/lclint-2.4/lib/
when i try *this*, i get...
bash$ lclint -help vars
LCLint 2.4 --- 14 Apr 98
LARCH_PATH = <not set> (default = .:c:/djgpp/lclint-2.4/lib/)
--- path used to find larch initialization files and LSL traits
LCLIMPORTDIR = <not set, default: c:/djgpp/lclint-2.4/imports>
--- directory containing lcl standard library files (import with <
... >)
systemdirs = /usr/ (set by include envirnoment variable or -systemdirs)
bash$
the variables are set in the environment - i've made sure of that! any
ideas, anyone????
thanks!!! and thanks a million to all of you who came up with your
wondeful suggestions!!!!! they've helped immensely!!!!!! *sighs of
relief*
- sunil *hoping he can sort this one last thing out*
--
"I see you have books under your arm, brother. It is indeed a rare pleasure
these days to come across somebody that still reads, brother."
- Anthony Burgess
- Raw text -