From: dahms AT ifk20 DOT mach DOT uni-karlsruhe DOT de Subject: Re: Bugs with gcc 24 Jan 1997 22:27:42 -0800 Approved: cygnus DOT gnu-win32 AT cygnus DOT com Distribution: cygnus Message-ID: <009AEDD6.B1495B40.8255.cygnus.gnu-win32@ifk20.mach.uni-karlsruhe.de> Original-To: aurel AT xylo DOT owl DOT de Original-CC: gnu-win32 AT cygnus DOT com, dahms AT ifk20 DOT mach DOT uni-karlsruhe DOT de Original-Sender: owner-gnu-win32 AT cygnus DOT com Hi, you wrote: : > : firstly, compiling/linking with the -s flag to g++ causes an executable : > : to be produced, that will not run, - apparently a non NT executable. : > What do you expect -s to do, please? : : The -s flag is passed to ld and is defined on the man-page for ld : on any UNIX system. So there must be a problem with ld when : stripping a executable. -s means stripping the executable. : It is done directly by ld (no call of strip) : : Aurel Balmosan Summarizing what several kindly people said and some more info of mine: There is *no* -s in my man page for gcc/g++ on unix (v2.7)! Using -Wl,-s would have put me on the right track, as -Wl is documented. man ld on hp-ux shows no -S, and on DECunix/Alpha ld -S is something else. GNU ld --help on cygwin explains -S as stripping debug symbols. Indeed all 3 have -s! Bye, Heribert (dahms AT ifk20 DOT mach DOT uni-karlsruhe DOT de) - For help on using this list, send a message to "gnu-win32-request AT cygnus DOT com" with one line of text: "help".