![]() The workaround is to find a Glibc version that predates the commit noted in the article above (i went with 2.14), compile GCC 4.5 with that installed (i chose 4.5.3 due to release proximity with glibc 2.14), and then start the process again with current Glibc and GCC.All NetBSD Packages The NetBSD Packages Collection Please read up on this complication BEFORE you start the manual process: Important Note: If you are trying to compile GCC, you'll probably need a working (and current) glibc enviroment. The package route has many potential positive aspects beyond being easy, please read below. I'm relatively sure that a simple package install of a recent GCC on your system will yield the same results (so long as you get 4.3.5-4 or later), but I haven't tested this as there are understandably no such packages for an FC9 install. ![]() I chose 4.7.2 as my goal because it was, at the time of this writing, the most current build in the stable tree. While reading, I noted that my system was using an affected version of GCC to compile my various sources (from an FC9 installation on a relic laptop). I found this post in the Debian Bug Archive: ![]() Why did compiling GCC (4.7.2) solve the issue? The Final Solution: a complete recompile and install of GCC (4.7.2) ![]() I tried following the advice provided in all of these threads (as the solutions discussed are largely the same) with no success. I initially found this compile failure while assembling GLib (all versions I tried that were more recent than 2.28.7), but I again encountered it with gobject and it appears related to several other packages' build failures: ![]()
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