I am trying to run the following test program on my Solaris 10 sparc machine using gcc 5.5.0
#include <iostream>
#include <cmath>
int main()
{
std::cout << "exp2(4) = " << std::exp2(4) << '\n'
<< "exp2(0.5) = " << std::exp2(0.5) << '\n'
<< "exp2(-4) = " << std::exp2(-4) << '\n';
return 0;
}
Here are the OS details,
~$ uname -a
SunOS sovms577 5.10 Generic_147147-26 sun4v sparc SUNW,SPARC-Enterprise-T5220
~$ cat /etc/release
Oracle Solaris 10 1/13 s10s_u11wos_24a SPARC
Copyright (c) 1983, 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
Assembled 17 January 2013
On compiling using the following command,
g++ -std=c++11 -Wall test.cpp
I get the following error,
In file included from /opt/csw/include/c++/5.5.0/cmath:44:0,
from test.cpp:2:
/opt/csw/lib/gcc/sparc-sun-solaris2.10/5.5.0/include-fixed/math.h:52:12: error: ‘std::float_t’ has not been declared
using std::float_t;
^
/opt/csw/lib/gcc/sparc-sun-solaris2.10/5.5.0/include-fixed/math.h:53:12: error: ‘std::double_t’ has not been declared
using std::double_t;
^
/opt/csw/lib/gcc/sparc-sun-solaris2.10/5.5.0/include-fixed/math.h:55:12: error: ‘std::fpclassify’ has not been declared
using std::fpclassify;
^
/opt/csw/lib/gcc/sparc-sun-solaris2.10/5.5.0/include-fixed/math.h:56:12: error: ‘std::isfinite’ has not been declared
using std::isfinite;
I installed GCC 5.5 following the instructions given here.
答案 0 :(得分:0)
I found the same error. In the header /opt/csw/lib/gcc/sparc-sun-solaris2.10/5.5.0/include-fixed/math.h I replaced the line:
#if __cplusplus >= 201103L
using std::float_t;
with
#if 0 && __cplusplus >= 201103L
using std::float_t;
Update 24 Apr 2019 -- @Andrew Henle wants you to know
If you are attempting to compile C++11 on an unpatched, unupdated
installation of Solaris 10, and are presenting this as a "fix",
you do not understand what you are doing.
@Andrew Henle says there's a 'solaris' patch that fixes the csw/include/c++/.../cmath and csw/lib/gcc/..../math.h, but how that patch affects the installation of the csw headers is unknown and unspecified.
Update 26 Apr 2019
I built a new binutils and gcc-5.5.0 using the csw gcc installation using the following packages:
binutils-2.27.tar.bz2
cloog-0.18.1.tar.gz
gcc-5.5.0.tar.gz
gmp-5.1.2.tar.xz
mpc-1.0.1.tar.gz
mpfr-3.1.2.tar.xz
Build binutils first.
../configure --prefix=$TARGET_PATH/sx64
make
make install
I used the following config for gcc:
../configure --prefix=$TARGET_PATH/sx64 --enable-languages=c,c++ --enable-threads=posix --enable-version-specific-runtime-libs --disable-libsanitizer --with-as=$TARGET_PATH/sx64/bin/as --with-ld=$TARGET_PATH/sx64/bin/ld --with-gnu-ld --with-gnu-as
make bootstrap
make install
You have to use --with-as and --with-ld to get gcc to use the binutils version built instead of the broken system versions.
Using this compiler I had no issues compiling valid c++-11 code.