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Original bug ID: 5459 Reporter:@Chris00 Assigned to:@lefessan Status: closed (set by @xavierleroy on 2013-08-31T10:44:23Z) Resolution: suspended Priority: normal Severity: minor Platform: x86_64 OS: Debian GNU/Linux OS Version: 3.10.0 Version: 3.12.1 Category: ~DO NOT USE (was: OCaml general) Monitored by:@hcarty
Bug description
When compiling a C file with ocamlc, the -o flag can be set but is not used. It is occasionally useful however, for example when different objects files may be produced by defining some macros.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
It looks like there are still some C compilers that don't comply to the -o option. If we don't use the C compiler -o option, ocamlc has to rename the object file itself, but then, it might clash with parallel compilation.
For these reasons, this feature is "suspended" until all known C compilers implement the -o option correctly.
Note that it is still possible to use -o with C files using the -ccopt option, if you don't care too much about portability across C compilers.
Original bug ID: 5459
Reporter: @Chris00
Assigned to: @lefessan
Status: closed (set by @xavierleroy on 2013-08-31T10:44:23Z)
Resolution: suspended
Priority: normal
Severity: minor
Platform: x86_64
OS: Debian GNU/Linux
OS Version: 3.10.0
Version: 3.12.1
Category: ~DO NOT USE (was: OCaml general)
Monitored by: @hcarty
Bug description
When compiling a C file with ocamlc, the -o flag can be set but is not used. It is occasionally useful however, for example when different objects files may be produced by defining some macros.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: